Buyer Guide

What Actually Matters When You're Buying Camp Insurance

A plain-English guide to buying camp insurance well — the questions worth asking, the coverage that actually matters for camps, and the gaps (like abuse coverage) that only surface at claim time. Not a ranking of insurers; a guide to making the decision.

By Maggie Holloway · June 3, 2026

What Actually Matters When You're Buying Camp Insurance

A plain-English guide to the questions worth asking, the coverage that actually earns its keep, and the mistakes that only show up when you file a claim.

Insurance is the line item every camp director pays and almost nobody enjoys understanding. It arrives as a renewal quote, the number is bigger than last year, you squint at it, you pay it, you move on. Then one bad afternoon — a kid breaks an arm on the climbing wall, a storm takes down a cabin, a parent's lawyer sends a letter — and suddenly the fine print you skimmed becomes the most important document your camp owns.

This isn't a guide to which insurer to pick. We don't rank companies, and anyone who tells you there's a single "best camp insurance" is selling something. It's a guide to buying well: the questions to ask, the coverage that actually matters for a camp specifically, and the traps that are invisible until the moment they aren't.

Start with what makes camp insurance different

A camp is not an office, a store, or a generic small business, and insurance built for those doesn't quite fit. You've got minors in your care, often overnight. You've got water, heights, fire, animals, vehicles, food service, and a seasonal workforce of nineteen-year-olds. You've got property that sits empty and exposed for months. And you've got the single highest-stakes risk in the business: something happening to a child.

That combination is why generic general-liability policies — the kind a broker who doesn't know camps might hand you — can leave gaps you won't see until a claim hits one. The first real question isn't "how much does it cost." It's "does whoever is writing this actually understand camps?" A broker or carrier that specializes in camps and youth programs will know to ask about your waterfront, your transportation, your overnight ratios. One that doesn't will sell you a tidy policy with a camp-shaped hole in it.

The coverage worth understanding before you sign

You don't need to become an underwriter. But a handful of coverage types do the heavy lifting for a camp, and knowing what they're for changes the questions you ask.

General liability is the floor — it covers the everyday "someone got hurt and it's arguably our fault" claims. Necessary, rarely sufficient on its own.

Abuse and molestation coverage is the one camp directors most need to understand and most often assume is included when it isn't. For a youth-serving organization this is not optional in any real sense, and it is frequently carved out, sub-limited, or sold separately. Ask explicitly whether it's covered, for how much, and under what conditions. This is the single most important "read the fine print" item in camp insurance.

Property coverage protects your buildings and equipment — but for a seasonal camp, the questions that matter are about the off-season: are you covered while the place sits empty? What about the specific perils your geography actually faces?

Participant accident / medical coverage handles camper injuries somewhat independently of fault, which can keep a minor incident from escalating into a liability fight with a family you'd rather keep.

Auto matters the moment you put campers in any vehicle, owned or not — including a counselor's own car on a supply run.

The point isn't to buy all of it at maximum limits. It's to know which of these your policy includes, which it excludes, and which it quietly sub-limits — before you need them.

The questions that reveal a good policy from a thin one

When you're comparing quotes, the premium is the least interesting number. Two policies at similar prices can be wildly different once a claim lands. These questions surface the difference:

  • What exactly is excluded? (The exclusions tell you more than the coverages.)
  • Is abuse/molestation covered, at what limit, and separately from general liability?
  • Are there sub-limits — caps on specific claim types that are lower than your headline coverage number?
  • What's covered off-season, when the property is empty?
  • Are all your activities named and covered? The high-risk ones — waterfront, horseback, climbing, archery, trips off-site — are exactly the ones that get excluded if not specified.
  • How does the carrier handle claims, and how fast? A cheaper policy with a carrier that fights every claim is not cheaper.
  • Does coverage extend to volunteers, seasonal staff, and board members?

A broker who knows camps will have answers ready. One who gets quiet or vague on the activity-specific and abuse-coverage questions is telling you something.

The mistakes that only surface at claim time

A few patterns show up again and again, and all of them are avoidable.

Assuming it's included. The most expensive words in insurance are "I thought we had that." Abuse coverage, specific high-risk activities, off-season property — these get assumed and then aren't there. Verify in writing.

Buying on premium alone. The cheapest quote often wins by excluding the things you're least likely to read about and most likely to need. Price is a real constraint, but the comparison has to be coverage-for-coverage, not number-for-number.

Letting the policy drift from the camp. You added a zip line, a new bus route, a teen travel program. Did the policy get told? Coverage is written against what you declared, and a camp that has quietly grown past its policy is carrying risk it thinks it insured.

Treating renewal as autopilot. The renewal quote is the one moment a year you have the carrier's attention and a natural reason to re-ask the questions above. Use it. Premiums rising across the industry is real, and the answer to a higher number is rarely just paying it — it's understanding what's driving it and whether your coverage still matches your camp.

Providers that work with camps

This isn't a ranking — there's no single "best," and the right fit depends on your camp, your activities, and where you operate. It's a reference list of providers that work with camps and youth programs, so you can see who specializes in what. A quick note on the type column, because it maps to that first question above: an agency shops the market on your behalf, a program administrator runs a specialized program placed through carriers, and a carrier underwrites the policy itself. Names link to their CampBuzz directory profiles.

ProviderTypeFocus / who they serve
A-G Specialty InsuranceProgram administratorStudent-athlete accident and special-risk for schools, sports camps, and clinics
AMSkier InsuranceSpecialty agencyChildren's camps, through a long-running dedicated camp program
Chalmers Insurance GroupIndependent agencyCamps and youth-serving organizations; Maine/New Hampshire region
Church Mutual InsuranceCarrierReligious organizations, camps, schools, and nonprofits
Great American Insurance Group (Specialty Human Services)CarrierYouth programs, camps, and human-services nonprofits
K&K InsuranceProgram administratorSports, recreation, and leisure programs, including camps
MarkelSpecialty carrierCamps, youth, and recreation programs
RPS Bollinger Sports & LeisureProgram administratorCamps, sports, and leisure programs
The Redwoods GroupSpecialty carrierCamps, YMCAs, Boys & Girls Clubs, and JCCs
Westpoint InsuranceIndependent agencySummer and sports camps, nationwide

Linked providers go to their CampBuzz directory profiles. This is a neutral reference, not a ranking or endorsement; confirm coverage, limits, and current offerings directly with each provider.

Where to start

If insurance has been a once-a-year squint-and-pay for you, the highest-value move isn't switching carriers. It's a single honest conversation — with your current broker or a camp-specialist one — built around two questions: what are we actually covered for, and where are the gaps? Bring your activity list, your off-season situation, and a direct ask about abuse coverage. An hour of that is worth more than any premium you'll save by shopping on price alone.

Insurance will never be the fun part of running a camp. But it's one of the few line items where understanding it a little better directly protects the kids, the staff, and the camp you've spent years building. That's worth an afternoon of fine print.

CampBuzz covers the companies, tools, and economics of the camp industry.

Author

Maggie Holloway

Editor, CampBuzz

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