30 Fun Summer Camp Activities for Every Kind of Camp Day

Profile picture of Trey MosierPosted by Trey Mosier
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A great summer camp isn't just a place — it's a feeling kids talk about for the rest of the year. And the activities you plan are what create that feeling. The challenge is keeping a group of kids engaged across long days, mixed energy levels, and the occasional rainy afternoon when outdoor plans fall apart.

This list has you covered. We've organized 30 summer camp activities by type so you can quickly find what fits your schedule, your group size, and how much setup time you actually have. From high-energy outdoor games to calm indoor crafts and everything in between, there's something here for every kind of camp day.

Genius Tip

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Outdoor Games

These activities work best with open space, a decent-sized group, and kids who have energy to burn. Most require minimal equipment and can be adapted for different age ranges.

1. Ninja Warrior Obstacle Course Set up a course using whatever you have on hand — cones, chairs, pop-up tunnels, rope, and hula hoops all work. Kids earn ninja headbands in their team color before the race, which doubles as an easy craft activity earlier in the day. Time each run and post results so campers can try to beat their own scores throughout the week.

2. Capture the Flag Divide into two teams and designate a play area with a clear midfield line. Each team hides their flag on their side. Players tagged on enemy territory go to jail and can only be freed by a teammate who tags them without getting caught. The game ends when one team captures the other's flag or time runs out. Works best with groups of 12 or more.

3. Blob Tag When the "it" player tags someone, they join hands and become the blob. The blob grows with every tag until the last free player wins. A large, connected blob trying to coordinate and chase people down is genuinely hilarious and gets funnier as the group grows.

4. Cardboard Box Car Races Ask families and staff to save large cardboard boxes ahead of time. On race day, supply tape, construction paper, markers, and craft supplies for kids to design their own cars. Cut holes in the bottom so kids can step in and wear them. Set up a racetrack using cones, run heats, and crown a champion. This one takes planning but delivers one of the most memorable days of the summer.

5. Camping for the Day No overnight stay required. Set up a daytime camping experience with teepees or simple tent structures, a nature scavenger hunt, and s'mores over a solo stove or firepit. It gives kids the feeling of a real camping trip without the logistics and works especially well as a themed day activity.

Water Activities

Plan water games for the hottest part of the afternoon and make sure counselors are prepared to get wet too.

6. Water Balloon Dodgeball Set up a standard dodgeball zone and station buckets of water balloons around the perimeter. Kids play regular dodgeball rules — if you get hit, you're out — but the soggy impact makes every tag memorable. Modern balloon filling kits let you fill dozens at a time, which makes setup fast. Plan to make more than you think you need.

7. Water Sponge Tag Pick up small sponges at the dollar store and fill several buckets with water around the play area. Players toss wet sponges to tag each other. Ask kids to aim below the shoulders to keep it safe. Because everyone ends up with a sponge pretty quickly, it tends to turn into an all-out water fight — which is usually exactly what a hot afternoon calls for.

8. Fireman's Relay Line kids up with a water hose at the front and a large empty bucket at the end. Each player gets a plastic cup. The first player fills their cup from the hose and pours it into the next person's cup, who passes it down the line until the last player dumps whatever remains into the bucket. Teams race to fill their bucket to a marked line. The water loss during each pour makes it genuinely competitive.

9. Sumo Suit Wrestling More of an investment, but the payout is worth it. Rent or buy inflatable sumo suits and let kids wrestle in a safe, padded area. The suits protect them when they fall, and matches result in the kind of laughter that carries through the rest of the day. Group kids by size and strength to keep matchups fair.

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Creative & Crafts

Craft activities give campers a chance to slow down, work independently, and make something they can take home. These also work well for mixed-age groups where you need activities that move at different pace levels.

10. Stone Painting Have kids collect smooth stones from around the camp, then provide acrylic paint and brushes. Finished stones can be displayed around camp for others to find, left near a trail as anonymous gifts, or taken home. Simple, low-cost, and the results are genuinely beautiful. A coat of clear sealant spray makes them weatherproof.

