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Clackamas, Oregon
Portland Metro · Oregon
Youth Sports in Clackamas: Leagues, Facilities & What Families Need (2026)

Youth Sports in Clackamas, Oregon: Leagues, Facilities & What Families Need to Know (2026)

Youth sports in Clackamas, Oregon are organized through a layered system that most relocating families don't fully understand until they've been here a few months — and by then, registration for the sport their kid wants has already closed. The options are genuinely strong: a well-funded parks district, active independent leagues, and a flagship high school that competes at Oregon's highest classification. But the ecosystem is fragmented across several organizations, and knowing which one runs what sport can save you weeks of confusion.

What shapes the sports landscape here is primarily the North Clackamas Parks and Recreation District (NCPRD), a purpose-built district founded by voters in 1990 to serve more than 116,000 residents across Happy Valley, Milwaukie, and the unincorporated Clackamas County communities. NCPRD runs the facilities that many of the independent leagues also use, including the North Clackamas Aquatic Park and the Hood View Sports Complex. Layered on top of NCPRD are independent leagues — Clackamas Little League, the Eastside Timbers for soccer, Clackamas Youth Football through the Tualatin Valley Youth Football League, and the competitive Clackamas United soccer club, among others.

This guide is for both recreational and competitive families. If your child wants low-pressure Saturday leagues, this guide tells you which organizations run them and when to register. If they're chasing a travel team or varsity pathway, the competitive infrastructure here connects into a serious regional ecosystem — and that's covered too.

Clackamas, Oregon

Youth Sports Programs in Clackamas, Oregon: Full League Directory

OrganizationSportAge RangeType
Clackamas Little LeagueBaseball & SoftballAges 4–12Recreational
NCPRD Hoopers BasketballBasketballGrades K–12Recreational
NCPRD Sideout VolleyballVolleyballGrades 1–8Recreational
NCPRD Shooting Stars BasketballBasketballAges 5+Recreational
NCPRD Basketball ClinicsBasketballGrades 5–8Skills / Rec
NCPRD Rising Stars SoccerSoccer (Adaptive/Inclusive)Ages 8+Inclusive/Rec
NCPRD Dance and Cheer StarsCheer/DanceGrades K–2Recreational
Eastside Timbers Recreation SoccerSoccerPre-K–High SchoolRecreational
Eastside Timbers Youth Futsal LeagueFutsalU7–High SchoolRecreational/Competitive
Clackamas UnitedSoccerVariesCompetitive/Travel
Clackamas Youth Football (TVYFL)Football3rd–8th GradeRecreational/Competitive
Clackamas Youth Lacrosse (OYL)LacrosseGrades K–12Recreational
i9 SportsBaseball, Softball, Multi-SportYouth AgesRecreational
Soccer and basketball have the deepest coverage here, with multiple entry points from pure recreation to competitive travel. Lacrosse and football each have one primary program, so families interested in those sports have less flexibility on timing and structure.
Elizabeth Davidson, Cascade Hasson Sotheby's International Realty
Elizabeth Davidson Real Estate Broker · Cascade Hasson Sotheby's International Realty Top 2% Portland Metro · Specializing in relocation buyers
🏡 Realtor Perspective: Clackamas

One thing I consistently tell families relocating into the Clackamas area is that the youth sports infrastructure here is a genuine quality-of-life differentiator — and it's priced into the neighborhoods in ways buyers don't always realize. The $598,000 median home price in Clackamas gets you access to NCPRD's facilities, which were built with serious investment and serve this community in a way that many comparable suburban districts don't match. The North Clackamas Aquatic Park alone draws 250,000 visitors a year, and the Piranhas competitive swim team that trains there is a real draw for families with athletic kids.

What buyers consistently underestimate is how tightly the youth sports seasons drive the relocation timeline. Families who close on a home in October and think they'll figure out sports "after they settle in" often miss the fall volleyball and basketball registration windows entirely. I've started advising buyers to check NCPRD's registration calendar before we even finalize a closing date — especially for basketball, where the Hoopers program fills its spots quickly in the August registration window. The neighborhoods closest to Hood View Sports Complex and the aquatic park tend to generate the most repeat buyer interest from sports-active families, and that demand is reflected in how those homes hold value. If you're considering Clackamas and want insight into which neighborhoods align with your priorities and budget, I'd welcome the opportunity to share what I've learned from helping hundreds of families make this move successfully.

