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Summer Camps in Fairfax, VA: A Directory Guide

Reviewed by: YouthCampsBase Editorial — editorial review only, not clinical/legal/financial reviewLast reviewed: 2026-04-25

Fairfax County Parktakes registration opens February 4. The popular weeks fill that day. If you're reading this in January, you have time to plan. If you're reading this in March, you're working the second-tier list and the waitlists. Bo...

Summer Camps in Fairfax, VA: A Directory Guide

Summer Camps in Fairfax, VA: A Directory Guide

Fairfax County Parktakes registration opens February 4. The popular weeks fill that day. If you're reading this in January, you have time to plan. If you're reading this in March, you're working the second-tier list and the waitlists. Both are real options.

Twelve camps below. Mix of public, private, specialty, and inclusive. Each one verified, named, and priced. We don't rank them. We surface what each program is, who it fits, who it doesn't, and what to ask before you register. Verify costs at the time of booking. Camps update annually.

Quick list


Fairfax County Parktakes camps

Type: Public, parks-and-rec Ages: 3–17 (varies by camp) Cost: $175 to $425 per week Registration: Opens early February, typically around February 4 to February 6 Fills fast: Yes. Same-day for popular weeks.

The default starting point for any Fairfax family. Parktakes runs camps at recreation centers and outdoor sites across the county (Audrey Moore, Cub Run, Spring Hill, Lee District). Programs cover general day camp, sports, arts, nature, and a handful of specialty tracks. The price is right. The supply isn't.

Returning campers and county residents register first. The popular McLean and Vienna sites fill in the first hour. South county sites and shoulder weeks (late August) hold seats longer. Full registration playbook in when does Fairfax Parktakes registration open.

McLean Community Center camps

Type: Private day, community-center-run Ages: 4–14 Cost: $300 to $600 per week, member discount available Registration: Opens in February for members, March for nonmembers Fills fast: Yes for members; nonmember slots can hold into April.

McLean Community Center runs day camps in the McLean Community Center building and at adjacent parks. Programs are general day camp with art, swim, and field trip rotations. Smaller and more structured than Parktakes. Worth the membership for families who use the center year-round.

Vienna Parks and Recreation summer camps

Type: Public, town-rec Ages: 5–13 Cost: $200 to $425 per week, town-resident discount Registration: Opens January for residents, February for nonresidents Fills fast: Yes. Town residents have a real advantage.

Vienna's town rec runs camps at Nottoway Park and the community center. Tighter capacity than Parktakes. Friendlier registration system. If you live inside the town of Vienna, this is often the easier book.

JCC of Northern Virginia day camp

Type: Private, JCC-affiliated Ages: 3–14, plus a CIT track for teens Cost: $500 to $900 per week Registration: Rolling, opens December Fills fast: Some weeks. Most hold seats past March.

JCC of Northern Virginia in Fairfax runs Camp Achva, a full-summer day camp with swim, sports, and Jewish cultural programming. Open to families of any background. Jewish content is part of the day, not a gate. Real swim instruction included, not just pool time.

Camp Highroad

Type: Overnight, Methodist-affiliated Ages: 7–17 Cost: $700 to $1,100 per week Registration: Opens December for returning, January for new Fills fast: Mid-summer weeks fill first.

Camp Highroad sits on 220 acres in Loudoun County, about 45 minutes from Fairfax. Christian camp, Methodist tradition, but the program is broader than chapel. Horseback riding, ropes course, swim, and outdoor skills. Open to non-affiliated families. A real first overnight option for kids ready to leave home.

George Mason University youth programs

Type: Specialty day, university-run Ages: 8–17 Cost: $400 to $900 per week Registration: Opens January Fills fast: STEM and computer science weeks fill first.

GMU runs a slate of academic and creative camps on the Fairfax campus (debate, robotics, theater, writing, computer science). Taught by graduate students and faculty. Day program. Good for kids who want one focus a week and like a college-feeling environment.

iD Tech at GMU

Type: Specialty day and overnight, tech Ages: 7–17 Cost: $1,000 to $1,800 per week (day); higher for overnight Registration: Opens November Fills fast: Yes. Coding and game design weeks fill earliest.

iD Tech runs a national chain of tech camps on university campuses. The GMU site offers coding, AI, game development, and robotics. Day camp for younger kids, overnight for older. Pricier than parks-and-rec by a wide margin. The supply is smaller than the demand for kids who want serious tech instruction.

Snapology Vienna

Type: Specialty day, STEM and LEGO Ages: 5–12 Cost: $375 to $525 per week Registration: Opens December Fills fast: Yes. The 5–8 bracket fills first.

Snapology Vienna runs themed weeks built around LEGO, robotics, and engineering challenges. Half-day and full-day options. A reasonable fit for the kid who wants STEM but is too young for iD Tech. Smaller groups than the big camps.

