ID CAMP GUIDE

Complete Guide to College Soccer ID Camps: Top Programs for Boys & Girls by Region (2026)

🎯 Navigate College Soccer ID Camps Strategically

ID camps offer direct access to college coaches—but choosing the wrong camps wastes $200-$600 per event. Learn which camps deliver real recruiting value, organized by region and gender—so you invest wisely in your college soccer future.

Introduction: ID Camps vs. Showcases—What's the Difference?

If you're navigating the college soccer recruiting process, you've likely heard about both showcases and ID camps. While showcases bring hundreds of college coaches to watch teams compete, ID camps are hosted by individual colleges at their own facilities with their own coaching staff.

This creates a fundamentally different recruiting dynamic. At an ID camp, you're training directly under the coaches who will decide whether to recruit you. You're on their campus, using their facilities, and getting evaluated in person by the decision-makers. For many players, particularly those targeting specific schools, ID camps offer more meaningful recruiting contact than large showcases.

However, not all ID camps are created equal. Some are genuine recruiting tools where coaches actively evaluate players for roster spots. Others are revenue generators where coaches show up for a few hours while assistant coaches run sessions. Understanding the difference—and choosing strategically—can save you thousands while dramatically improving your recruiting outcomes.

💰 The ID Camp Investment Reality

Typical ID camp costs per event:

  • Day Camps (Commuter): $150-$350
  • Overnight Camps (Residential): $400-$700
  • Elite Prospect Camps: $250-$500
  • Multi-Day Training: $500-$900

Annual Investment (3-5 camps): $900-$3,000

Critical Question: Are you attending camps at schools that fit your ability level and genuinely need players in your position?

Understanding ID Camp Types

Before diving into specific camps, understand that not all "ID camps" serve the same purpose. Here's how to decode what you're actually signing up for:

Camp Type Cost Range
Prospect/Recruitment Camp $250-$500
Purpose: Active recruiting tool for juniors/seniors
Best For: Players seriously interested in that specific school
What to Expect: Head coach present, roster evaluation, direct recruiting contact
Elite Invite-Only Camp $300-$600
Purpose: Top prospects by invitation
Best For: High-level players who received direct invitation
What to Expect: Small camp, intense evaluation, high commitment rate
Position-Specific Camp $200-$400
Purpose: Development + recruiting for specific positions
Best For: Goalkeepers, defenders, forwards seeking specialized training
What to Expect: Position coaches present, technical skill focus
Youth Development Camp $150-$350
Purpose: Skill development for younger players (U12-U15)
Best For: Freshmen/sophomores building relationships
What to Expect: Training focus, early exposure, less recruiting pressure
Team Camp $400-$800 per team
Purpose: Full teams attend together
Best For: Club teams wanting college exposure together
What to Expect: Games vs. other teams, college coaches observe

⚠️ ID Camp Red Flags

  • Generic Marketing: Email blasts to thousands without personalization
  • No Roster Needs Listed: Doesn't mention graduation losses or positions needed
  • Head Coach Absent: Only assistant coaches run entire camp
  • Huge Numbers: 100+ players at "elite" camp (can't evaluate properly)
  • Young Age Groups: Recruiting focus on U14-U15 (too early for most D1/D2)
  • Pay-to-Play Feel: More focus on revenue than actual recruiting

Top 10 ID Camps for Boys Soccer (By Region)

These camps consistently deliver strong recruiting value with head coach involvement, realistic roster evaluations, and proven commitment track records. Understanding the U.S. youth soccer structure helps you identify which level programs to target with your ID camp attendance.

Northeast Region (Boys)

School/Camp Division Cost
1. Georgetown Prospect Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (Big East) $350-$450
When: June, July
Location: Washington, DC
Best For: Elite D1 prospects, top technical players
Format: 2-3 days, head coach involved, small group sessions
Track Record: Consistent top-25 program, strong commitment rate
2. UNC Wilmington ID Camp D1 NCAA D1 (CAA) $250-$350
When: June, December
Location: Wilmington, NC
Best For: Strong D1 prospects, mid-Atlantic players
Format: Day camp, position-specific training
Track Record: CAA powerhouse, NCAA tournament appearances
3. Lehigh Valley United Prospect Camp D1 NCAA D1 (Patriot) $225-$325
When: July, August
Location: Bethlehem, PA
Best For: Academic-minded D1 prospects
Format: 2 days, combine-style evaluation
Track Record: Strong Patriot League program