Clackamas Youth Sports: Sport-by-Sport Breakdown

Clackamas Youth Soccer Leagues (Eastside Timbers & Clackamas United)

The Eastside Timbers Recreation program is the primary entry point for youth soccer in Clackamas, running both fall and spring seasons for players from pre-K through high school across East Multnomah and Clackamas Counties. The focus is explicitly inclusive — skill level doesn't gate participation, which makes it the right starting point for kids trying the sport for the first time.

Outdoor games are played across multiple East Side fields, with Clackamas-area players typically assigned to nearby sites in the county. For indoor winter play, the Eastside Timbers Youth Futsal League runs November through February at Oregon Premier Futsal, located at 12402 SE Jennifer Street, Suite 190B in Clackamas.

Fall registration for the outdoor season typically opens in late spring, and the U8 and U10 age brackets tend to fill earliest. Spring season registration follows in winter.

Competitive track: Clackamas United (clackamasunited.com) offers tryout-based competitive travel soccer for families whose kids are ready to move beyond recreational play.

Clackamas Little League Baseball & Softball (Spring 2026)

Clackamas Little League runs a tiered spring program that starts with Tee-Ball for four- and five-year-olds and moves through Rookies, Farm, Minors, and Majors for players up to age 12. Registration fees range from $99 for Tee-Ball to $199 for the Minors and Majors divisions, and Opening Day 2026 is set for April 5.

Game fields are tied to the broader North Clackamas parks network, with the Hood View Sports Complex — a 35-acre facility at 16223 SE Stadium Way in Happy Valley — serving as the area's flagship baseball venue. The complex's four all-turf, lighted fields with scoreboards are a step above what most community leagues play on.

Spring registration typically opens in January and February, with the Majors division (ages 10–12) filling fastest as kids age out of recreational play and families want to secure a spot before tryouts.

Competitive track: Players who develop through the Majors division have pathways into All-Star tournament play and eventually into the broader Oregon Little League structure.

Clackamas Youth Football (SYFA: Tualatin Valley Youth Football League)

The Clackamas youth football program runs through the Tualatin Valley Youth Football League (TVYFL), one of the larger metro-area tackle leagues covering the Portland metropolitan area for students in 3rd through 8th grade. The program is based at Clackamas High School, 14486 SE 122nd Ave, which provides both practice facilities and game-day infrastructure.

The 2026 tackle season is expected to follow the same general structure as 2025, with the season launching in early August and registration running May through late July. Flag and non-contact options are available for families who want football exposure without full contact, with a later registration window running into August.

Registration for tackle tends to close before most families realize the season has started — the May 1 open date is earlier than many incoming families expect.

Competitive track: TVYFL feeds into regional competition across the Portland metro, with strong programs in neighboring districts that provide genuine competitive exposure for older players.

Clackamas Youth Basketball (NCPRD Hoopers & Shooting Stars)

NCPRD runs two distinct basketball programs. Hoopers is the flagship, running November through March for players in grades K–12, with registration opening in August. The Shooting Stars Basketball League runs January through March and is open to ages five and up, providing a lower-barrier entry for younger players mid-season.

The North Clackamas Aquatic Park and district recreation centers serve as primary gym venues. NCPRD also runs basketball clinics for grades 5–8 in October and November for players who want skill development outside of league play.

August is not when most families are thinking about basketball registration — which is exactly why Hoopers spots disappear before September. Set a calendar reminder.

Competitive track: Players ready for select-level play typically move into AAU programs based out of the Portland metro, which draw from the Clackamas area heavily.

Clackamas Youth Volleyball (NCPRD Sideout)

NCPRD's Sideout Volleyball program runs September through November, with registration opening in July. Grades 1–4 play in a coed format, while grades 5–8 shift to single-gender divisions. The program is recreational in structure, with an emphasis on fundamentals and age-appropriate competition.

Games are played at district facilities within the NCPRD service area. For families whose daughters are interested in the sport longer-term, Sideout is a logical first step before the club volleyball pathway that runs through Portland-area clubs.

July registration is easy to miss for families still finishing summer travel — the Sideout program is one of the most consistent "we didn't know it had already started" registration misses for new residents.

Competitive track: Club volleyball at the 12U and older levels requires joining a Portland-metro club; no competitive club program is based directly in Clackamas.

