Martial Arts Summer Camp Curriculum: A 6-Week Plan You Can Teach From

What do you need to build a strong martial arts summer program?
A strong summer camp is built on four things—weekly themes, repeatable daily rotations, precise staffing ratios, and a marketing funnel that moves kids into year-round memberships.
Today, I'll show you how to create a curriculum your instructors can teach on day one.
Here's the best part: This structure isn't martial art specific—it works whether you're teaching BJJ, karate, taekwondo, kickboxing, or a mixed martial arts kids program.
This guide covers the operational aspects that other guides skip: student curriculum, staffing math, defensible pricing, and post-camp student retention.
Let's get into it.
Half-Day vs Full-Day: Pick Your Format First
Half-day or full-day?
This is the question you'll need to answer first. Your answer to this question changes everything that comes afterward—staffing, pricing, curriculum depth, and parent expectations, so it's important that you get this right.
- A full-day martial arts camp is daycare with extra steps. Parents enroll their kids with the expectation that they're paying for childcare. These camps compete with daycare, YMCA programs, and summer options for working parents.
- Half-day camps are sports clinics. Half-day sessions are great because you need fewer instructors and activity blocks, and less downtime programming. The downside is that your revenue potential is capped, and you're forced to compete with sports clinics.
The format you choose changes what families are willing to pay.
Not sure where to start? Start with a half-day model; it's a safer bet in year one.
Then, take a look at your local market. Does it already support YMCA-style childcare pricing? If so, full-day camps are much more likely to create long-term value.
Pricing: What to Charge and How to Defend It
It's easy for martial arts instructors to underprice their camps, comparing them to memberships. This isn't the right move.
A much more reasonable option would be to compare your camp pricing with daycare and full-day summer camp pricing.
Most martial arts school owners underprice their camps because they compare them to student memberships rather than childcare alternatives.
Here's the problem. Parents aren't comparing your camp to a two-day-per-week kids' class.
They're comparing it to local day camps, YMCA programs, gymnastics camps, soccer camps, and childcare options.
According to the American Camp Association, the average US day-camp pricing ranges from $73 – $87 per day. That said, there's a lot of regional variation. On the other hand, a quick Google search shows that full-day YMCA camps range between $220 and $575 per week, depending on location.
That creates defensible pricing:
Here's a real-world example.
Jose at Takeover Jiu-Jitsu runs a six-week full-day summer camp, serving approximately 60–70 kids daily. Their camp blends academics, literacy, dance, and jiu-jitsu programming.
This level of structure enables Takeover to justify premium pricing, as parents view its program as a complete summer package (rather than just mat time).
Not sure you can justify pricing for your summer camp?
Take some time to benchmark your direct local competitors. Search for gymnastics centers, ninja gyms, soccer academies, and YMCA camps in your zip code.
What are they charging for their camps? If all comparable camps in your area charge $325 weekly, pricing your camp at $175 signals weakness rather than value.
Staffing Math: Ratios, Roles, and Real Costs
This is the part where things get dicey. Summer camps tend to run into the same issues.
- If you're understaffed, your programs create safety problems, parent complaints, instructor burnout, and poor retention.
- If you're overstaffed, excess staff members destroy profit margins. Suddenly, it's easy to lose money on a summer camp program that was supposed to make money.
Across multiple Gymdesk Originals interviews, the working ratios consistently looked like this:
At NC Budo, sessions are capped at 20–25 students; age groups stay separated; this way, 5-year-olds aren't stuck training with 10-year-olds.
If you're an experienced instructor, you know that separation is essential during camp—energy levels and emotional regulation vary wildly by age.
This means you'll need three operational roles:
To staff their camp, NC Budo built a long-term staffing pipeline.
They brought former students from college back to help run their summer camps. It's a model that creates continuity, giving younger students role models they already trust.
See for yourself:
Staffing math breakdown
Here's an example of a full-day camp:
- 30 kids enrolled
- Six-week camp
- Four staff members total
- Eight-hour days
- Junior instructor compensation: $15–$17/hour
- Head instructor (paid at their usual rate)
If we use the Bureau of Labor Statistics childcare wage benchmarks as the floor, junior instructors' labor costs alone can easily exceed $10k across six weeks. Add a head instructor to the mix and you're adding another ~$7k.
Is this affordable? Well, that all depends on what you decide to charge your campers.
Example: full-day camp, 30 kids, six weeks, $325/week
(Numbers illustrative—swap in your own rate for the head instructor. The point: even at a conservative labor load, a well-priced full-day camp clears ~$40K gross margin over six weeks.)
The key is running the numbers ahead of time, before the first camper arrives. Do your best to set a fixed budget for your expenses.
The 6-Week Curriculum Framework
Your curriculum is the heart of your summer camp. If you nail your curriculum, you keep your campers and make it easier to convert them to annual memberships.
Your curriculum should be a single, repeatable structure with repeatable themes. These themes should change weekly.
Here's a structure you can use to customize your curriculum.
Weekly themes (your foundation)
A weekly theme turns "summer camp" into a story parents share with their neighbors and friends. Here's what these themes look like in action:
With the anti-bullying theme in week two, it's a good idea to frame self-defense concepts properly (i.e., teaching through awareness and competence rather than fear).
