How to choose the right holiday club for your child this summer

 

Six weeks. Forty-two days. One thousand and eight hours. However you count it, the summer holidays are long, and however much you love your children, “I’m bored” before 9am on day two is enough to drive even the sanest parent crazy.

For parents of primary school-age children, the summer break is both a joy and a logistical challenge. Your annual leave won’t stretch to six weeks. Your kids have too much energy to know what to do with, and somewhere in between work, life, and everything else, you need to find childcare that’s genuinely good – not just good enough.

That’s where holiday clubs come in. But here’s the thing: not all holiday clubs are created equal. Some are packed with sport, energy, brilliant coaches, and the kind of days kids talk about for weeks. Others are… less so. Knowing what to look for is the difference between dropping your child off with a smile and spending the day quietly hoping for the best.

So here’s your no-nonsense, parent-approved guide to choosing the right holiday club for your child this summer.

 

What to look for in a holiday club: your practical checklist

 

Ofsted registration

Let’s start with the big one. If your child is under eight, any holiday club providing more than two hours of childcare a day must be registered with Ofsted. This is a legal requirement, and it’s there for all the right reasons.

Ofsted registration means the club has been independently inspected and meets national standards for safety, safeguarding, and quality of care. It also unlocks something very useful for your bank balance: Tax-Free Childcare. Through the government’s scheme, for every £8 you pay in, they top it up to £10 – saving families up to £2,000 per child per year.

When you’re shortlisting clubs, always verify Ofsted status directly on the Ofsted website. Look for ‘Good’ or ‘Outstanding’ ratings, and if a provider has achieved multiple ‘Outstanding’ ratings across different settings, that’s a very encouraging sign that quality isn’t a fluke.

 

The people running it might matter more than anything

Great holiday club coaches aren’t just qualified in their sport or activity, they’re trained to work with children, brilliant at managing groups, endlessly enthusiastic, and the kind of adults who make a nervous four-year-old feel like they’ve found their people within about twenty minutes. That’s a skill.

It takes proper recruitment and proper training to get it right.

When you’re researching a club, look for:

  • All staff DBS checked – without exception
  • Coaches with recognised qualifications in their activity area
  • Clear, age-appropriate staff-to-child ratios
  • Specific training for working with primary school-age children

 

A daily programme worth getting excited about

The best children’s holiday clubs offer a wide, varied, structured programme of activities that gives children something genuinely exciting every single day. Not a vague timetable of “outdoor activities and crafts”, but real, well-coached sessions in sport, creative play, team challenges, and skills development – planned with purpose and delivered by specialists who actually know what they’re doing.

When comparing holiday clubs, ask to see the programme in detail. Specifically look for:

  • A genuine variety of sports and activities – enough to cater for every personality, from the sporty one to the creative one to the child who just wants to try everything
  • Skill development, not just entertainment – the best clubs leave children measurably better at something by the end of the week
  • Structure with breathing space – children need organised sessions AND time to just be kids
Multi activitiy Holiday Camp Hockey

Safety and venues you can feel good about

Many of the best holiday clubs run from school premises or established leisure facilities – familiar environments that children often already know. That familiarity matters, especially for younger children attending for the first time.

Beyond the venue itself, check:

  • Clear, secure sign-in and sign-out procedures
  • A robust safeguarding and behaviour policy (ask to see it)
  • Paediatric first aid trained staff on site
  • Sensible arrangements for bad weather (because this is the UK, and it will rain at least twice)
  • Easy, stress-free drop-off and pick-up for busy parents

 

Flexibility that fits real family life

Working parents don’t have rigid, predictable summers. Meetings move, childcare arrangements shift, and occasionally someone gets sick at spectacularly inconvenient timing. The best holiday clubs build flexibility from the start, because they understand what modern family life actually looks like.

Look for:

  • Day-by-day booking – so you’re not locked into paying for a full week you might not need
  • Early drop-off and late pick-up options – because school hours don’t always match office hours
  • Tax-Free Childcare and childcare vouchers accepted – so you’re not leaving money on the table
  • A fair, clear cancellation policy – life happens; you need a provider who gets that

 

What other parents actually think

Here’s the truth: no blog (including this one) tells you as much as a genuine parent review. Real feedback from real families is the most reliable indicator of what a holiday club is actually like day to day.

Before booking, look beyond the testimonials on the provider’s own website. Check Google Reviews, local Facebook parent groups, and independent review platforms. Look for recurring themes: Do children consistently come home happy? Do parents mention great staff by name? Are there any concerns that keep coming up?

Volume and consistency matter. A provider with thousands of reviews and a strong, sustained rating has earned that reputation through repeat bookings and genuinely happy families – not a lucky few five-star reviews.

Safeguarding holiday camps

10 questions to ask before you book

Print this, screenshot it, send it to yourself- whatever works.

  1. Are you Ofsted registered, and can I see your most recent inspection report?
  2. Are all staff DBS checked, and what are their coaching qualifications?
  3. What is your staff-to-child ratio?
  4. Can I see a sample weekly timetable?
  5. How do you group children by age?
  6. What activities are included in the price?
  7. What’s your plan when it rains?
  8. What are your drop-off, pick-up, and sign-out procedures?
  9. Do you accept Tax-Free Childcare or childcare vouchers?
  10. Can I book individual days, or is it full weeks only?

 

Why parents trust Premier Education

We know we’re a little biased, but thankfully, you don’t have to take our word for it.

Premier Education has over 25,000 Trustpilot reviews and is rated Excellent, and we’re genuinely proud of that, because those reviews come from real parents, talking about real experiences their children have had at our clubs. You’ll find parents talking about the coaches who remembered their child’s name on day one, the sessions that turned a reluctant joiner into a confident, enthusiastic participant, and the summers their kids still talk about years later.

Our holiday clubs are Ofsted registered, delivered by fully qualified, DBS-checked coaches, and packed with an enormous range of sports and activities – from football, tennis and gymnastics to creative arts, multi-skills, and team challenges – all tailored for children aged 4–11. We offer flexible day booking, accept Tax-Free Childcare, and run clubs right across the UK, so there’s very likely one closer to you than you think.

We don’t just want to be your convenient option this summer. We want to be the club your child asks to go back to.

Find a Premier Education holiday club near you and give your child a summer to remember.

Happy Kids. Healthy Futures.