Every spring, the same conversation happens in thousands of kitchens. A parent reads about a camp friend’s kid having “the best week of her life” at sleepaway camp, looks across the table at their own seven-year-old eating cereal in pajamas, and thinks: could she do that? And then immediately: could I?
There’s no perfect age for sleepaway camp. There’s no universal checklist. But there are real signs of readiness, and an equally important set of signs that your child (or you) needs another year. Here’s what I’ve learned actually matters in helping make the decision.
First, About Age
What Age is Best for Sleepaway Camp?
Most traditional sleepaway camps in the US accept kids starting around age 7 or 8, with some “starter camp” programs (3–5 night sessions) designed specifically for younger first-timers. The sweet spot for a confident first sleepaway experience is generally between 8 and 11. Kids younger than that can thrive, but the failure-to-thrive risk is higher; kids older than that often have a harder time joining peer groups that have already bonded in earlier sessions.
But age is the worst predictor in the bunch, according to experts. Which makes me feel better, since I’m a mom to a 10-year-old. A mature, securely-attached seven-year-old often handles camp better than an anxious eleven-year-old. The right question isn’t “how old is my kid?” It’s “what does my kid do when things feel hard and I’m not in the room?”
The Real Signs
The Signs Your Kid is Ready
None of these are deal-breakers on their own. But if your kid hits most of the list, you’re probably in good shape.
- They’ve slept away from home before without falling apart. Grandparents, sleepovers, a long weekend with a cousin — any experience of waking up somewhere that isn’t home and being okay.
- They can handle a problem without you for a few minutes. Can they ask a teacher for help? Tell a coach they need water? Navigate a public bathroom alone? Camp doesn’t require independence, but it does require the willingness to ask another adult for help.
- They show curiosity about it. Not necessarily excitement, but curiosity. Kids who ask questions (“What do you do at night? What if I miss you?”) are processing. Kids who refuse to discuss it usually aren’t ready yet.
- They tolerate being uncomfortable. Hot, cold, tired, hungry, bored. Can they ride out those feels for an hour without melting down? Camp is full of mild discomfort. Resilience to small frustrations matters more than enthusiasm for archery.
- They have a friend going, OR they’re comfortable making new ones. Either path works. A kid going with a buddy has a built-in safety net. A kid who finds new friends at the park within ten minutes will usually be fine alone.
- They can sleep through the night in a noisy room. Bunks are loud. Crickets, snoring, whispering, the kid two beds over crying for the first night. Light sleepers struggle.
And the Other Side
Signs Your Kid isn’t Quite There Yet (and That’s Fine)
None of the following mean “never.” They mean “not this summer.” A year of growth at this age changes everything.
- They’ve had a hard sleepover experience recently: calling home, not staying through the night, or asking to come home.
- They’re going through a clingy phase. Some kids who were independent at six get clingy at eight, and then independent again at nine. It’s developmental, not regression.
- There’s been a significant family disruption — a move, divorce, new sibling, loss — within the last year. Sleepaway camp is not the right setting for processing that.
- They have a strong physical comfort attachment (a specific stuffed animal, a particular pillow, a sleep ritual you can’t replicate) and panic if it’s unavailable.
- They have an anxiety pattern around new environments that hasn’t started to ease yet. It will, but usually with more low-stakes practice first.
- They tell you, clearly and repeatedly, that they don’t want to go. Believe them. Pushing rarely works and often backfires.
The Question Most Guides Skip
Are You Ready?
This is the part camp brochures don’t talk about. Parent readiness is half the equation, and parents who aren’t ready often telegraph that to their kids, who then become exactly as anxious as the parent secretly is. Ok, so this is me.
You’re probably ready if:
- You can imagine not knowing where your kid is for several hours without going to a dark place.
- You trust the camp’s emergency protocols and you’ve actually read them — not skimmed, but actually read.
- You’re prepared for one or two homesick letters that will absolutely wreck you and that you should not, under any circumstances, respond to by driving up to pick them up. (What? I should get back out of the car? Fine.)
- You have a plan for what you’ll do that week. Empty-nest grief is real, even if it’s only ten days.
- You can resist the urge to over-prepare them. The kids who do best are the ones whose parents radiate calm, not the ones who got a forty-five-minute pep talk about how the bug bites will hopefully not be too bad.
If you get a homesick letter, do not call the camp to pull your kid out. Almost every camp director will tell you: kids who write a heartbreaking Tuesday letter are usually having a great time by Friday. The letter is a snapshot of a hard moment, not a plea you need to act on. Write back warm, brief, and confident: “I love you, I’m proud of you, you’ve got this.” Then put the letter down and trust the people you chose.
A Soft Approach
The Trial-Run Method
If you’re genuinely unsure, you don’t have to commit to two weeks. The smartest way to test sleepaway readiness is a graduated approach across two summers:
Summer one: A 3–5 night “starter camp” or “rookie session.” Many traditional camps run a shorter program for first-timers. The reduced length lowers the stakes, the cohort is all in the same boat, and you get real data on how your kid does instead of guessing.
Summer two: If summer one went well, a full one- or two-week session at the same camp. Returning campers have a huge advantage — they already know the layout, the staff, the rhythm. Even a single prior summer turns a first-time camper into a confident veteran.
If summer one was hard but not disastrous, repeat the starter program — don’t escalate. If it was a clear “not yet,” let it rest a full year before trying again.
Before You Commit
Questions to Ask the Camp Before You Book
Don’t just go by the website. Get someone on the phone and ask:
- What’s your counselor-to-camper ratio in the cabin, not just in activities?
- How do you handle homesickness in the first 48 hours? (The answer should not be “we don’t really see much of it.”)
- Can my kid contact me, and how? Many camps have a no-phone policy. Some allow letters or one supervised call. Know the rules before you go.
- What’s the on-site medical setup, and is there a nurse 24/7?
- What’s your protocol if my child says they want to come home?
- How are cabin groups assigned? Can my child request a bunkmate?
- What does a typical day look like — and what does free time look like?
A camp that answers these specifically and warmly is a good camp. A camp that gets defensive or vague is telling you something important.
The Final Gut Check
If You’re Still Not Sure
One question I borrow from a friend who knows whereof she speaks: “If I knew for certain my kid would have a moderately hard day on day two, and then a great rest of the week, would I send them?”
If the answer is yes, you’re ready. The first 48 hours of sleepaway camp are hard for most kids. That’s not a sign you made the wrong call. That’s the price of admission, and the growth happens on the other side of it.
If the answer is no — if even a moderately hard day two is more than you can stomach — that’s useful info too. It probably means one more summer of day camp, sleepovers, and weekend trips with grandparents. There’s nothing wrong with that. Sleepaway camp isn’t a milestone you can fail to hit. It’s an experience that waits for the right year.
Once the deposit is paid and the dates are on the calendar, the next question is what actually goes in the trunk. Our companion post — The Sleepaway Camp Packing List — walks through what to bring, what to skip, and the small things parents always forget. It pairs directly with this one.
— Kathy