Understanding Soccer ID Camps: Club tryouts, college recruiting, and the national pathway
How to tell the difference between paid showcases, local team clinics, and official national team scouts.
Key Takeaways
- Club ID sessions are glorified tryouts: These are run by local ECNL, MLS NEXT, or National 1 League teams to evaluate prospective players for their own rosters.
- College camps are recruiting businesses: High school players pay to perform directly in front of college coaching staffs.
- U.S. Soccer Talent ID Centers are invite-only: These are free, single-day events run by national scouts to find players for Youth National Teams.
- Leagues have their own scout bridges: Programs like ECNL PDP and US Club Soccer id² select players from regular matches for regional showcases.
The Local Roster: Club ID Clinics and League Showcases
If you play travel soccer, you will see clubs advertising "ID clinics" throughout the year. For the most part, these are club-level tryouts. Teams in MLS NEXT, ECNL, and the new National 1 League (the unified league launching in 2026–27) use these sessions to evaluate outside talent without the pressure of official spring tryouts. Players sign up, train under the club's staff, and get a feel for the team's level.
For players already on high-level club rosters, leagues offer regional identification pathways. Programs like US Club Soccer’s id² Program and the ECNL Player Development Program (PDP) are invite-only. Instead of signing up, players are scouted during normal league games. The league invites the top performers to regional camps where U.S. Soccer scouts and college coaches are on the sidelines.
The Recruiting Split: College Showcases vs. National Team Scouts
Once players reach high school, the identification process divides into two different paths: college recruitment and the national team pool.
College ID camps are commercial events. Players pay to attend, and the camp is run by a specific college or a group of them. These camps give you direct access to coaching staffs at schools you actually want to attend. For college coaches, it is an efficient way to see how players handle instruction, fit into tactical sessions, and interact with others off the field.
U.S. Soccer Talent ID Centers (IDCs) are entirely different. They are free, single-day events run directly by U.S. Soccer scouts. You cannot register or pay to attend. Players are invited based on recommendations from club directors or from being scouted during national league matches. The goal is to build the pool for the Youth National Teams.
Conclusion
Finding the right ID event comes down to your immediate goals. If you want to play in college, target the specific college camps of the schools on your list. If you want to move up to a higher club tier, look for local club-hosted ID clinics. And if you are aiming for the national pool, focus on performing consistently in your regular league matches where scouts are already watching.





