Some places just
stay with you.

775 acres on Sebago Lake. Open since 1970.
Generations of families keep coming back.

Since 1970.

In 1970, Larry Gould opened Point Sebago on 220 acres of pine forest on the north shore of Sebago Lake. He called it a summer camp for the whole family. Six dollars and fifty cents got you a tent site. The Beatles had just released Let It Be. Apollo 13 had just made it home. Bell-bottoms were peaking.

More than half a century later, it’s 775 acres. Some of the kids from that first summer are grandparents now, bringing their kids and their kids’ kids up to the same summer camp.

A week here is whatever you need it to be. Lazy days on the beach. A round of golf or a paddle around the cove. Cornhole, pickleball, the marina, the fishing dock. Themed weekends when you want a party. A quiet porch at sunset when you don’t. Kids explore. Parents unwind.

The lake is the same lake.
So is the reason people come back.
Vintage Point Sebago — c. 1970s
Watch This ↑

Families who keep coming back.

Some of these guests are second-generation. Some are fourth. They’ve been writing the same vacation, summer after summer, for thirty, forty, fifty years.

The Caledonia family at Point Sebago

The Caledonias

First Visits: Jay, Early 1970s · Elizabeth, 1989

“That’s the magic of Point Sebago that intertwines us all. It’s like an invisible thread.”
— Elizabeth Caledonia

Jay started coming in the early 1970s. His daughter Elizabeth first came in 1989. The annual Caledonia crew is now thirty-plus people across cabins, an RV site, and a glamping tent. In 2024, their cabin (number 781) hosted twenty different families across eighty-four nights.

Bob Zafian, longtime Point Sebago guest

Bob Zafian

First Visit: 1971

“I’ve lived a really full life, but my summers in Maine really mean a lot to me.”
— Bob Zafian

Bob’s family found Point Sebago in a 1971 Rand McNally guidebook. He arrived at age ten, from New Jersey, in a Starcraft pop-up camper. Decades later, his parents’ ashes are scattered near the campground.

The Rondeau family at Point Sebago

The Rondeau Family

Three Generations

“My kids grew up coming here and now my ten grandchildren have become obsessed.”
— Julie Rondeau

Three generations. More than fifty family members. One week, every summer.

Sarah Ensminger and her family at Point Sebago

Sarah Ensminger

First Visit: Late 1990s

“I bring my two boys every year, even after we moved to Florida.”
— Sarah Ensminger

Sarah came as a kid. She got engaged at Point Sebago. Her sister met her husband here. Now she flies up from Florida every summer with her own two boys.

These families had a first trip. The Caledonias started in the early 1970s. Yours could be this summer.

PLAN YOUR TRIP →

Whether you’ve visited before or not.

First-Timers.

Traditions start here.

Most families find their way here once and spend the next decade coming back. It’s the kind of vacation that asks you to slow down and look up.

START YOUR TRADITION HERE →
The Regulars.

Generation after generation.

You already know the route up I-95. Your kid’s I Won It! shirt from the last trip is probably still in the rotation. Restart the tradition with another visit!

BOOK YOUR SPOT NOW →

How you’ll fill the days.

You don’t have to do everything. Most people pick a few things and lean into them.

Lake Life

Forty-five square miles of Sebago Lake. Sandy beach, full marina, boat rentals at Moose Landing. Kayaks, paddleboards, pontoon boats. Or float on a tube and don’t move for an hour.

Tee Time

Eighteen-hole championship course, 500 acres of pine forest, tees from 3,200 to 7,002 yards. PGA instruction if you want it. The 19th Hole when you’re done.

Game On

Twelve pickleball courts. Two tennis. Basketball, sand volleyball, shuffleboard. The whole sports center got a complete resurface in 2025, with new clinics and tournaments added for 2026.

After Dark

Live music every night during the summer. Variety shows, dance parties, karaoke. Beach bonfires and s’mores at the fire pit. The Tiki Bar with your feet in the sand. Some traditions hold.

The Brochure

Hour-by-hour daily schedules for every week of peak season. Hundreds of activities.

OPEN THE 2026 BROCHURE → Schedule Starts on Pg. 25 ↑

The Shirt

There’s a tradition here. Win an “I Won It!” T-shirt at one of the official events. The kids (and adults) take this seriously.

← Win One

Amazing Family Vacations

On Sebago Lake.

Sebago Lake covers 45 square miles of clear, cold water fed by the mountains to the west. It’s deep enough to feel like an inland sea, clean enough to see the bottom, and quiet enough that you can still hear the loons at night. The resort sits right on the water with a beach, docks, and an unobstructed view across the lake.

Different ways to wake up here.

Cabins, RV sites, glamping, the Island Lodge. There’s no wrong answer.

Cabins

Sleeps 4–6

“Waking up to the lake.”

Two bedrooms, a fully equipped kitchen, and a deck with a fire ring. Three levels of finish from basic to premium. Sleeps four to six.

RV Sites

Bring Your Own

“You bring the home. We’ll handle the rest.”

100 full-hookup sites scattered through the resort. Water, electricity, and septic on most. Pump-out service if you need it.

Glamping & Tiny Homes

Sleeps 2–4

“Roughing it, refined.”

Canvas-walled tents with real beds and small kitchens. Or the Stargazer, a double-decker tiny cottage with an upper deck. No air mattresses.

The Island Lodge

Sleeps 22

“When the whole family shows up.”

Three floors. Seven bedrooms, five bathrooms. Two kitchens, two living rooms, a hot tub, and a sauna. Reunions, milestone birthdays, the kind of week your whole side of the family decides to show up.

BOOK YOUR STAY →

A season on the lake.

Themed weekends all spring and fall, with the full Point Sebago summer experience at the heart of it.

Spring · May – June

Themed weekends start.

Spring kicks off with Opening Weekend, Mother’s Day, and Memorial Day. June rolls into Country Western, Pirates Adventure, Luau Beach, and Father’s Day.

EXPLORE THEMED WEEKENDS →
Peak Summer · July – August

Sunrise to sunset.

The activities runs from morning to night. Daily kids’ programs. Evening entertainment. Live music every night.

VIEW THE FULL SUMMER CALENDAR →
Fall · September – October

The leaves change.

The days cool down, but Point Sebago keeps the weekends lively with Labor Day, Lake Life, the Music Tributes Fest, Autumn Intrigue, Spooky Spectacular, and Halloween.

EXPLORE THEMED WEEKENDS →
≈ 1 hour from Portland, ME
≈ 1 hour from N. Conway, NH
≈ 2&12; hours from Boston
Portland Jetport closest airport · 30 min away

Your turn.

Sunny days and campfire nights, all season.

Come on up.

PLAN YOUR TRIP → (855) 964-2683