Southeast Region (Boys)

School/Camp Division Cost
4. Wake Forest Elite ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $400-$500
When: June, July
Location: Winston-Salem, NC
Best For: Top D1 prospects, ACC-level talent
Format: 2-3 days, residential option available
Track Record: National championship program, top recruiting
5. UCF Soccer Prospect Camp D1 NCAA D1 (Big 12) $275-$375
When: June, December
Location: Orlando, FL
Best For: D1 prospects, Florida/Southeast players
Format: Day camp, multiple sessions
Track Record: Rising Big 12 program, strong development

West Coast Region (Boys)

School/Camp Division Cost
6. Stanford Soccer Prospect Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (PAC-12) $500-$600
When: June
Location: Stanford, CA
Best For: Elite academic & athletic prospects
Format: 3 days residential, intensive evaluation
Track Record: National championship program, Ivy-level academics
7. UCLA ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (Big Ten) $450-$550
When: July, December
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Best For: Top California/West Coast prospects
Format: 2-3 days, head coach directed
Track Record: Consistent top-10 program, strong PAC-12
8. San Diego State Elite Camp D1 NCAA D1 (Mountain West) $300-$400
When: June, July
Location: San Diego, CA
Best For: Strong D1 prospects, Southern California
Format: Day camp, combine testing
Track Record: Mountain West contender, NCAA appearances

Central/Midwest Region (Boys)

School/Camp Division Cost
9. Indiana University ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (Big Ten) $400-$500
When: June, July
Location: Bloomington, IN
Best For: Elite Midwest prospects, Big Ten level
Format: 2-3 days, residential available
Track Record: National championship history, top program
10. SMU Prospect Camp D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $300-$400
When: June, December
Location: Dallas, TX
Best For: Texas/Central prospects, rising ACC program
Format: 2 days, position-specific work
Track Record: New to ACC, strong recruiting momentum

Top 10 ID Camps for Girls Soccer (By Region)

Girls soccer ID camps typically see higher attendance and more competitive evaluation due to increased scholarship availability (14 vs. 9.9 for men). Many top programs host multiple camps throughout the year to evaluate prospects at different stages. For more context on the broader recruiting landscape, check out our college recruiting tips and resources.

Northeast Region (Girls)

School/Camp Division Cost
1. UNC Elite ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $450-$550
When: June, July
Location: Chapel Hill, NC
Best For: Elite national prospects, top 1% players
Format: 3 days, highly selective, invitation-focused
Track Record: Most national championships in women's soccer history
2. Duke Soccer Prospect Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $400-$500
When: June, July
Location: Durham, NC
Best For: Top academic & athletic prospects
Format: 2-3 days, residential option
Track Record: Consistent top-10 program, elite recruiting
3. Penn State ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (Big Ten) $400-$500
When: June, July, December
Location: State College, PA
Best For: Elite Big Ten prospects
Format: 2-3 days, multiple camp options
Track Record: National championship program, top Big Ten

Southeast Region (Girls)

School/Camp Division Cost
4. Florida State Elite Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $400-$500
When: June, July
Location: Tallahassee, FL
Best For: Elite Southeast prospects, ACC-level
Format: 2-3 days, intensive evaluation
Track Record: National championship contender, top-5 program
5. Clemson ID Camp D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $300-$400
When: June, December
Location: Clemson, SC
Best For: Strong D1 prospects, Southeast players
Format: 2 days, position-specific training
Track Record: ACC competitor, strong program culture
6. South Carolina Prospect Camp D1 NCAA D1 (SEC) $275-$375
When: June, July
Location: Columbia, SC
Best For: D1 prospects, SEC exposure
Format: Day camp, combine testing
Track Record: Rising SEC program, NCAA tournament team

West Coast Region (Girls)

School/Camp Division Cost
7. Stanford Women's Soccer Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (ACC) $550-$650
When: June, July
Location: Stanford, CA
Best For: Elite academic & athletic prospects
Format: 3-4 days residential, elite evaluation
Track Record: National championship program, #1 academics
8. USC Soccer Prospect Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (Big Ten) $450-$550
When: June, July
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Best For: Top California prospects, Big Ten level
Format: 2-3 days, head coach present
Track Record: Consistent top-10 program