Clackamas Youth Lacrosse (Oregon Youth Lacrosse)

Youth lacrosse in Clackamas operates through Oregon Youth Lacrosse, which runs a spring recreational league for boys in grades K–12 across the state. It's a single-pathway program — there's no separate competitive division at the youth level within this structure, though high school lacrosse at CHS provides the varsity endpoint for committed players.

Spring season registration aligns with the broader spring sports window, typically opening in late winter. Families new to lacrosse should note this program is boys-only at the recreational league level; girls lacrosse opportunities connect into club programs out of the Portland metro.

Competitive track: High school players at Clackamas High School have access to varsity lacrosse through NCSD.

Clackamas High School Sports: Cavaliers — 6A Mt. Hood Conference

Clackamas High School competes at the 6A level — Oregon's highest OSAA classification — in the Mt. Hood Conference, going up against programs from schools like Adrienne C. Nelson High in Happy Valley (also in the North Clackamas School District) and other large public schools across the Portland metro. The Cavaliers wear red and black, and the athletics program has a track record that parents of competitive kids should know about: between 2016 and 2019, CHS football, volleyball, girls soccer, boys basketball, and baseball all advanced to state title games at least once, with football and baseball bringing home championships in 2017.

Fall sports at CHS include football, girls soccer, volleyball, cross country, and tennis. Winter brings boys and girls basketball, swimming, wrestling, and the school's Unified Basketball program — a genuinely supported inclusive athletics initiative, not just a checkbox. Spring sports include baseball, softball, track and field, boys soccer, golf, and lacrosse. The baseball program has historically been one of the conference's stronger offerings and remains a consistent draw for student-athletes in the area. Families looking for a high-visibility, high-expectation varsity program will find it here — CHS is not a school where JV is the ceiling.

Clackamas, Oregon

Clackamas Parks & Recreation Youth Programs

NCPRD's youth programming extends beyond league sports into a few specific offerings worth knowing. Dance and Cheer Stars runs in two sessions — January through March and April through June — for students in grades K–2, providing an introduction to performance athletics that isn't typically covered by independent leagues. Rising Stars Adaptive and Inclusive Soccer is one of the more thoughtful programs NCPRD runs: an August–September season for players ages 8 and up with diverse abilities, with registration opening in April. It's genuinely uncommon to find an adaptive sports program this well-resourced at the community level.

The North Clackamas Aquatic Park at 7300 SE Harmony Road in Milwaukie anchors the district's aquatic youth programming. The Piranhas competitive swim team trains at this 45,400-square-foot facility, which features six pools including a lap pool, dive well, wave pool, and a kiddie pool — all kept at 86 degrees year-round. The facility also has a 29.5-foot indoor climbing wall, an outdoor sand volleyball court, and a sundeck, making it a year-round hub for families well beyond swim season.

Todd Davidson, Executive Loan Officer at Rocket Mortgage
Todd Davidson Executive Loan Officer · Rocket Mortgage · NMLS #2003696 Specializing in Oregon & Washington home buyers statewide
🏦 Mortgage Perspective: Clackamas

Families relocating to Clackamas with youth sports in mind tend to gravitate toward neighborhoods like Sunnyside and Creekside, and for good reason — both offer quick access to the fields, courts, and recreation facilities that keep kids busy year-round. Howard Estates is another area worth watching, particularly for families who want more space without sacrificing proximity to league activity. Homes in these pockets that are priced well under $750,000 and situated near parks or school athletic programs routinely go under contract within days, not weeks. If youth sports access is genuinely driving your search, location matters as much as the home itself.

Before you fall in love with a house near Sunnyside's recreation corridors or Creekside's open spaces, sit down with a lender first. Your full monthly obligation includes property taxes, homeowner's insurance, any HOA dues, and your loan structure — and that complete picture often looks different from the purchase price alone. Knowing your comfortable budget, not just your maximum approval, means you can move quickly and confidently when the right home appears.

