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It’s time to start signing your little ones up for camps!
To make things easier for you, we have put together our top picks of
this year’s summer programs available to the San Francisco Bay Area, along with insider tips and camp must-haves from our team of fellow SF Bay Area Mamas.
Scroll on and happy camping!
Mountain Camp Marin
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Looking for an unforgettable summer adventure? Mountain Camp Marin brings the magic of overnight camp to a choice-driven day camp experience in San Rafael! Hosted at Mark Day School, campers in grades K-8 unplug from screens and dive into a world of fun, with elective activities like Swimming, Archery, LARPing, Arts & Crafts, and Music.
Our 3:1 camper-to-staff ratio leads the industry and signature traditions like Wacky Wednesdays and Gather assemblies make every day special. Older campers can take on leadership roles through our Camper In Leadership Training (CILT) and Junior Staff In Training (JSIT) programs, developing confidence and responsibility. We believe that our day camp program provides a vital educational experience that all children should have – Read More
DATE | June 16 – August 1, 2025 (7 sessions)
LOCATION | 39 Trellis Drive San Rafael, CA 94903
PHONE | 415-906-2667
CLICK HERE to learn more about the Mountain Camp Family and their other 3 camps (Overnight Farm Camp, Overnight Mountain Camp, and Mountain Camp Woodside) across the Bay Area and beyond!
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Camp Galileo
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Get ready for an unforgettable summer at Camp Galileo, full of K-8th STEAM projects, collaborative design challenges and classic camp fun, like silly skits, face painting and pie throwing. Every hands-on activity and outdoor game is designed by a team of educators, tailored by grade and calibrated for maximum fun and lasting learning.
24 Bay Area Locations, weekly sessions, 9am-3pm camp day and AM & PM extended care options. Scholarships available and enrollments accepted through many top backup care providers.
Use the code BAYAREAMOMS25 to save $25 per week. Combinable with $50 off per week Early Bird promotion through Feb 28, 2025. Applicable on future purchases only and may not be retroactively applied.
DATE | 06/09/2025 – 08/15/2025
LOCATION | 24 Bay Area Locations
PHONE | (800) 854-3684
Camp Integem
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Kids and Teens (ages 5-18) join Camp Integem to step into the future: Ride a spaceship to the stars, meet dinosaurs, create magical game worlds, and bring your art to life; build AI robots, design and fly space drones, and launch your creations to the stratosphere—up to 100,000 feet!
Explore Holographic AR, AI, robotics, drones, coding, animation, 3D design, and more in a fun, hands-on journey of creativity. ACS WASC accredited and partnered with NVIDIA. Thousands of students have joined Camp Integem since 2018.
Save $50/week using code: SFBAM
DATE | 06/09/2025 – 08/01/2025
LOCATION | Multiple locations in the SF Bay Area
PHONE | (408) 459-0657
Steve & Kate’s Camp
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Since 1980, Steve & Kate’s Camp has put kids in charge–allowing campers to choose from a variety of activities in real-time, including sewing, stop-motion animation, coding & gaming, sports & recreation, maker crafts, water play, baking, and more.
As children are empowered to make their own choices at camp, they discover new reserves of confidence, resiliency, and creativity as they learn to make course corrections & trust themselves and as they go.
Families can buy any number of days, to use at any time–no weekly reservations required. Or, buy a Summer Pass, which covers the whole season. Either way, any unused Passes are automatically refunded at summer’s end.
Ages: 4–12 | Lunch, snacks & all hours (8am–6pm) included.
DATE | June – August, 2025
LOCATIONS | Multiple locations across the San Francisco Bay Area
Cathedral Hill- 888 Turk St., San Francisco, CA 94102
Potrero Hill- 1555 Mariposa St., San Francisco, CA 94107East Bay:
Emeryville- 1070 41st St, Emeryville, CA 94608
Fremont- 3300 Kearney St., Fremont, CA 94538
Pleasanton- 1125 Concord St, Pleasanton, CA 94566
Walnut Creek- 975 N San Carlos Dr, Walnut Creek, CA 94598North Bay:
Corte Madera- 330 Golden Hind Passage, Corte Madera, CA 94925
Petaluma- 705 N Webster St., Petaluma, CA 94952
Santa Rosa- 4400 Day School Place, Santa Rosa, CA 95403Peninsula:
Belmont- 1200 Notre Dame Ave, Belmont, CA 94002
Palo Alto- 450 San Antonio Rd, Palo Alto, CA 94306
San Mateo- 2701 Hacienda Street, San Mateo, CA 94403South Bay:
Berryessa- Berryessa School District (Exact location TBA)
Willow Glen- 2105 Cottle Ave San Jose, CA 95125
Sunnyvale- 1500 Partridge Ave, Sunnyvale, CA 94087
PHONE | (415) 389-5437
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Tutu Camp at Tutu School San Francisco ~ Bay Street
Ripe Fruit Creative Writing Camps for Teens
Camp SFS at The San Francisco School
06/17/2024 – 08/02/2024 | (415) 239-5065 | 300 Gaven Street, San Francisco, CA Map It
Camp SFS is a choice-based, play-centered summer camp with rich and varied activities sure to form lasting memories. We are housed on our unique campus with an adventure playground, LEGO cave, art shack, vintage arcade, homemade lunch, unique themed weeks, and more.
