Online AI camp for kids

The AI camp where kids ship something real.

Kids ages 6-17 direct AI in plain English to build real games, quizzes, tools, and websites — no coding required. A modern alternative to traditional coding camp, online and parent-controlled.

10-week camp: $150/kid · 4-week sprint: $79 · or try the free tier first

Why an AI camp, not another coding camp?

Syntax is what AI is best at. Directing AI clearly is the skill kids will actually use. That's what camp builds.

Traditional coding camp
  • One language's syntax, taught in a week
  • Most projects never leave the classroom
  • $200-400 for a single week, in person
  • Pace set by the room, not your kid
Xyplor AI camp
  • Direct AI in plain English — no syntax
  • Every kid ships a real project they keep
  • $150 for 10 weeks, fully online
  • Self-paced, age-adapted 6-17

Curious how it compares to other tools? See Xyplor vs Scratch and Xyplor vs Roblox.

How camp works

Pick a cohort

Choose a start date that fits your summer. Each cohort runs 10 weeks, fully online and self-paced.

Build week by week

Nova, the in-app guide, walks your kid from a first idea to a finished build through weekly milestones.

Ship & keep it

Your kid ships a real project for their portfolio — and keeps using Xyplor to build more after camp ends.

Parent-controlled

Every AI chat is parent-visible and safety-filtered. Kids sign in behind a parent PIN.

A fraction of camp cost

$150 for 10 weeks vs $200-400 for a single week of in-person coding camp.

Ages 6-17

The AI adapts to your kid's age, so beginners and teens both learn by building.

AI camp for kids — common questions

What is an AI camp for kids?

An AI camp teaches kids to direct AI — to describe what they want in plain English and guide the AI to build it, then improve it. At Xyplor, kids ages 6-17 use AI to build real games, quizzes, tools, interactive stories, and websites. The skill isn't memorizing syntax; it's learning to think clearly, give good instructions, and iterate — the skill that matters most in the AI era.

How is this different from a traditional coding camp?

Traditional coding camps teach a specific language's syntax over a week, and most of what kids build never leaves the classroom. Xyplor teaches kids to direct AI to build real, working projects in plain English — no syntax required — and every kid ships something they keep. It's also a fraction of the cost: a week of in-person coding camp often runs $200-400, while Xyplor's 10-week online camp is $150 per kid total.

What ages is the camp for?

Ages 6-17. The AI adapts to the child's age — a 7-year-old gets colorful games with big buttons and simple prompts, while a 14-year-old gets more sophisticated output and deeper projects. Both learn the same core skill: directing AI to build real things.

Is it safe for my child?

Yes. Every AI conversation is safety-filtered and visible to parents. Kids sign in behind a parent-set PIN, and creations require parent approval before they're published anywhere. Xyplor is COPPA compliant — no data sold, no ads, no cross-site tracking.

Does my kid need to know how to code?

No. Kids describe what they want to build in plain English, the AI creates it, and the kid plays, tests, and refines it. No prior coding experience is needed — the camp is about directing AI and iterating, which works for complete beginners.

How much does it cost?

The 10-week summer camp is $150 per kid (with a 15% sibling discount), and there's a 4-week sprint for $79. Outside of camp, Xyplor has a free tier (1-2 creations a day), Pro at $34.99/month, and Max at $54.99/month. You can start free anytime to try it before enrolling in a cohort.

What will my kid actually make?

Real, working projects: games, quizzes, interactive tools, stories, and websites. During the 10-week camp, each kid develops one project across guided weekly milestones — from brainstorming an idea to shipping a finished build they can show off and keep in their portfolio.

Give your kid a summer they can show off.

See the open cohorts, or start free today and try it first.