It's especially helpful if students learn that certain elements of conflict and violence are predictable.
In week four, trips to trampoline parks, go-karts, and bowling alleys add variety and lots of fun for your campers, without abandoning the camp's martial arts identity.
Daily structure
A rotating schedule is the easiest and most scalable model for your summer camp. It keeps kids engaged and prevents instructor burnout.
Here's a look at that schedule:
Each 'block' is broken into 10–15-minute segments, so it never becomes a single long lecture.
Half-day camps typically cut the afternoon blocks.
Why rotations, though? It's about kids' attention spans. Research shows that attention spans are roughly two to three minutes per year of age, with some researchers putting the upper limit at five.
Exceed that, and kids' attention spans collapse quickly. If you're working with the 4–7 age group, long lectures and extended drilling sessions won't fly.
Discipline-specific tweaks
You'll need to make some minor adjustments, depending on your martial arts program. Different martial arts require different emphases:
- For BJJ: Use movement games, positional rounds, turtle games, and obstacle courses. Not sure where to start? Here's a detailed guide on creating a kids' BJJ curriculum.
- For karate/taekwondo: Focus on forms, stances, kicking lines, and board breaks; these will fit naturally into showcase week. Here's a comprehensive guide on creating a curriculum for your karate or Taekwondo program.
- For mixed programs: With mixed programs, things are a little bit different. You'll want to rotate disciplines by day or week (e.g., takedowns, footwork, striking). It's surprising, but variety is a selling point for many parents.
Take a look at what's working well for the other schools and camps in your area. You'll want to figure out where you're positioned. Is your camp a premium option for families, or a specialty option for kids interested in competing?
Figure out where your camp stands ahead of time and plan accordingly.
Converting Camp Kids to Full Members
This is where most gyms lose significant revenue.
They build an amazing camp experience for their students—their kids have an incredible time, and their parents leave rave reviews about their program.
There's no follow-up at the end of camp, so their campers never transition to become regular members.
This is what separates profitable and unprofitable schools.
The best martial arts camps treat this transition as a natural part of the curriculum itself. Families are invited to continue their training, and the setup process is made easy.
Here's how they do it.
Step 1: Seed your conversation with parents
Instructors should be watching for progress indicators. Are their campers exceeding expectations? What are they doing well?
Look for ways to capture evidence showing improvement. Take videos and photos of the kids in action.
Then, send that photo or video to their parents along with a brief message.
"Did you see Cody nail that uchi mata throw?! Yes!"
Brag about their progress; you want to convey genuine excitement that your campers are getting it and doing well. If any part of this is insincere, don't bother.
This needs to be important.
Step 2: Mid-camp parent touchpoint
At the halfway point, instructors should have a one-on-one conversation with parents about their child's progress.
Specificity is the key here; you want to avoid generic praise—that looks like a sales pitch.
"So Cody has been making huge progress. His takedown game and footwork have been A+. He's consistently one of the top three during sparring. Have you thought about him continuing to train after camp? He's got a knack for this."
If you've followed step one, parents can see their child's progress. They can see your excitement for their child.
Keep the approach gentle and respectful. No pressure selling; just touch and go as you gauge parent reactions.
Step 3: Last-day offer
It's the end of camp, but that doesn't mean training has to end. If you give parents an irresistible offer, you're presenting them with a clear next step.
It should be a no-brainer.
For example, you give your campers (non-members) a free week of regular classes after camp ends. This works because it's a low-pressure move that gives families a clear next step.
Your irresistible offer should be:
- Printed—physical, in-hand, not just an email
- Deadline-driven—tied to a clear expiration
- Specific—names the exact classes included
- Redeemable—spells out how the family claims it
Step 4: Follow-up and family onboarding
Are you prepared for an entire family to join?
If the whole family decides to join, you want to move them into a family plan, so their siblings or parents can join later without headaches or hassles.
If you're doing this manually, it's a nightmare.
Use gym management platforms like Gymdesk to automate free trials, sign-ups, family accounts, attendance, and follow-up messaging to keep the process from becoming a nightmare.
Common Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)
Here are some of the more common mistakes gym owners make when creating their summer camps.
What a Defensible Camp Plan Looks Like
It only takes 6 weeks to create a defensible camp plan.
Six weeks from now, your martial arts summer camp will be well-planned, well-organized, and memorable—a profitable venture that produces a significant amount of income for your gym and grows student memberships.
Structure is the key.
A strong martial arts summer camp curriculum has:
- Weekly themes that parents can remember
- Daily rotations that keep kids engaged
- Staffing ratios that promote safety
- Pricing that's anchored to your local market and what it can support
- A funnel that turns campers into active members after camp ends
This is how you create an amazing camp experience, one that students don't want to leave. An experience that's appealing to kids and parents—something that goes beyond daycare on mats.
It starts with structure.
With the right gym management platform, creating that structure is straightforward. Gymdesk helps you to manage student registration, attendance, family billing, and trial-member conversions during camp season, everything you need to build your camp and grow your martial arts school.
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