Central/Midwest Region (Girls)

School/Camp Division Cost
9. Texas A&M ID Camp ELITE D1 NCAA D1 (SEC) $350-$450
When: June, July, December
Location: College Station, TX
Best For: Texas/Southern prospects, SEC-level
Format: 2 days, multiple session options
Track Record: Top SEC program, strong Texas recruiting
10. Wisconsin Soccer ID Camp D1 NCAA D1 (Big Ten) $300-$400
When: June, July
Location: Madison, WI
Best For: Midwest prospects, Big Ten exposure
Format: 2 days, position training
Track Record: Strong Big Ten program, NCAA appearances

Strategic ID Camp Selection Guide

How Many ID Camps Should You Attend?

Grade/Year Recommended #
Freshman/Sophomore 1-2 camps
Strategy: Development camps at schools you're interested in, build early relationships
Junior (Fall/Winter) 3-5 camps
Strategy: Attend prospect camps at top 5-10 target schools, active recruiting
Junior (Spring/Summer) 2-4 camps
Strategy: Follow-up camps where coaches showed interest, narrow school list
Senior (Fall) 0-2 camps
Strategy: Only if uncommitted and specific schools showing interest

ID Camp vs. Showcase: When to Choose Which

Scenario Choose ID Camp Choose Showcase
You have 3-5 target schools ✅ Attend their ID camps ❌ Too broad
You're exploring options ❌ Too narrow ✅ See multiple coaches
School showed interest ✅ Direct evaluation opportunity Maybe as supplement
Geographic specific (e.g., only California) ✅ CA schools' camps ✅ Regional showcases
Need wide exposure ❌ One school at a time ✅ 200+ coaches at once
Budget conscious ✅ Day camps $150-$350 ❌ $600-$1,500 total cost

✅ Your ID Camp Selection Checklist

  • Only attend camps at schools that match your academic profile (GPA/test scores)
  • Verify you match the athletic level (be honest about D1 vs D2 vs D3 ability)
  • Research roster needs (are they graduating players in your position?)
  • Confirm head coach will be present and involved (not just assistants)
  • Check camp size (under 50 players = better evaluation ratio)
  • Email coaches BEFORE registering to gauge interest level
  • Prioritize camps at schools you'd actually attend (location, major, culture)
  • Budget for 3-5 camps junior year, not 10+ (diminishing returns)

Regional ID Camp Strategy

If You Live In... Priority Camps
Northeast
(NY, NJ, PA, MA, CT, MD)
Boys: Georgetown, Lehigh Valley, UNC Wilmington
Girls: Penn State, Duke, UNC
Why: Strong ACC, Big East, Patriot League presence. Add Ivy League camps (Harvard, Princeton, Yale) if academic profile fits.
Southeast
(NC, SC, VA, GA, FL, TN)
Boys: Wake Forest, UCF, UNC Wilmington
Girls: UNC, Florida State, Duke, Clemson
Why: ACC dominance in women's soccer, rising SEC programs, strong regional recruiting
California Boys: Stanford, UCLA, San Diego State
Girls: Stanford, USC, UCLA
Why: Top programs stay in California, add Santa Clara, Cal, San Diego for more options
Texas/Southwest
(TX, OK, NM, AZ)
Boys: SMU, Texas schools (UT, Tech, etc.)
Girls: Texas A&M, Texas schools, Oklahoma
Why: Big 12, SEC presence, strong regional recruiting, less need to travel far
Midwest
(IL, IN, OH, MI, MO, WI)
Boys: Indiana, Big Ten schools
Girls: Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan schools
Why: Big Ten dominance, add Missouri Valley and Horizon League schools for D1 depth

Maximizing ID Camp ROI

📋 Pre-Camp Checklist (3-4 Weeks Before)

  • Email head coach expressing interest and confirming attendance
  • Include updated highlight video link (under 5 minutes, recent footage)
  • Send academic info (GPA, test scores, NCAA Eligibility Center ID)
  • Research team roster (who's graduating? what positions needed?)
  • Prepare 3-5 questions to ask coaches about program/school
  • Study team's playing style (watch games on YouTube if available)
  • Verify camp format, schedule, what to bring
  • If overnight camp, plan arrival/departure logistics early

