🛡️ Safety Guidelines
Campline exists to keep camping alive by making it safe. These guidelines help you camp responsibly and look out for each other.
Before You Camp
Check the weather forecast
Look at the full forecast for your entire camp duration — not just the first day. Pack for the worst conditions predicted. Campline will send proactive weather alerts, but prepare before you arrive.
Pack essentials
Water (more than you think), snacks, portable phone charger, warm layers, rain protection, sunscreen, a small flashlight, and any medication you take regularly. Don't rely on nearby stores — they might be closed when you need them.
Don't plan to camp alone
Use the Campline buddy system to connect with another camper. Tell a friend or family member where you'll be and for how long. Share your phone's live location with someone who isn't camping.
Research the venue
Check the Venue Camp Intel in the community tab for bathrooms, food, lighting, and ground surface. If info isn't available yet, ask in the community chat — other campers who've been there before can help.
If you're under 18
We strongly recommend camping with a trusted adult. Make sure a parent or guardian knows where you are, how long you'll be there, and has agreed to the Campline terms on your behalf.
During Your Camp
Sleep when you can
Sleep deprivation is the number one health risk while camping. Campline's smart check-in system uses sleep mode at night so you can rest. Use it. Your spot is protected — that's why the system exists.
Stay hydrated and fed
Dehydration and low blood sugar cause dizziness, confusion, and fainting — especially in heat. Eat and drink regularly. Use your break bank to get food. Your health is more important than your position.
Watch out for each other
If someone near you looks unwell, dizzy, disoriented, or distressed — check on them. Use the "Someone Near Me Needs Help" button in the Safety Center if needed. It's handled privately and discreetly.
Keep your phone charged
Your phone is your check-in tool, your safety connection, and your communication line. Use a portable charger. Link a buddy so you're covered if your battery dies.
Use your breaks
Break time exists for a reason. Use it to eat, rest, walk around, use the bathroom. The Line Lead sets break hours equally for everyone. Don't skip breaks to "protect" your spot — the system protects it for you.
Know When to Step Back
Extreme weather is real danger
If temperatures are extreme (above 100°F / 38°C or below 20°F / -7°C), if there's a severe storm warning, or if conditions become unsafe — your position is not worth your health. Leave. Your keepsake and camp history will still be there. You can reinstate later.
Your health comes first, always
If you feel dizzy, nauseous, have chest pain, difficulty breathing, or any medical concern — get help immediately. Tap "I Need Medical Help" in the Safety Center. Don't minimize symptoms to keep your spot. No concert is worth your life. We mean that literally.
🚨 In a life-threatening emergency, always call 911 first.
Campline's Safety Center notifies your buddy and venue security, but it is not a substitute for emergency services. If someone is unconscious, not breathing, having a seizure, or in immediate danger — call 911.
🛡️ Our Commitment to You
Campline is built on the belief that fans should be able to camp safely for the artists they love. We provide tools — check-ins, buddy systems, weather alerts, safety reporting — to help make that possible. But we are not a security service or medical provider. Your safety ultimately depends on your own judgment, the people around you, and emergency services when needed. Camp smart. Look out for each other. And remember: the concert will be amazing whether you're position #1 or #50. Take care of yourself first.