11. Bead Crafting Set out a wide variety of beads, cord, and clasps and let kids design their own bracelets, necklaces, or keychains. This is a particularly good activity for kids who need a quieter, more focused option — the repetitive motion of stringing beads is calming for many children, including those with ADHD or sensory sensitivities.

12. Nature Art Take campers outside and give them a designated area to wander and find something in nature that inspires them — a leaf, a pattern in tree bark, a view. Back inside, they recreate it using drawing or watercolor supplies. Display finished pieces on a camp gallery wall so everyone can see each other's work.

13. Genius Day Inventions Tell campers a few days in advance that Genius Day is coming and their job is to think of an invention that solves a real problem. On the day, give them materials — cardboard, tape, craft supplies, recycled items — and time to build. Finish with a presentation round where each inventor pitches their creation. Have kids make thinking caps to wear during the build. This one rewards creativity over skill and tends to bring out unexpected talent.

14. Paper Bag Puppet Show Give each camper a lunch bag and a pile of craft supplies — googly eyes, pom poms, pipe cleaners, construction paper, markers. After building, pair kids up or put them in small groups to write and perform a short puppet show. Set up a simple stage using a table on its side or a curtain hung between two chairs.

Genius Tip

For craft activities, pre-sort supplies into individual bags or trays before kids arrive. It cuts down on the scramble at the start, reduces waste, and makes cleanup dramatically faster. Counselors will thank you.

Drama & Performance

Performance activities build confidence, encourage teamwork, and give every kid a moment in the spotlight — even the ones who seem like they'd never want one.

15. Talent Show Give campers at least a day or two to prepare. Set up a proper stage with seating for the audience and designate an MC to introduce each act. Keep a box of props and costumes available for kids who aren't sure what to do. The point is participation, not polish.

16. Children's Theatre Divide campers into small groups and let them choose a simple story to perform — fairy tales work well because everyone already knows the plot. Give them time to assign roles, practice, and pull together basic costumes from a prop box. Plan the show as a camp-wide event so there's a real audience.

17. Counselor Fashion Show Split campers into groups, one per counselor. Each group designs and builds a costume for their counselor using available materials — toilet paper, newspaper, fabric scraps, tape, foil. Give a time limit, then clear a runway. Counselors model their looks while their teams cheer. Kids vote for best design and best runway walk. Counselors who commit fully make this one legendary.

18. Myth Busters Design a session around popular myths kids can actually test — does yawning spread to everyone in the room? Can you balance a broom on your hand? Frame each one as a real investigation with a hypothesis before the test and a conclusion after. Kids learn something and feel like scientists in the process.

Indoor & Rainy Day

Every camp season has days where outdoor plans fall apart. These are worth having ready before you need them.

19. Build a Balloon Rocket String a length of fishing line or twine across the room and thread a straw onto it before tying off both ends. Blow up a balloon, pinch it closed, and tape it to the straw. Let go and watch it rocket across the line. Once kids understand the basic setup, challenge them to experiment — does a longer balloon go faster? A wider one? Does the angle of the line change the distance? It turns a simple activity into a genuine experiment and works for a wide age range.

20. Don't Set Off the Alarm In a hallway or open indoor space, use tape or strips of paper to create a laser maze at different heights and angles. Time campers as they navigate through without touching any of the "lasers." It requires almost no materials, sets up in minutes, and kids will want multiple attempts to beat their own time.

21. Cooking Class Simple recipes work best. Great options include no-bake cookies, yogurt bark, fruit skewers, ice cream sundaes, mini pizzas on English muffins, or tortilla roll-ups with a choice of fillings. Kids are almost always more enthusiastic about food they had a hand in preparing. Check allergy lists before planning the menu.

22. Balloon Tennis Use fly swatters or foam paddles and inflated balloons as the ball. Because balloons move slowly, kids of all athletic levels can participate equally. Run multiple games simultaneously in a gym or large indoor space — balloons drifting into neighboring courts just adds to the chaos.

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Quick No-Prep Games

These are your back-pocket activities — the ones you can run with zero setup when there's a gap in the schedule, energy is flagging, or you need to fill 15 minutes before lunch.