📋 During Camp Checklist

  • Arrive early every day (first impression matters)
  • Introduce yourself to head coach in person (eye contact, firm handshake)
  • Wear same color/number throughout camp for identification
  • Play YOUR game - don't try to be someone you're not
  • Show coachability - respond positively to instruction
  • Communicate on field (coaches evaluate leadership/communication)
  • Engage during downtime - ask questions, show genuine interest
  • Exchange contact info with coaches who show interest
  • Talk to current players - ask about culture, academics, experience
  • Parents: be present but not overbearing (let player lead interactions)

📋 Post-Camp Checklist (Within 48 Hours)

  • Email head coach thanking them for camp opportunity
  • Reiterate genuine interest in program if true
  • Ask about next steps in recruiting process
  • If coach expressed interest, follow up with requested materials
  • Add coaches to monthly update email list
  • Update recruiting spreadsheet with camp notes/impressions
  • Reflect honestly: was this a good fit? Right level?
  • Adjust target school list based on experience

Common ID Camp Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake Why It Costs You Better Approach
1. Wrong Level Attending D1 elite camp when you're D3 level wastes money and confidence Be brutally honest about ability, target appropriate division levels
2. No Pre-Contact Coaches don't know who you are, just one of 50 campers Email coaches 3-4 weeks before with video, express genuine interest
3. Too Many Camps Attending 8-10 camps = $2K-$5K spent with diminishing returns Focus on 3-5 camps at realistic target schools junior year
4. Generic Interest "I want to play D1 soccer anywhere" shows no research/genuine interest Research specific programs, explain WHY that school interests you
5. Ignoring Academics Can't get recruited if your GPA doesn't meet school requirements Match academic profile FIRST, athletic ability second
6. Parent Overkill Helicopter parents approaching coaches makes player look immature Let player lead all recruiting communication and interactions

⚠️ The Harsh Truth About ID Camps

ID camps are NOT:

  • ❌ Guaranteed recruiting opportunities (coaches evaluate hundreds per summer)
  • ❌ Magic tickets to roster spots (skills matter more than attendance)
  • ❌ Necessary for every player (D3/NAIA recruiting often works differently)
  • ❌ Worth attending if academics don't match school requirements

ID camps ARE valuable when:

  • ✅ You've researched the program and genuinely want to attend that school
  • ✅ Your ability level matches their roster (be honest!)
  • ✅ You have skills ready to showcase (not still developing basics)
  • ✅ You've made pre-contact and coach knows who you are
  • ✅ You can afford it without financial stress on your family

Division-Specific ID Camp Strategy

Division Target ID Camp Strategy
Elite D1
(Top 25 Programs)
• Attend their camps only if invited or showing elite ability
• Email coaches FIRST with video before registering
• Expect very selective environment
• Budget: $400-$600 per camp
Reality Check: These camps fill with top 1-2% of national talent. If you're not ECNL/MLS NEXT/GA elite level, focus elsewhere.
Mid-Major D1 • Best ROI for strong D1 prospects
• Coaches actively recruiting at these camps
• More realistic evaluation opportunity
• Budget: $250-$400 per camp
Sweet Spot: Programs like CAA, A-10, WCC, Mountain West actively use camps for recruiting and have realistic roster spots.
D2 • Many camps are smaller, more personal
• Often better coach-to-player ratios
• Scholarship money often comparable to D1
• Budget: $200-$350 per camp
Advantage: D2 coaches often more accessible, genuine interest easier to gauge, academic scholarships stack well with athletic money.
D3 • ID camps less common (no athletic scholarships)
• Focus on campus visits and direct coach contact
• Academic fit matters more than camp attendance
• Budget: If camps exist, $150-$300
Different Approach: D3 recruiting emphasizes academics, campus visits, and direct communication more than camp attendance. Save money, visit campus instead.

The Skills-First Alternative Strategy

Here's the approach most families get backwards: they attend ID camps before their player has college-level skills. Coaches can evaluate technical ability in 15 minutes. If you're not ready, camp attendance won't help—it'll hurt by showing coaches you're not at their level yet.

The smarter sequence:

  1. Ages 14-16 (Freshman-Sophomore): Focus on building college-level technical skills through consistent daily training. Maybe attend 1 development camp to see college-level play.
  2. Age 16-17 (Junior Year): NOW attend 3-5 ID camps at target schools when your skills can genuinely compete at that level.
  3. Age 17-18 (Senior Year): Only attend camps at schools actively recruiting you or where you need final evaluation.

