Camp is the biggest registration moment of the year for most Illinois parents. Park districts and libraries open summer registration in February or March, and the popular weeks at popular sites fill within hours. Two patterns to know: full-day camps (typically 9-3, with optional before/after care) at park district recreation centers, and specialty camps (sports, arts, STEM) that run as week-long focused programs. Pricing usually has a resident vs non-resident split; living inside the district line saves 20-40%. If your kid is on the younger side (4-5), look for half-day camp options at parks and libraries; full-day camp tends to assume school-age kids. Reading the camp page carefully is worth the time — supervision ratios, lunch policy, and water-day frequency vary widely.
Pekin, IL
Jun 1 – Jun 24
MO, WE 18:20–18:50
DragonLand Water Park · Pekin, IL
Jun 1 – Jun 11
MO, TU, WE, TH 10:10–10:40
Veterans Memorial Arena · Pekin, IL
Jun 1 – Jun 5
06:30–18:00
Pekin, IL
Jun 1 – Jun 24
MO, WE 18:20–18:50
Pekin, IL
Jun 2 – Jun 25
TU, TH 17:45–18:15
Pekin, IL
Jun 15 – Jun 25
MO, TU, WE, TH 10:10–10:40
Veterans Memorial Arena · Pekin, IL
Jun 15 – Jun 19
06:30–18:00
Pekin, IL
Jun 29 – Jul 9
MO, TU, WE, TH 10:10–10:40
Pekin, IL
Jun 30 – Jul 23
TU, TH 17:45–18:15
Pekin, IL
Jul 13 – Jul 23
MO, TU, WE, TH 10:10–10:40
Veterans Memorial Arena · Pekin, IL
Aug 10 – Aug 14
06:30–18:00
Most Illinois park districts open registration in February or March for the following summer. Popular weeks at the most-known camps fill within days, sometimes hours. Library reading-camp programs often open later (April-May) and rarely fill up.
Half-day options often start at age 3-4. Full-day camp generally assumes age 5+ (kindergarten readiness). Specialty camps (sports, science, art) usually have their own age minimums published, often age 6 or 7.
Most park districts charge resident vs non-resident rates. Resident is typically 20-40% cheaper. Boundary lines aren't always intuitive — your zip code may be served by an unexpected district, so worth checking before assuming non-resident.
Two questions to ask: supervision ratio (counselor:camper) and what's the daily structure. Programs that publish their daily schedule and ratios upfront are usually the well-run ones. Camps that don't publish either tend to be improvised on the day.
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