Clackamas Youth Sports Registration Dates 2026

SportOrganizationRegistration WindowSeason DatesWhere to Register
Baseball & SoftballClackamas Little LeagueJanuary–FebruaryApril–Juneclackamaslittleleague.org
Football (Tackle)TVYFL / Clackamas Youth FootballMay 1–July 28August–Octobertvyfl.com
Football (Flag)TVYFL / Clackamas Youth FootballThrough August 10August–Octobertvyfl.com
Soccer (Outdoor)Eastside Timbers RecreationSpring (fall season); Winter (spring season)Fall & Springeastsidetibers.com
Futsal (Indoor Soccer)Eastside Timbers Futsal LeagueFallNovember–FebruaryOregon Premier Futsal
Basketball (Hoopers)NCPRDOpens AugustNovember–Marchncprd.com
Basketball (Shooting Stars)NCPRDWinterJanuary–Marchncprd.com
Basketball ClinicsNCPRDOpens AugustOctober–Novemberncprd.com
VolleyballNCPRD SideoutOpens JulySeptember–Novemberncprd.com
Dance & Cheer StarsNCPRDWinter / SpringJan–Mar / Apr–Junncprd.com
Adaptive SoccerNCPRD Rising StarsOpens AprilAugust–Septemberncprd.com
LacrosseOregon Youth LacrosseLate WinterSpringoregonyouthlacrosse.org
Multi-Sporti9 SportsRollingYear-roundi9sports.com

Competitive Youth Sports in Clackamas: What Parents Should Know

The gap between recreational leagues and competitive travel sports in this area is real and worth understanding before your child makes the jump. Recreational leagues through NCPRD and Clackamas Little League are affordable, locally based, and designed for broad participation. Travel sports — through Clackamas United soccer, AAU basketball, club volleyball, or tournament-level Little League — involve tournament weekends frequently staged in the Portland metro, Salem, and occasionally Eugene or Bend. Budget $1,500–$3,000 per season for club fees, uniforms, and tournament entry at the youth travel level, with costs climbing for older age groups.

The geographic advantage of being in Clackamas specifically is that the Hood View Sports Complex and Oregon Premier Futsal are genuinely competitive-caliber facilities. Teams that train and play in this area aren't traveling into Portland for every practice — the infrastructure is local. Tournament weekends for baseball and soccer often stay within a 30-minute drive, which matters significantly for families managing two-sport households or younger siblings.

The honest reality for parents eyeing a varsity pathway: Clackamas High School's 6A Mt. Hood Conference competition is fierce. CHS coaches at the high school level are actively developing rosters from the community, and players who come up through the local recreational and club system have a visible advantage in tryouts simply through familiarity with local coaching expectations. Getting your child into the Eastside Timbers, NCPRD, or Little League pipeline early is not just about recreation — it's about building the experience that gets them ready for what 6A competition actually demands.

Clackamas, Oregon

Local Expert Takeaway: NCPRD basketball registration opens in August — which catches most families off guard because summer is still in full swing. If your family is moving to Clackamas in the July–September window and your child plays basketball, register for Hoopers the week you arrive. That program fills well before the fall school year starts, and waiting until October means you're on a waitlist for the January Shooting Stars league instead.

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Quick Takeaways & FAQs

When does Clackamas youth soccer registration open?

Eastside Timbers Recreation Soccer typically opens fall season registration in late spring, and spring season registration in winter. The indoor futsal league registration opens in fall for the November–February session. Families should check eastsidetibers.com directly, as exact dates shift year to year.

How do I register my child for NCPRD basketball in Clackamas?

NCPRD's Hoopers Basketball program opens registration in August for the November–March season. Registration is completed at ncprd.com, and spots typically fill before the fall school year begins. The Shooting Stars league in January offers a mid-season option for younger players who miss the main window.

What sports does Clackamas High School offer?

Clackamas High School competes in the 6A Mt. Hood Conference with a full athletic calendar: football, soccer, volleyball, cross country, and tennis in fall; basketball, swimming, wrestling, and Unified Basketball in winter; and baseball, softball, track and field, boys soccer, golf, and lacrosse in spring. The school has a strong history of state-level competition, particularly in baseball and football.

Explore the full Clackamas series: The Ultimate Clackamas Relocation Guide · Is Clackamas Safe? · Cost of Living in Clackamas · Best Neighborhoods in Clackamas · Clackamas Schools & Family Life · Clackamas Youth Sports · Clackamas Parks & Recreation · Retiring in Clackamas · 1031 Tax-Deferred Exchange in Clackamas · Clackamas First-Time Homebuyers Guide · Clackamas Down Payment Assistance Guide · Moving to Clackamas from California