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Summer Camp Prep Checklist – SimplicetyAtHome.com

Prevention Starts Before Drop-Off

One of the most effective things a parent can do is check their child's hair before camp begins. If lice are present and go undetected, they can spread to an entire cabin within a few days — creating a much bigger problem for your family and the camp community.

This checklist takes less than 10 minutes and covers everything you need to do before your child gets on that bus. It was built by Pete the Lice Guy, who has handled over 13,000 lice cases and knows exactly what families miss before camp season.

The goal is simple: send your child to camp with a clean head and the right tools, so if lice do show up, you're already prepared to act fast.

Important: Complete this checklist within 48 hours of drop-off day for the most accurate results. Checking too early may not catch an early-stage infestation.
Pete the Lice Guy checking hair at camp

Complete Before Drop-Off Day

Click each item to mark it complete. Your progress is tracked automatically.

Hair Inspection Do This First
Check your child's hair in good lighting Use natural daylight or a bright lamp. Dim lighting makes nits almost impossible to spot. A window during daytime works best.
Section the hair into four quadrants Divide hair into four sections (front-left, front-right, back-left, back-right) using clips. Check each section individually and thoroughly.
Inspect the hotspots: behind ears and nape of neck Lice and nits are most commonly found behind the ears and along the nape of the neck. Start here before moving to the rest of the scalp.
Look for nits (eggs), not just live lice Nits are tiny, oval-shaped, and attached firmly to the hair shaft close to the scalp. They do not flick off like dandruff. A magnifying glass helps.
Run a fine-tooth nit comb through damp hair Comb through section by section, wiping the comb on a white paper towel after each stroke. Any lice or nits will be visible against the white surface.
Prevention Steps Before Packing
Tie back long hair or use braids Long loose hair significantly increases the chance of head-to-head contact during camp activities. Braids, buns, and ponytails all help reduce exposure.
Talk to your child about not sharing hair accessories Hair ties, brushes, combs, hats, and helmets should not be shared. This is one of the most common ways lice spread at summer camps.
Label all personal items (brush, comb, pillow) Labeled items are less likely to be borrowed or mixed up with a bunkmate's belongings. Use permanent markers or iron-on labels.
Pack a lice-repellent spray (optional but recommended) Tea tree or lavender-based sprays can provide an added layer of prevention. Apply lightly to the hair before activities each day at camp.
Packing Essentials What to Bring
Pack a personal nit comb (do not share) Include a quality fine-tooth nit comb for the camp nurse or counselor to use if there's a concern during the session. Keep it in a labeled bag.
Include your contact info for lice-related communication Make sure the camp has a current phone number and email address for you. If lice are found, fast communication means faster treatment.
Save the Simplicety toolkit link on your phone Bookmark this page or the main toolkit hub so you have Pete's resources available if the camp calls you during the session.
If You Found Lice During the Check Action Required
Do not send your child to camp until treated and cleared Most camps have a no-lice policy for drop-off. Treat first, verify clearance with a follow-up check, then contact the camp to confirm return timing.
Follow the full Action Plan before drop-off Visit our Found Lice Before Camp? page for the complete treatment process, recheck schedule, and what to communicate to the camp director.

Lice-Prevention Packing List

These items help prevent lice and make treatment easier if needed. Label everything with your child's name.

Must Have

Fine-Tooth Nit Comb

The single most important tool. A quality nit comb allows thorough checking and is the primary method of removal.

Must Have

Personal Hairbrush & Comb

Label these clearly. Never share brushes or combs — it's the fastest way for lice to transfer between campers.

Must Have

Hair Ties & Clips

Enough for the full session. Keeping long hair tied back daily is one of the most effective prevention strategies.

Recommended

Enzyme/Repellent Spray

Pete recommends a natural enzyme-based spray applied daily. It acts as a deterrent and makes the hair easier to comb through.

Recommended

Labeled Pillowcase

A labeled, personal pillowcase that stays with your child's bunk reduces the chance of cross-contact during sleep.

Recommended

This Toolkit on Your Phone

Bookmark the Simplicety summer camp hub so you have Pete's checking guide and action plan available instantly if needed.

Prevention Tips That Actually Work

After 13,000+ cases, Pete knows exactly what works — and what's a waste of time.

Head-to-head contact is the #1 risk

Lice cannot jump or fly. The only way they spread is direct scalp-to-scalp contact. Selfies, sleepovers, and huddles during games are the biggest risk moments at camp.

Buns and braids are your best friend

Any hairstyle that keeps hair off the shoulders and away from other heads significantly reduces exposure. Braids, tight buns, and ponytails all work well for camp.

Shared helmets are low-risk

Despite common belief, helmets and hats are rarely a vector for lice because lice don't survive long off the scalp. Head-to-head contact is far more likely.

You don't need to panic or clean the whole house

If lice are found, focus on the head — not the furniture. Washing pillowcases in hot water is enough for the home environment. Save your energy for the treatment.

Check again the day they return from camp

Even after a clear pre-camp check, do a follow-up inspection the day your child comes home. Catching anything early means a much easier treatment process.

The nit comb does the real work

Over-the-counter shampoos kill live lice but not nits. Manual removal with a quality nit comb is the only method that truly resolves an infestation completely.

Ready to Go? You're All Set.

If everything checked out, great — enjoy camp season. If you found lice, don't panic. Pete's Action Plan walks you through exactly what to do next.