Gardens of Golden Gate Park / Garden Camp
06/17/2024 – 08/09/2024 | (415) 320-8196 | 1199 9th Avenue, San Francisco Map It
Connecting children to plants and each other through structured activities and unstructured play amidst plants from around the world, Garden Camp currently offers programs for children ages 5 through 14 (rising K through 8th grade). An all-outdoors day camp designed to connect children to plants through a combination of structured, themed activities and open-ended time to develop curiosity, initiative, imagination, and creativity. Themes include gardening, art, wellness, and ecology.
IYK® Yoga Camps
06/10/2024 – 08/24/2024 | (141) 575-0999 | info@itsyogakids.com
IYK® Campers ages 4 to 12 strengthen and stretch their bodies, minds, and hearts with yoga and mindfulness in our High5 Habits practice, Presidio nature hikes, games, and art projects. We are 100% outdoors!
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Mixed Activities / Outdoors
- Steve & Kate’s Camp
- Brains and Motion Education
- Seabird Preschool
- San Domenico Summer Camps
- SF City Kids Camp
- Trackers Bay Summer Camps
- Kids for the Bay
- YMCA Summer Camps
- Words in the Wild
- Roughing It Day Camp
- City of Redwood City
- City of Palo Alto
- City of San Mateo
- City of Martinez
- City of Concord
- Walnut Creek Arts & Rec
Camp Essentials
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Summer Camp Tips From Our Writers:
- Keep up to date and compile with health guidelines for a safe camping experience!
- Don’t over-schedule your children, especially if they are super young and this is their first time at camp/ away from you. It’s summertime, and you don’t want your kids exhausted from too many things. Let them be kids and have downtime too.
- If your child is starting preschool in the fall, do a “little” camp. This will help with the preschool transition and may help with school separation anxiety. That way, if your child freaks out and doesn’t really make it to camp that much, you didn’t waste money on a whole semester.
- Try something new. This is a great chance to try something before registering for it for an entire semester. Does your child like dance, basketball, or computers? Who knows? Summer allows you to give it a try. Exposure to different activities allows children to really find what they are interested in.
- Take advantage of the area we live in. Maybe your child will want to do coding or circus acrobats? These camps aren’t offered other places in the country like they are here. If you have an older child, camps like these stand out on college applications because they are unique.
- If your are trying to get into a particular school, register for their camp. It doesn’t hurt to get your family’s name out there and let the school get to know your child. It can only help!
- Don’t just do what your friends are doing. Do what’s best for your child. Use this guide to find something special for your child.
- Plan your camps around your vacations. It’s hard to plan in advance, but try to plan what you might be doing this summer from little day trips to maybe some bigger vacations (woo hoo!). You don’t want to pay for camp and then realize your child is going to miss a whole week for your cousin’s wedding on the East Coast.
- Location, location, location. Don’t sign up for a camp too far away. Just because this isn’t your child’s every day school, don’t forget you still might find it super inconvenient to drive a long distance every day over the summer to a camp.
- Dress your child in T-shirts that can be conversation starters. It’s hard to make new friends in a new environment. Maybe a SF Giants shirt, 49ers shirt, or an Elsa Frozen shirt (you get the idea) will help the kids realize they might like something in common and help them begin to chat.
- Don’t panic to sign up. Take your time to find the right camp. There are plenty of camps out there. It will all work out.
- Let your child take some ownership in their camp. Give them choices, ask them what they want to do, and then use this information to make a good decision.
- Remember to apply sunscreen and pack sunscreen for outdoor camps. Note whether your camp is allowed to re-apply or not and discuss this with your child.
- If you have a child that is just too young for camp make sure and carve out some “summer experiences” just for them so they don’t feel left out seeing their older siblings go to camp.
- If your child is independent, don’t be afraid of sleep-away camps. The goal is to raise children who will one day be capable of leaving us, right?
- Label EVERYTHING! Here are some of our favorite labels.
- Don’t let your child bring their “favorite” anything (water bottle, hat, whatever), even if it’s labeled. Items tend to go to home with the wrong camper and sometimes never make their way back. All kids have different schedules, and you may not see the same kids every day like you do in regular preschool.
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How do you choose which camps to send your kids to?
I talk to my kids. I asked them what they want to learn about. Sports, legos, airplanes, the arts, etc. Then, I give them options my husband and I are already cool with to pick from. I let them have some ownership in their camps. I don’t worry about what their friends are doing. If they have friends will similar interests, great! If not, no big deal. I don’t want my kids to do a camp just because their friends are there. I want them to be interested in and excited about the camp!
Also, don’t just look at the type of camp, look at the location! A camp that is 20 minutes away may not sound far, but driving to and from camp (especially if it’s a half-day camp) adds up quickly and will take up a lot of your time!
Finally, you also need to consider half-day versus whole-day. You really need to think about the age of your child. If they are young, maybe a half-day is enough. Older kids have more stamina for longer days. Don’t over-schedule your kid just because the camp sounds cool. They will not learn if they are super exhausted.
And just a side note–a lot of preschools have camps, so if you’re unsure what your child may like because they are still young, try one of the school camps.