- Are Camp Illahee and Camp Kahdalea for Girls for the same ages?
- Camp Illahee accepts ages 6–16. Camp Kahdalea for Girls accepts ages 7–10. If your child sits at the boundary of either range, contact the camp directly — many programs run mixed-age internal grouping that lets them flex on the published cutoffs.
- Are Camp Illahee and Camp Kahdalea for Girls accredited?
- Camp Illahee is ACA-accredited (1921 years operating). Camp Kahdalea for Girls is ACA-accredited (69 years operating). ACA accreditation is voluntary — many excellent camps run without it. Tenure tends to be a stronger signal of operational maturity than accreditation alone, but both together carry real weight.
- What logistics differ between Camp Illahee and Camp Kahdalea for Girls?
- Camp Illahee publishes: lunch included, no transportation, no posted aid, no extended care. Camp Kahdalea for Girls publishes: lunch included, no transportation, no posted aid, no extended care. Logistics often determine which camp actually fits a working family's week — extended care alone can shift a $400 program to a more sustainable option than a cheaper program without it.
- How should I pick between Camp Illahee and Camp Kahdalea for Girls?
- Start by listing the three things that matter most to your family — schedule fit, price ceiling, kid's primary interest, friend group, transportation, or accreditation — and score each camp against your top three. Visit if logistics are close. Most Brevard parents we've spoken with say the deciding factor was either day-length fit or whether their kid already had a friend in one of the programs.