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Military Kids Could Get Free NFL Camps in 2026, but Their Base Has to Win First


Updated: April 9, 2026 at 6:45 PM EDT

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Two teen boys play football at a pro camp.
Yokota High School students participate in an NFL ProCamp at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 12, 2025. Staff Sgt. Spencer Tobler/374th Airlift Wing
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The sign in the store makes it sound easy… free NFL camp, military kids, ages 6 to 14.

That part is true. What the sign doesn’t explain is the part families actually need to know; that children don’t simply sign up and go. First, their installation has to win that opportunity.

For the 14th straight season, the Defense Commissary Agency, the military exchanges, and Procter & Gamble are running the NFL ProCamps push for military children at select installations. The 2026 promotion runs from March 9 through April 5, and DeCA says purchases of designated (in-store promoted) P&G products at participating stateside commissaries and exchanges will help determine which installations receive camps. Winning locations are expected to be announced a few weeks after the promotion ends.

Sean Hanrahan, NFL ProCamp director, coaches NFL ProCamp participants at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 12, 2025.
Sean Hanrahan, NFL ProCamp director, coaches NFL ProCamp participants at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 12, 2025.

Why a Grocery Purchase Can Decide Whether Your Child Gets Access

This is not an individual lottery. It is a base-by-base competition built into a retail promotion. Families aren’t entering their children. Their community is competing through qualifying purchases made during the promotion window. That means the real starting point of this story is the commissary aisle, not a registration form.

According to DeCA, the camps are for children ages 6 to 14 from active-duty, Reserve, retired, and Department of Defense civilian families. Each camp can serve up to 150 children.

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NFL players lead instruction through skill stations, games, and competitions, and campers receive a T-shirt, a picture, and lunch. The agency also says the program has reached more than 20,000 children over time.

This is what makes the offer real. It’s not a giveaway item. It’s access to a professional-level experience most families probably wouldn’t get otherwise. Think, core memories… check!

What Happens After a Base Wins, and Why Timing is Important

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Winning the camp is only the first gate. Once locations are announced, families still have to register through ProCamps, which hosts the events and publishes camp-specific registration pages and details once camps are confirmed. That means a winning installation still doesn’t guarantee access for every child who wants a spot. Availability is limited by the number of camp slots at each event.

DeCA’s says this promotion is tied to participating stateside commissaries and exchanges. That means this version of the program isn’t universally accessible in the same way across the military community. Where a family is stationed still determines whether their installation can compete in this specific promotion.

The official release notes that two overseas ProCamps events had already taken place in 2026, including one at Andersen Air Force Base in Guam and another tied to Ramstein. OCONUS families are included as a part of the broader program, just not this specific stateside purchase-driven competition.

Yokota High School students pose for a photo during an NFL ProCamp at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 12, 2025.
Yokota High School students pose for a photo during an NFL ProCamp at Yokota Air Base, Japan, April 12, 2025.

What Last Year Shows About How This Works

In 2025, DeCA announced camps for children in eight military communities, including installations tied to Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Camp Pendleton, Fort Benning, Barksdale Air Force Base, Naval Weapons Station Charleston, Fort Leavenworth, and Fort Bragg.

That’s a pretty big reach to choose from when selecting military families. It’s also a reminder that this is a limited opportunity, even when it’s widely promoted. DeCA senior enlisted advisor Navy Command Master Chief Mario Rivers said military children face the “twists and turns” of military life and that these camps give them “a sense of normalcy and fun.”

Families interested in participating should note that the qualifying period for this prize ends April 5, 2026.

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Natalie Oliverio

Navy Veteran

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BY NATALIE OLIVERIO

Veteran & Senior Contributor, Military News at VeteranLife

Navy Veteran

Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 published articles, she has become a trusted voice on defense policy, family life, and issues shaping the...

Credentials
Navy Veteran100+ published articlesVeterati Mentor
Expertise
Defense PolicyMilitary NewsVeteran Affairs

Natalie Oliverio is a Navy Veteran, journalist, and entrepreneur whose reporting brings clarity, compassion, and credibility to stories that matter most to military families. With more than 100 published articles, she has become a trusted voice on defense policy, family life, and issues shaping the...

Credentials
Navy Veteran100+ published articlesVeterati Mentor
Expertise
Defense PolicyMilitary NewsVeteran Affairs

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