30+ camps along the Little Miami River and beyond — nature, STEM, arts, sports, and more. Spots fill fast.
Loveland is Ohio's "Canoe Capital" — and the Little Miami Scenic Trail running right through town makes it one of the best spots in Greater Cincinnati for outdoor summer camps. But there's a lot more than river camps. This guide covers all 8 categories for Loveland and the surrounding Clermont County area.
Loveland's setting along the Little Miami River and close proximity to Cincinnati Nature Center and East Fork State Park makes it exceptional for outdoor and nature-focused camps. These are the most-in-demand camps in the area.
One of Greater Cincinnati's premier nature education institutions. Located in Milford (8 miles from Loveland), Cincinnati Nature Center runs week-long day camps for ages 4–14 across their Rowe Arboretum and Long Branch Farm campuses. Programs include Wildflower Woods (early childhood), Explorer (ages 6–8), Junior Naturalist (ages 9–11), and Teen Wilderness (ages 12–14). Low camper-to-naturalist ratios and genuinely immersive outdoor science.
Loveland is the "Canoe Capital of Ohio" for a reason. Multiple outfitters on the Little Miami offer guided summer river programs for families and youth groups. Kids learn paddling, river ecology, wildlife spotting, and Leave No Trace principles. Ages 8+ for independent paddling; family floats for younger kids. Some programs include trail hiking on the Little Miami Scenic Trail connector.
East Fork State Park (Batavia, 15 miles from Loveland) runs junior ranger programs and naturalist-led summer sessions through the Ohio DNR. Campers explore Harsha Lake, practice fishing, wildlife tracking, and native plant identification. Sessions typically run weeklong during June–August. Affordable and genuinely educational.
Camp Kern (Oregonia, Warren County — 20 miles from Loveland) is the Greater Cincinnati YMCA's premier outdoor overnight camp on the Little Miami River. Horseback riding, canoeing, climbing wall, archery, campfires, and cabin life. Loveland families frequently use Camp Kern as their "big summer adventure" week. Week-long overnight sessions June–August.
The Loveland-Symmes Recreation District runs summer day camp programs that use the Little Miami Scenic Trail, the river corridor, and local parks. Programs range from traditional day camp (games, swimming, field trips) to outdoor-focused weeks with nature exploration. Affordable option for Loveland families who want outdoor programming without the price tag of specialty camps.
STEM options near Loveland are strong — Code Ninjas, BSTEM, and University of Cincinnati programs are all accessible. Best for ages 8–16.
Code Ninjas runs week-long summer coding camps for ages 7–14 at their Milford and Mason locations (both within 10 miles of Loveland). Kids learn Scratch, Roblox game dev, Python, and app building in a structured, belt-progression system. Sessions are half-day or full-day, making it easy to combine with other camps in the same week.
iD Tech operates summer STEM intensives at University of Cincinnati (20 miles from Loveland) across coding, AI/ML, game dev, robotics, and engineering tracks. Week-long residential or commuter options. Tracks for beginners through advanced — Java, Python, Unity, Roblox Lua, 3D printing, and more. Strong reputation among Cincinnati-area families.
BSTEM (Brilliant STEM) runs science, engineering, and robotics camps for K–8 at multiple Greater Cincinnati locations. Programs focus on hands-on engineering challenges, bridge building, LEGO robotics, and chemistry labs. Loveland families typically access the Milford or Mason sites. Week-long day camps with themed weeks that change each session.
The Cincinnati Observatory (Mt. Lookout, 15 miles from Loveland) runs summer astronomy camps for ages 8–14. Kids use real telescopes, learn constellation mapping, planetary science, and astrophotography basics. Evening sessions include actual stargazing. A uniquely cool option that stands out from standard STEM camps.
Arts camps near Loveland are anchored by Cincinnati Playhouse, Cincinnati Art Museum, and local theater programs. Great options for creative kids.
Cincinnati Playhouse (Eden Park, 18 miles) runs summer youth theater intensives for ages 7–17. Multi-week programs culminating in performances. Tracks include musical theater, acting, playwriting, and technical theater (lighting, sound, set design). One of the strongest professional theater youth programs in the Midwest.
The Cincinnati Art Museum (Eden Park) runs themed week-long art day camps during June–August for ages 4–13. Camp themes rotate: ceramics, illustration, painting, mixed media, and museum exploration. Campers create original work inspired by the museum's permanent collection. A wonderful option for creative kids who want fine arts over performing arts.
Arts for Learning runs artist-in-residency summer camps at partner sites across Greater Cincinnati, including east-side locations near Loveland. Campers work with professional teaching artists in drawing, sculpture, printmaking, and fiber arts. Strong program with real working artists leading each session.
CSO's education arm runs summer music camps for young musicians at the Music Hall campus. Instrument-specific sessions (strings, woodwinds, percussion, piano) and ensemble camps for older students. Loveland has a strong school music program — CSO camps are a natural extension for students who want to develop their instrument over the summer.
Sports camps near Loveland are anchored by FC Cincinnati youth programs, Loveland-Symmes Recreation leagues, and multiple specialty sports options across Clermont and Warren counties.
FC Cincinnati's official youth development arm runs summer soccer camps across Greater Cincinnati, including east-side locations accessible from Loveland. Day camps for ages 5–14 in week-long sessions — technical training, small-sided games, and FCC culture. Staff includes FCC Academy coaches. Great for competitive and recreational players alike.
Loveland-Symmes Recreation runs summer sports camps in basketball, volleyball, tennis, and flag football for ages 5–14. Local coaches, local kids — a lower-key alternative to elite academy camps that prioritizes fun and skill development together. Morning sessions typical (9am–12pm), leaving afternoons free.