23. Animal Charades Write animal names on slips of paper and drop them in a hat. Kids take turns drawing a slip and acting out the animal while everyone else guesses. The player who guesses correctly goes next. No materials beyond a pen, paper, and a hat.

24. Storyteller Circle Everyone sits in a circle. A counselor opens with a story setup — something mysterious or funny that happened at this very camp. Each camper adds one sentence going around the circle until it reaches a natural or gloriously absurd ending. No prep, no materials, works anywhere.

25. Cat & Mouse Most kids stand in a circle with space between them to pass through. Two kids are chosen — one is the cat, one is the mouse. The cat tries to catch the mouse by weaving through the gaps between players. When someone passes through a gap, those two players close it by joining hands. As gaps close, the pressure builds. Select two new players each round.

26. Sardines The reverse of hide and seek. One person hides while everyone else counts. When a seeker finds the hider, they squeeze in and hide with them quietly. The spot gets increasingly crowded and increasingly hard to keep quiet until the last seeker finds the group. The first finder hides next round.

27. Parachute Games A parachute is one of the best all-ages camp investments you can make. Lift it together, keep a beach ball bouncing on top, run under it and switch sides before it falls, or step inside together to be surrounded by color. Works for groups from 10 to 40, requires almost no explanation, and has zero cleanup. Maximum fun for minimum effort.

28. Flashlight Tag One player is "it" and carries a flashlight. When the beam lands on another player, they're tagged. Play in a large outdoor area after dark with clear boundaries. Best saved for the last session of the evening — it sends kids to bed on a high note.

29. Capture the Flag — Indoor Version The same rules as the outdoor version but played in a gym or large multipurpose room. Use bandanas or pinnies as flags and let furniture and equipment serve as natural cover. The smaller space makes it faster and more intense.

30. Scavenger Hunt Create a list of things to find in nature or around camp — a smooth rock, something yellow, something that makes a sound, a leaf with five points. Kids either collect items or check them off as they spot them. Swap the list for clues to turn it into a full treasure hunt with something waiting at the end.

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Keeping It Fun and Informative

Summer camp is about more than keeping kids busy — it's about giving them experiences they'll carry with them long after the summer ends. The activities you choose set the tone for everything: the friendships that form, the confidence that builds, and the memories that stick. Whether you're running a week-long overnight camp or a series of day sessions, this list gives you enough variety to keep every kind of kid engaged from the first day to the last. The best camps aren't the ones with the most elaborate programming — they're the ones where kids feel seen, included, and excited to come back.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best summer camp activities for large groups?

Outdoor games like Capture the Flag, Blob Tag, and Cardboard Box Car Races work well for large groups because they scale easily and don't require much individual supervision. Parachute games are also excellent for big groups across a wide age range — they're cooperative rather than competitive, which helps when you have mixed energy levels or kids who don't know each other yet.

How do I keep campers engaged on rainy days?

The key is having a rainy day rotation ready before you need it — not scrambling to figure it out when kids are already restless. Cooking class, balloon tennis, Don't Set Off the Alarm, and the puppet show activity all work well indoors and require minimal setup. Storyteller Circle and Animal Charades are good back-pocket options if you need something with zero prep and zero materials.

What activities work best for younger campers (ages 5–7)?

Younger kids do best with activities that have simple rules, short time commitments, and a physical component. Parachute games, water sponge tag, stone painting, and bead crafting are all strong choices. Avoid activities with complex team rules or long setup times — attention spans are short and transitions are everything at this age.

How far in advance should I plan summer camp activities?

Most experienced camp directors plan their full activity calendar at least four to six weeks before the first session. This gives you time to source supplies, send families any material requests (like cardboard boxes for car races), coordinate counselor roles, and build in backup options for weather. Having a two-week rolling schedule posted for staff keeps everyone aligned and reduces the number of "what are we doing next?" moments.

How can SignUpGenius help with summer camp coordination? SignUpGenius makes it easy to handle the logistics that pile up before and during camp — volunteer sign ups, supply donations, field trip permission, snack schedules, and session registration. You can create a sign up in minutes, share it via link or email, and track responses in real time without chasing anyone down. It's especially useful for camps that rely on parent volunteers or rotating weekly helpers.

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