This approach saves $800-$1,500 (avoiding early camps before you're ready) while producing dramatically better results because coaches see a player ready for their level instead of someone still developing basics.

Build ID Camp-Ready Skills at Home

Before spending $1,500-$3,000 on ID camps, invest in building skills that will make you stand out when you DO attend. Coaches evaluate technical ability first—no amount of camp attendance replaces actual skill development.

Anytime Soccer Training provides:

  • 5,000+ follow-along videos building college-level technical ability
  • Position-specific training matching what college coaches evaluate
  • Affordable team ($6/player/year) and individual ($120/year) options
  • Systematic development that prepares you for ID camp success

Stop attending camps before you're ready. Build the skills FIRST, then showcase them strategically at the right programs.

View Pricing & Start Free Trial Get Free Training Resources

ID Camps vs. Showcases vs. Direct Contact: The Complete Picture

Understanding how ID camps fit into your overall college recruiting strategy helps you allocate time and money wisely:

Method Cost Best For
ID Camps $200-$600 per camp When you have 3-10 specific target schools identified
Showcases $600-$1,500 per event When you need wide exposure, exploring many options
Direct Email/Video $0 (just time investment) Always - should be your primary recruiting method
Campus Visits $200-$800 (travel) When coach has shown interest, evaluating fit
Skills Training $10-$20 per month ALWAYS - foundation for everything else

💡 The Most Cost-Effective Recruiting Strategy

Junior Year Investment Priorities (in order):

  1. Skills Development: $120-$240/year (Anytime Soccer Training or similar)
  2. Direct Email Campaigns: $0 (send 20-30 personalized emails with video)
  3. 3-5 ID Camps: $900-$2,500 (at schools that responded positively to emails)
  4. 1-2 Showcases: $1,200-$3,000 (regional showcase for backup options)
  5. Campus Visits: $600-$2,400 (only schools actively recruiting you)

Total Investment: $2,820-$8,140 (dramatically less than $10K-$20K many families spend)

Key Insight: Direct email with quality video costs $0 and often produces better results than expensive camps at schools that aren't a fit.

Final Recommendations by Player Profile

Player Profile ID Camp Strategy
Elite D1 Prospect • 3-5 elite program camps (Stanford, UNC, Georgetown, etc.)
• Only if invited or coach knows who you are
• Budget: $1,500-$2,500
Strong D1 Prospect • 3-4 mid-major D1 camps in your region
• Focus on programs that match your level
• Budget: $900-$1,600
D1/D2 Borderline • 2-3 lower D1 camps + 2-3 strong D2 camps
• Keep options open at both levels
• Budget: $1,000-$2,000
D2 Target • 3-5 D2 camps at programs matching your region/interests
• Better ROI than D1 camps if honest about level
• Budget: $800-$1,500
D3 Target • Skip most ID camps (not primary recruiting tool for D3)
• Focus budget on campus visits instead
• Budget: $500-$1,000 for campus visits
Late Bloomer/Uncertain • Start with 1-2 camps to gauge interest level
• Adjust strategy based on coach feedback
• Don't overspend until level is clear

Additional ID Camps to Consider (By Region)

While the top 10 lists above represent camps with the strongest recruiting track records, here are 25+ additional quality ID camps worth researching based on your geographic location and target division level. These camps consistently offer solid coaching staff involvement and genuine recruiting evaluation.

Northeast Region

NCAA D1 Programs:

  • Boston College (ACC) - Chestnut Hill, MA | $300-$400
  • Syracuse University (ACC) - Syracuse, NY | $275-$375
  • Rutgers University (Big Ten) - Piscataway, NJ | $250-$350
  • University of Connecticut (Big East) - Storrs, CT | $300-$400
  • Villanova University (Big East) - Villanova, PA | $275-$375
  • University of Maryland (Big Ten) - College Park, MD | $350-$450
  • University of Delaware (CAA) - Newark, DE | $225-$325
  • Fairfield University (MAAC) - Fairfield, CT | $200-$300

NCAA D2 & D3 Programs:

