Lakeside Bible Camp is a Christian camp owned and operated by six evangelical churches in the greater Seattle area. The focus of LBC is sound Bible…
Christian camps, retreat centers, and conferences that create the unhurried environments where faith is formed — through campfires and Bible studies, adventure and quiet, lifelong friendships and the worship gatherings that shape what believers carry home for decades after.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
Lakeside Bible Camp is a Christian camp owned and operated by six evangelical churches in the greater Seattle area. The focus of LBC is sound Bible…
Lutheran Brethren Conference Center is a nonprofit religious conference center commonly known as Tuscarora Inn & Conference Center. We serve the…
Mount Hermon is a nonprofit, interdenominational, evangelical arm of the church, dedicated to serving churches and the family through year-round…
New Life Camp leads children to Jesus through camping, teaching and sports ministries. Our vision is to be a set-apart place where children…
Pine Cove Christian Camps, also known as Pine Cove, Inc. is an interdenominational camp located in East Texas in Tyler, South Texas, in Columbus…
Pine Valley is a year-round faith-based camp located in Ellwood City, PA about 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh. We serve inner-city at-risk youth…
Sandy Cove Ministries is a camp, conference, and retreat center located in North East, MD. Catering to families and people of all ages, and…
SpringHill’s mission is to glorify God by creating life-impacting experiences that enable young people to know Jesus Christ and to grow in their…
Since 1966, the ministry of Christian Camps of Pittsburgh, Inc dba Summer's Best Two Weeks has the primary objective to provide the facilities…
The heart of America's KESWICK's ministry is Addiction Recovery. Founded in 1897, the Colony of Mercy consists of 120-day residential program for men…
AMG International is a Gospel-first global ministry that meets people’s deepest needs — spiritual and physical — by inspiring hope, restoring lives…
Christian Camps & Conferences owns and operates residential camps, and a conference center for the purpose of introducing people to Jesus Christ in…
169 nonprofits
Christian camps and conferences take many forms — from week-long youth camps to multi-generational family retreats, from specialty programs for vulnerable kids to large-scale conferences drawing tens of thousands. Each creates space for the formation work that doesn't happen elsewhere.
Week-long residential camps for kids, tweens, and teens — combining biblical teaching with outdoor recreation, lifelong friendships, and the kind of formative spiritual experiences that often shape faith for decades.
Multi-generational camp weeks where families attend together — with programming for kids, teens, and adults running in parallel — and adult retreat weekends serving men, women, couples, and ministry leaders.
Camps designed specifically for foster kids, kids of incarcerated parents, children with special needs, grieving children, and others — bringing the camp experience to those who would otherwise never have it.
Year-round facilities hosting church retreats, leadership retreats, marriage retreats, men's and women's weekends, and pastoral renewal — providing the space and support that local congregations cannot replicate themselves.
Multi-day events drawing thousands or tens of thousands — college and youth conferences, denominational gatherings, worship and teaching conferences, ministry leader summits — where teaching, music, and community converge.
Training and discipling the seasonal college-age staff who make camps run — and providing scholarships that ensure kids from struggling families can experience camp regardless of ability to pay.
Almost every Christian who came to faith young can name a place. A cabin. A campfire. A week at camp where the noise of life finally quieted and something true settled in. Pastors point to it. Missionaries trace their callings back to it. Lifelong believers remember the song around the fire, the friend who prayed with them, the late-night conversation that changed everything. The week at camp regularly turns out to be the most consequential week of someone's faith.
Christian camps and conferences exist to create those weeks. They build the unhurried environments where the rush of daily life stops being the loudest voice, where Scripture and worship and friendship and creation can do the slow work of forming faith. They invest in the seasonal staff who become the older siblings and mentors campers remember for life. They maintain the property — water systems, kitchens, lakes, bunks — that makes the experience possible.
The category is broader than just summer camp. It includes year-round retreat centers serving church groups every weekend, family camps where multiple generations grow together, specialty camps for foster kids and kids of incarcerated parents, intensive marriage retreats that save struggling couples, conferences drawing tens of thousands of college students into one room to worship. Each form of this work serves something local churches alone cannot — extended time, dedicated space, focused environment.
This work also depends entirely on donors. Most camps operate on tight seasonal margins. Property maintenance is expensive. Insurance, food, training, and facilities costs add up. And many of the kids who would benefit most from camp can't afford the full fee. Scholarship support — the gift that quietly sends a struggling family's child to camp — may be the most impactful dollar given to this category, because the kid who arrives on scholarship often becomes the adult whose faith was formed there.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to camp and conference ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Camps and conferences serving children require gold-standard safety practices — comprehensive background checks for every staff member and volunteer, mandatory abuse prevention training, two-deep leadership rules, transparent reporting protocols, and ongoing safety audits. Look for ministries accredited by recognized child safety organizations and willing to discuss their protocols openly. This is non-negotiable.
Camp programming requires real skill — biblical teaching that engages young people honestly, age-appropriate activities, emotional sensitivity, and the ability to handle the inevitable hard moments that arise when kids leave home. Excellent ministries invest in staff training, hire experienced leadership, and prioritize quality over volume. Look for camps with strong staff retention and clear training programs.
The kids who would benefit most from camp often can't afford it. Excellent ministries make accessibility a core mission — through scholarship funds, sliding-scale pricing, partnerships with churches in underserved communities, and specific outreach to foster kids, military families, and other groups facing barriers. Look for ministries where scholarship support is a major budget line, not an afterthought.
Emotional moments at camp matter less than what carries forward into daily life. Excellent ministries connect campers back to local churches, youth pastors, and mentors after the week ends. They follow up with campers, equip parents to continue conversations, and partner with churches rather than competing with them. Beware of camps that emphasize peak experiences without integration support.
Camp property is expensive to maintain — buildings, water, kitchens, recreation, transportation, insurance. Excellent ministries are transparent about facility costs, maintain their property well, and plan responsibly for capital needs without overextending. Look for ministries that explain financial realities honestly rather than hiding facility costs behind program rhetoric.
Christian camps vary in their theological emphasis — evangelical, denominational, charismatic, Reformed, and others. None of these is necessarily wrong, but they shape what is taught and modeled at camp. Excellent ministries publish clear statements of faith so donors and parents know what theological direction their kids will encounter. Look for transparent doctrinal frameworks rather than vague "Christian" branding.
Explore verified camp and conference ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.