Capital Camps

Type: Overnight, Jewish-affiliated, Maryland-adjacent Ages: 8–16 Cost: $1,500 to $2,200 per week Registration: Opens November Fills fast: Yes. Returning campers fill returning slots first.

Capital Camps and Retreat Center sits in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania, but draws heavily from the DC and NoVa Jewish community. Jewish overnight camp with programming around community, swim, sports, and arts. Real first sleepaway option. Bus transportation from Northern Virginia included.

INOVA Sports Performance camps

Type: Specialty day, sports Ages: 8–17 Cost: $400 to $700 per week Registration: Opens January Fills fast: Soccer and basketball weeks fill first.

INOVA's sports performance camps are coach-led training programs, not general sports day camp. Position-specific work, conditioning, and strength basics. Right for kids who already play the sport competitively and want more reps. Wrong for kids who want to sample sports for fun.

Top Sail at the Potomac

Type: Specialty day, sailing Ages: 8–16 Cost: $500 to $700 per week Registration: Opens February Fills fast: Yes. Limited fleet.

Top Sail runs sailing camps at the Washington Sailing Marina on the Potomac. Real on-water instruction in small boats, US Sailing certified. A genuine niche. Most kids in NoVa don't have a way to learn to sail any other way.

The Auburn School summer programs

Type: Specialty day, neurodivergent-friendly Ages: 5–17 Cost: $600 to $900 per week Registration: Opens January Fills fast: Yes. Small program by design.

The Auburn School in Herndon serves students with social and learning differences year-round. Their summer programs run small ratios (typically 1:4) with staff trained in autism, ADHD, and anxiety supports. This is a specific accommodation, not a checkbox. If your kid was the one excluded by a generic camp's facilitator, this is the one to call.

For a fuller breakdown of inclusive options, see inclusive summer camps for neurodivergent kids.


How to actually get a spot

Three moves.

One: register for Parktakes the morning it opens. Full playbook in when does Fairfax Parktakes registration open.

Two: build a backup list of three private day camps before Parktakes day. If you miss the public registration, you go straight to backups without thinking.

Three: email the directors. The good camps reply. Ask what fills first, ask about scholarships if you need them, and ask whether they hold a few seats for late callers. Some do.

The waitlist is real. The waitlist moves. The full waitlist strategy is in summer camp waitlist strategy.

What to ask each camp before you register

  • Counselor-to-camper ratio for your kid's age group.
  • Counselor training: first aid, mental health, behavior support.
  • How they handle a homesick or struggling kid mid-day.
  • Refund and cancellation policy.
  • Whether they hold a few late-caller seats.
  • For inclusion: name the accommodation. "We welcome everyone" isn't an answer.

FAQ

What is the cheapest summer camp in Fairfax County? Fairfax County Parktakes camps at south-county sites and Vienna Parks and Recreation for town residents. Both run $175 to $425 per week. YMCA scholarships and Parktakes financial aid make those prices lower for qualifying families.

Are there overnight camps in Fairfax County? Most overnight camps in the corridor sit just outside Fairfax. Camp Highroad is in Loudoun, Capital Camps is in Pennsylvania (with NoVa bus). True in-county overnight is rare.

What is a Korean or Asian cultural camp option in Northern Virginia? Limited. Several families on r/nova have searched and come up short. The Korean summer camps in Northern Virginia page tracks current options.

Which Fairfax camp accommodates a kid with ADHD or autism? The Auburn School summer programs in Herndon, with caveats on capacity. Several Parktakes inclusion programs also exist. Call to confirm staff training. The blanket "we welcome everyone" answer isn't enough.

When should I start researching for next summer? November. Returning campers re-enroll in December for popular sleepaway and specialty programs. By Parktakes registration in February, the most-wanted weeks at the most-wanted sites are already half-shed to returning families.


YouthCampsBase is a directory. We don't rank, rate, inspect, or endorse the programs listed above. Programs change year to year. Staff turn over, costs shift, accommodations evolve. Verify pricing, ages, registration windows, and accommodations directly with each camp before booking. The reader evaluates; we surface options.


Disclaimer

This article is informational only and reflects best-effort research at time of publication. Information may change. We're a directory — we surface options and how to evaluate fit; we don't replace direct conversations with the providers, programs, or professionals listed. Editorially reviewed by YouthCampsBase Editorial. Not clinically reviewed. Last reviewed: 2026-04-25.

Health & safety note — last reviewed 2026-04-25. This page is general information for parents and caregivers, not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. AAP and CDC guidance changes; individual children vary. Talk to your child's pediatrician — and any specialists already involved in their care — about readiness for activities, screen time, sensory environments, and any program decision specific to your child. Recommendations and licensure rules differ by state and country; this page reflects U.S. guidance as of the review date and is not regulatory advice in your jurisdiction. In an emergency call 911. For suspected poisoning, Poison Help: 1-800-222-1222. Reviewed editorially by YouthCampsBase Editorial — editorial review only, not clinical review.

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