Directory · Charlotte · Ages 10–11 · 23 camps
Directory · United States · North Carolina · Charlotte · Ages 10–11

Summer Camps for ages 10–11 in Charlotte.

23 camps in Charlotte accept ages 10–11. Median week: $250; range $225–$300.

Tween-targeted summer camps in Charlotte skew either deeper-specialty (the kid has been doing this thing since age 7 and now wants the intensive version) or harder-fun (high-adrenaline activities the under-10 set can't do). The middle is harder to find than parents expect — there's a real "I outgrew the day camp but I'm not ready for sleepaway" gap.

Top 20 camps

  1. Summer Camp Activity #176934 · Ages 8–12
  2. Summer Camp Activity #175914 · Ages 6–12
  3. Summer Camp Activity #176830 · Ages 6–13
  4. Summer Camp Activity #176259 · Ages 8–13
  5. Summer Camp Activity #177735 · Ages 7–12
  6. Summer Camp Activity #176963 · Ages 6–12
  7. Summer Camp Activity #176792 · Ages 6–12
  8. Traditional Summer Camp · Charlotte Preparatory School · Ages 5–13 · $525/week
  9. Charlotte Elite Camp · Charlotte, NC · Ages 11–12 · $1750/week
  10. AGOC: Traditional Summer Camp 2026 · Arbor Glen Outreach Ctr · Ages 8–12 · $150/week
  11. Accelerate Academy · Waxhaw, Charlotte · Ages 5–12
  12. Acting Out Studio - Camp Acting Out · South Charlotte · Ages 7–12 · $300/week
  13. Acting Out Studio - Make Your Own Movie Camp · South Charlotte · Ages 7–14
  14. Acting Out Studio - Musical Performance Camps · South Charlotte · Ages 7–14 · $225/week
  15. Acting Out Studio - Summer Unlimited · South Charlotte · Ages 5–12
  16. Camp Mindy at the Levine JCC · South Charlotte · Ages 5–12
  17. Charlotte's Best After-School & Summer Camp · Charlotte · Ages 5–12
  18. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools Summer Learning Program · Various CMS Schools · Ages 5–18
  19. Kids Summer Pollinator Camp · Foxhound Bee Company · Ages 6–10 · $250/week
  20. Young Historians Academy Summer Camp: Unwrapping Chocolate History · Levine Museum of the New South · Ages 7–11

All Charlotte camps →

↘ What to look for

If the kid has a specialty, lean into it — a third year of ballet camp at the same studio is more useful than a generic week. If they don't, prioritize camps that mix activities the kid hasn't tried (rock climbing, surfing, woodshop, coding) over more of the same. Watch for camps that herd 10–11s into the same groups as 6-year-olds; that's a tell.