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Planning a leadership retreat for your ministry team can feel like an unnecessary luxury expense, but it’s one of the most valuable things you can do.
In the middle of weekly services, meetings, and constant needs, it’s easy to keep moving without ever stepping back. A retreat gives your team the chance to pause, seek God together, and move forward with clarity.
If you’ve been wondering how to plan a leadership retreat that actually makes a difference, here are seven steps to guide you.

Before you book a location or build an agenda, take time to ask a simple question:
Why are we doing this?
Is your team in a season of:
Clarity here matters more than anything else. Without it, retreats can quickly become unfocused or surface-level.
Try to narrow it down to 2–3 key goals. That focus will shape everything else.
Where you go will shape how your team shows up.
Ministry leaders don’t just need meeting space; they need room to breathe. A good retreat setting should feel different than everyday life. Quiet. Unhurried. Restful.
Natural environments, in particular, tend to help people:
Look for a place where your team can step away from distractions and settle into a different rhythm, even if just for a few days.

Green Lake Conference Center
It’s tempting to fill every hour, but that’s usually when retreats become exhausting instead of renewing.
Instead, think in terms of rhythm, not just schedule.
A simple flow might look like:
Leave space between sessions. Some of the most important conversations happen in the margins.
Healthy ministry starts with healthy relationships.
A retreat is one of the few times your team can slow down enough to actually talk, not just about tasks, but about what’s really going on.
Prioritize:
This is especially important if your team is new, growing, or walking through change.
Trust doesn’t usually grow in meetings, but it often grows around tables.

This is one of the most overlooked parts of a ministry retreat, and one of the most important. Your team spends so much time leading others spiritually. A retreat is a chance to simply be with God again.
Build in space for:
Sometimes what your team needs most is unhurried time to listen.

The more complicated the logistics, the more they pull focus from what really matters. Think through:
Or consider choosing a place that handles most of that for you, so your team can stay present instead of managing details. Simple, smooth logistics create space for deeper work.
A great retreat can lose its impact quickly if there’s no follow-through.
Before you leave, make sure to:
Then revisit those decisions once you’re back in your normal rhythm. The goal isn’t just to have a meaningful few days; it’s to carry that clarity forward into your ministry.
A leadership retreat is about stepping back so you can move forward with intention. When you create space to seek God, listen well, and align as a team, the impact carries far beyond those few days. And if you’re in the early stages of planning, don’t overcomplicate it. Start with purpose, create space, and trust that God will meet you there.