Loveland City Schools' Loveland Community Pool and neighboring Clermont County facilities run summer swim lesson programs and junior swim camps. Week-long intensive sessions for ages 3–16, from beginner water comfort to competitive stroke technique. Early morning sessions leave afternoon free for other camps.
The Cincinnati Tennis Center (site of the Western & Southern Open) runs junior tennis development camps during summer at Lindner Family Tennis Center in Mason. Loveland families regularly attend — it's 20 minutes away and one of the best junior tennis programs in the Midwest. Beginner through advanced tracks.
Multiple travel baseball and fastpitch softball academies near Loveland run summer development camps and training weeks, including East Cincinnati Baseball Academy and Greater Cincy Girls Softball camps. Week-long day camps emphasizing hitting, fielding, and pitching fundamentals. Available at East Cincinnati complex fields and Loveland athletic facilities.
Loveland City Schools (nationally recognized, consistent top-10 in Ohio rankings) runs a strong enrichment and summer learning program. Low-cost, local, and surprisingly comprehensive.
Loveland City Schools runs summer enrichment for PreK–8 in academic acceleration, reading, math, art, music, and STEM exploration. Loveland Tigers Summer School also offers credit recovery for middle/high schoolers. Sessions are typically 3–4 weeks in June. Registration opens in spring — fills moderately fast for the most popular grades.
LHS varsity coaches in football, basketball, soccer, volleyball, and cross-country run summer skills camps for youth (ages 8–14) and incoming players. Attending LHS coach-led camps is a great way for young athletes to build community before they enter the school system — and the price is right.
Loveland City Schools partners with local STEM employers for a summer STEM academy targeting grades 4–8. Robotics, engineering design challenges, environmental science tied to the Little Miami River watershed, and career exploration with local professionals. Limited spots — priority to Loveland students but open enrollment if seats remain.
Full-day and week-long day camp options are essential for working parents. The Greater Cincinnati YMCA and local recreation centers have you covered.
The YMCA's Loveland and Milford branches run traditional summer day camps for ages 5–12, typically 7am–6pm with before/after care. Swimming, sports, arts, weekly field trips, and structured outdoor time. Financial assistance available. Consistent, reliable, and one of the few full-day options that works for two-job families.
Ohio State University Extension runs 4-H summer camps and clubs across Clermont County. Programs span animal science, gardening, cooking, environmental science, and community service. A uniquely Ohio option — kids get hands-on agricultural and environmental experience alongside traditional camp activities. Very affordable.
KidzArt offers traveling art education camps at multiple Loveland and Milford host sites (often libraries or community centers). Half-day week-long sessions focused on drawing, painting, and illustration for ages 5–12. Lower price point than major museum camps, still professionally led. Good option for younger children's first art camp experience.
Loveland has some genuinely unusual options that you won't find in other Cincinnati suburbs — particularly the medieval history angle thanks to Loveland Castle.
Loveland Castle — a hand-built medieval stone castle on the Little Miami River — is one of the most unique historical sites in Ohio. The castle runs summer youth programs in medieval history, castle-building history, knight culture, and hands-on demonstrations of medieval tools and techniques. Afternoon tours and special summer events. Truly one-of-a-kind — your kid will talk about this for years.
Pyramid Hill (Hamilton, 30 min from Loveland) is a unique 300-acre outdoor museum of giant sculptures in nature. Summer youth programs combine art history, outdoor exploration, and hands-on sculpture projects. Children's Adventure Museum on site. A wonderful crossover camp for kids who love both art and outdoor exploration.
Cincinnati Children's (one of the top pediatric hospitals in the US) runs competitive summer biomedical research programs for high schoolers and STEM exploration days for middle schoolers. For the future doctor or scientist — this is a resume-building, college-application-worthy summer experience. Limited spots; applications typically open January–February.
The Cincinnati Zoo's summer camps put kids behind the scenes with real animals. Junior Zookeeper programs for ages 5–16 include animal care, feeding, vet medicine basics, and conservation science. One of the best animal-focused camp programs in the Midwest. Camps run June–August in weekly sessions; overnight options for older campers.
Quick answers for Loveland parents
Loveland and the surrounding Clermont County area have 30+ summer camps spanning nature, outdoor adventure, STEM, arts, sports, and day camp programs. Loveland's location along the Little Miami River and proximity to Cincinnati Nature Center makes it a hub for outdoor and nature-based camps.
Most Loveland area camp registrations open in January–March 2026. Nature-based camps like Cincinnati Nature Center and Little Miami programs fill by April. Loveland City Schools enrichment programs open in spring. YMCA camps typically accept rolling registrations but popular sessions sell out by May.
Top Loveland camps include: Cincinnati Nature Center (Milford) for nature immersion, Loveland-Symmes Recreation day camps along the Little Miami bike trail, Camp Kern (YMCA overnight camp nearby), Loveland City Schools enrichment programs, Code Ninjas for coding, and FC Cincinnati soccer camps. Loveland Castle also runs one-of-a-kind medieval history programs.
Loveland day camps typically run $150–$350/week depending on specialty. Loveland City Schools enrichment programs are often $75–$200/week. Nature-based programs at Cincinnati Nature Center run $275–$400/week. YMCA camps offer financial assistance. Specialty camps (coding, arts, sports) range $300–$550/week.
Yes — Loveland is the "Canoe Capital of Ohio." The Little Miami Scenic Trail and river make outdoor camps especially strong here. Cincinnati Nature Center (8 miles in Milford), East Fork State Park, and Loveland-Symmes Recreation all run river, trail, and nature immersion programs for kids. Camp Kern nearby offers full overnight outdoor camp on the Little Miami.
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