Camp Info
| Ages: | 5–10 |
| Type: | Day |
| Month: | Summer |
| Gender: | Co-Ed |
| Setting: | City |
| Sports: | Sports, Soccer |
Oceanside, CA, USA
World Cup Soccer Camps Oceanside is a youth soccer day camp for boys and girls. The Oceanside location currently lists three camp tracks: Junior Academy for ages 5–6, Classic Skill Camp for ages 7–9, and Development Academy for older developing players. The broader World Cup Soccer Camps program serves players up to age 17, but the listed Oceanside camp sessions focus mainly on younger players and early teens.
The camp is best for children who want a full soccer experience rather than a general multi-activity camp. Younger players start with playful training, teamwork, and the game's basic building blocks. Classic Skill campers work on core skills and then apply them in game-like situations. Development Academy players get a more technical program designed for children with some soccer experience.
The tone is active, organized, and coach-led. Campers move through warm-ups, skill work, small-sided games, scrimmages, supervised breaks, and full-day lunch time. Players are grouped by age and ability, which helps newer players feel supported while giving stronger players enough challenge.
This camp will likely interest kids who enjoy soccer, running, team play, and steady practice. It is also a good match for children who need more touches on the ball before the next season.
| Ages: | 5–10 |
| Type: | Day |
| Month: | Summer |
| Gender: | Co-Ed |
| Setting: | City |
| Sports: | Sports, Soccer |
You won’t be charged yet. The camp will contact you to confirm all terms first.
You can still submit a quick request to let the camp know you’re interested.
World Cup Soccer Camps Oceanside is a day camp, so there are no overnight accommodations, cabins, dorms, or residential supervision. Campers attend during the day and return home after their registered session.
The Oceanside location offers half-day and full-day options. Half-day camp runs from 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Full-day camp runs from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Instruction begins after the early drop-off window, so campers have time to arrive before training starts.
Extended care is available for summer camps. Morning extended care runs from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m., and afternoon extended care runs from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. This time is supervised, but it is not extra soccer training. Activities may include board games, coloring, free play, and social time. Most extended care takes place outside in a shaded area.
Campers need to come prepared with food and water for the day. The camp checklist includes a healthy snack for the 11:00 a.m. break and a refillable water bottle. Full-day campers also need to pack lunch.
The camp schedule includes supervised breaks during the day. Full-day campers have a lunch and relaxation period before afternoon soccer activities continue. This midday reset is useful because the program includes running, ball work, games, stretching, and outdoor play.
Meals, snacks, and drinks are not described as provided by the camp. For a full-day camper, lunch should be easy to eat, filling enough for an active sports day, and packed with the weather in mind. Water is especially important because players spend much of the day moving on the field.
World Cup Soccer Camps describes its safety approach through staffing, training, grouping, and outdoor precautions. The camp maintains a low coach-to-camper ratio of about 10–12 players per coach. Some program materials describe a ratio of 1:12 or lower.
Coaches are described as certified, trained, screened, and prepared to work with children. Background checks through the DOJ and FBI are part of the staff screening process. Coaches are also listed as Safe Haven-Certified and CDC Concussion-Certified.
Campers are grouped by age and skill level. Coaches monitor players during the week and may adjust groups when a child needs a better fit. This helps keep training both positive and challenging.
The camp also builds in regular water breaks. Camp locations are selected with shade in mind, and tents may be used when extra shade is needed. Families are reminded to apply sunscreen before camp, which matters for a field-based summer program.
The health information available focuses on hydration, sun protection, concussion awareness, and illness or injury credit procedures. Campers should bring a refillable water bottle and sunscreen. Staff provide regular water breaks, and full-day campers have supervised rest and lunch time in the middle of the day.
Coaches are CDC Concussion Certified. That is relevant for a soccer camp because players may run, change direction quickly, jump, compete for the ball, or fall during games and drills.
If a camper leaves during the camp session because of illness, injury, or another reason, the family may request a prorated camp credit. If a camper does not check in and does not attend the registered session, a credit for the fees paid may be requested.
World Cup Soccer Camps Oceanside is organized around age-appropriate soccer development. Junior Academy introduces ages 5–6 to fundamentals through playful training, teamwork, and small-sided games. Classic Skill Camp gives ages 7–9 more structured work on passing, dribbling, shooting, ball control, and game situations. Development Academy is designed for players with some soccer experience who are ready for more technical training and stronger match performance.
Oceanside camp sessions are listed as Monday–Friday.
Half-day camp runs from 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Full-day camp runs from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
Extended care should be registered no later than one week before camp starts.
Extended care is supervised downtime, not additional soccer instruction.
Cancellations receive camp credit for the amount paid; cash refunds are not available.
Camp credit is transferable to a family member.