Summer Camp Resources

Family Camps: What They Are and How to Find the Right Program

Family camps bring parents, children, and in many cases grandparents and extended family together in a camp setting for a shared experience. They occupy a distinct category from traditional children’s camps and from parent-child programs: the defining feature is that the entire family attends together rather than children attending independently or a single parent accompanying a child. The range of programs available under the family camp umbrella is broad, and understanding the differences helps identify which type of experience matches what your family is actually looking for.

Types of family camp programs

Family camp programs generally fall into two categories based on how structured the experience is.

Programmed family camps operate more like a traditional camp with a scheduled curriculum: activities, instruction, group events, and organized gatherings are built into the daily schedule, and families are expected to participate to some degree. These programs are well suited to families who want structure, variety, and the experience of camp programming as a shared activity rather than simply using camp facilities as a backdrop for independent leisure.

Facility-based family rentals sit at the other end of the spectrum. The family books use of a camp’s grounds, lodging, and amenities and largely sets their own agenda. Meals may or may not be provided depending on the arrangement. These programs are closer to a cabin rental or resort stay that happens to take place at a camp facility, and they suit families who prefer flexibility and independence over a structured program.

Most family camp options fall somewhere between these two extremes, offering a mix of optional organized activities alongside unstructured time to use facilities freely.

Where family camp programs are offered

Family camp programming is available through two distinct types of providers. Traditional summer camps often offer family sessions in the shoulder periods just before or after their primary children’s program, typically in early to mid-June and in August or September. These sessions allow camps to make productive use of their facilities and staff outside the core season and give families access to established camp infrastructure.

Dedicated family camp facilities are separate from children’s programs entirely and often have more scheduling flexibility throughout the year. Geography plays a meaningful role in availability: facilities in mild-climate regions such as the Western United States tend to offer programming across more of the calendar year, while camps in cold-weather regions are often limited to late spring through early fall.

What family camps typically include

Most family camp programs include some combination of lodging, meals, and access to the camp’s activity infrastructure such as waterfront, hiking, sports facilities, and program equipment. The specifics vary considerably: some programs provide three meals a day in a communal dining setting; others provide kitchen access for families to prepare their own food. Lodging ranges from traditional camp cabins with bunk beds to more comfortable lodge-style accommodations depending on the facility.

Activities available to families at camp depend on the facility’s programming infrastructure and what is included in the session fee versus available for an additional cost. Asking specifically what is included, what requires separate registration or fees, and what the age range of activities accommodates ensures expectations are aligned before you arrive.

Parent-child programs within family camp settings

Some traditional camps offer parent-child sessions that are distinct from their broader family programming. These programs, often structured as father-son or mother-daughter weekends, are specifically designed around the one-on-one parent-child dynamic rather than the whole family unit. For more on that format, see our guide to father-son and mother-daughter camp programs.

Find family camps on Camp Channel

Use the Camp Channel full camp search to find programs and contact camp directors directly to ask about family session availability, dates, and what is included. Not all camps offer family programming, and those that do may not advertise it prominently on their primary website.