  • Messiah University (D3) - Mechanicsburg, PA | $175-$250
  • Williams College (D3) - Williamstown, MA | $200-$300
  • Amherst College (D3) - Amherst, MA | $200-$300
  • Franklin & Marshall (D3) - Lancaster, PA | $175-$275

Southeast Region

NCAA D1 Programs:

  • University of Virginia (ACC) - Charlottesville, VA | $400-$500
  • Virginia Tech (ACC) - Blacksburg, VA | $300-$400
  • University of Tennessee (SEC) - Knoxville, TN | $275-$375
  • Auburn University (SEC) - Auburn, AL | $300-$400
  • College of Charleston (CAA) - Charleston, SC | $250-$350
  • High Point University (Big South) - High Point, NC | $225-$325
  • Coastal Carolina (Sun Belt) - Conway, SC | $225-$325
  • Jacksonville University (ASUN) - Jacksonville, FL | $200-$300

NCAA D2 Programs:

  • Wingate University (D2 - SAC) - Wingate, NC | $200-$300
  • Limestone University (D2 - SAC) - Gaffney, SC | $200-$300

West Coast Region

NCAA D1 Programs:

  • Santa Clara University (WCC) - Santa Clara, CA | $350-$450
  • University of San Francisco (WCC) - San Francisco, CA | $325-$425
  • UC Berkeley (ACC) - Berkeley, CA | $400-$500
  • University of Washington (Big Ten) - Seattle, WA | $350-$450
  • UC Irvine (Big West) - Irvine, CA | $275-$375
  • Loyola Marymount (WCC) - Los Angeles, CA | $300-$400
  • UC Santa Barbara (Big West) - Santa Barbara, CA | $275-$375
  • Portland University (WCC) - Portland, OR | $275-$375

NCAA D2 Programs:

  • Cal State LA (D2 - CCAA) - Los Angeles, CA | $200-$300
  • Chico State (D2 - CCAA) - Chico, CA | $200-$300

Central/Texas/Midwest Region

NCAA D1 Programs:

  • University of Texas (SEC) - Austin, TX | $350-$450
  • Texas Tech (Big 12) - Lubbock, TX | $275-$375
  • Baylor University (Big 12) - Waco, TX | $300-$400
  • TCU (Big 12) - Fort Worth, TX | $300-$400
  • University of Michigan (Big Ten) - Ann Arbor, MI | $350-$450
  • Northwestern University (Big Ten) - Evanston, IL | $400-$500
  • Notre Dame (ACC) - South Bend, IN | $400-$500
  • Marquette University (Big East) - Milwaukee, WI | $300-$400
  • Creighton University (Big East) - Omaha, NE | $275-$375

NCAA D2 & D3 Programs:

  • Grand Valley State (D2 - GLIAC) - Allendale, MI | $225-$325
  • University of Chicago (D3 - UAA) - Chicago, IL | $250-$350
  • Washington University (D3 - UAA) - St. Louis, MO | $250-$350

📋 Before Registering for Any ID Camp:

  • Research the program's roster needs (check their website for graduating seniors)
  • Verify your academic credentials match school requirements (GPA, test scores)
  • Confirm head coach involvement (not just assistant coaches running camp)
  • Email the coaching staff BEFORE registering to gauge interest level
  • Check camp size (under 60 players = better evaluation opportunity)
  • Read reviews or ask club coaches about camp quality and recruiting value
  • Consider travel costs when comparing similar-level programs
  • Prioritize camps at schools you'd genuinely want to attend academically and athletically

⚠️ Important Note About This List

This additional list is provided as a starting point for research—not as an endorsement of specific camps. Camp quality, coaching involvement, and recruiting value can change year to year based on staff changes, roster needs, and program priorities.

Always do your own due diligence:

  • Visit the program's official athletics website to verify current camp offerings
  • Contact coaches directly to ask about camp format and recruiting focus
  • Check recent roster additions to see if they recruited from their camps
  • Ask your club coach if they have feedback about specific camps
  • Remember: attending the "right" 3 camps beats attending 10 random camps

Related Resources

📚 Complete Your College Soccer Knowledge


About the Author: Neil Crawford is the founder of Anytime Soccer Training and host of The Inside Scoop podcast. Having navigated ID camps, showcases, and the complete recruiting process leading to a professional academy placement, he helps families make strategic decisions about where to invest recruiting dollars—focusing on skill development first, strategic exposure second.