Mallorca has three proper water parks, plus a handful of smaller splash options worth knowing about if a full day of squealing and slides isn’t quite what you need. Here’s the honest breakdown: what each one actually offers, what it costs, and which corner of the island it best suits.
1.
Aqualand, El Arenal
The largest water park in Mallorca and the best option for a mixed-age group travelling from across the island. Four zones cover most of a day: Adrenaline Fun for the big slides, Kidzworld for younger children, Family Fun for group rides, and Chill Out & Play for anyone who’d rather float than plummet. Two new attractions arrived for 2026, Kukulcán and Hurakán, joining long-standing high octane favourites like King Cobra, Tornado, Kamikaze and Anaconda – all best suited for older children and thrill-seekers.
Toddler friendly? Yes! Kidzworld for younger children includes MiniPark, designed for the smallest of splashers, Dragoland – a themed pool and Polynesia is a tropical-style splash pool – all without height restriction. There’s also Adventureland with twelve slides scaled for children of around 6yrs+ (min. height 1m50).
Food: Picnics allowed, but only in designated areas. On-site food covers pizzas, roast chicken, burgers, salads and chips, plus snack kiosks throughout.
Opening hours: 10h to 18h (closes at 17 in May, June, September). The season runs from early May to end September.
Prices (online):
Adult €37 | child (5 to 10) €29 | mini (3 to 4) €18
Family Pack (two adults, two children) €124 online.
Under three, free
Parking & access: On site parking for €8 per vehicle per day plus easy access from Palma; 15 minutes by car, or the EMT number 23 bus, which stops right outside.
Worth knowing:
Lockers €7/day, sunbeds €6/day or premium for €8/day. Purchasing a fast pass makes a significant difference to waiting times in July and August, at a significant cost however – from €45-€75 per person on top of the ticket price. If you plan on purchasing the pass, it’s best to do so online as they may be sold out on the day.
More info and tickets
2.
Western Water Park, Magaluf
The only themed water park on the island, split into three zones: Western Land, Indian Town and El Paso. The centrepiece is The Beast, rated the steepest water slide in Spain and one of the tallest in Europe, over 30 metres of near vertical drop. Boomerang, a fifteen-metre half-pipe, adds to the adrenalin, while Gran Cañón and Wild River offer a slower pace for younger or less adventurous riders. A big wave pool and Kidzworld, its own younger children’s zone, means it works for a mixed-age group too, not just thrill-seekers. Owned by the same group as Aqualand so expect similar facilities.
Toddler friendly? Yes. Kidzworld has three play areas without a height restriction, and with – with small slides suitable for children from around six years plus.
Opening hours: 10h to 18h (closes at 17 in May, June, September). The season runs from early May to mid-October.
Prices (online):
Adult €36 | child (5 to 10) €28 | toddler (3 to 4) €17,
Family Pack (two adults, two children) €112 online
Under three, free.
Food: Bring your own, as long as you eat it in the designated picnic and lawn areas. No glass, chairs, umbrellas, tables, pets or tents. There are also three on-site restaurants if you’d rather not carry a cool bag.
Parking & access: On site parking for €8 per vehicle per day plus easy access from Palma, Palmanova and the southwest coast by TIB bus. Bus 123 & 106 bus stop right outside.
Worth knowing: Lockers €8/day, sunbeds €6/day or premium for €8/day. Purchasing a fast pass makes a significant difference to waiting times in July and August, from €20-€40 per person on top of the ticket price. If you plan on purchasing a fast pass, it’s best to do so online as they may be sold out on the day.
More info and tickets
3.
Hidropark, Alcudia
The only water park in the north, and the smallest and calmest of the three proper parks. Six slide zones and a wave pool cover most of what’s here, plus a mini golf course if anyone needs a break from water. It suits younger children well, and works for a few sequels for families with big kids who can’t manage the drive south.
Toddler friendly: Hidrokids has a spraypark and a shallow pool with ankle-deep water for the smallest visitors.
Opening hours: 10h to 18h in July and August (11h to 17h in April, May, September and October; 10h to 17h in June). The season runs from 1 April to 30 October.
Prices (online):
Adult (11 to 60) €31.95 | Child (3 to 10) €17.50
Under three, free.
Excellent resident discounts available online (Spanish language website only)
Food: No outside food or drink, with the sensible exception of water and fruit. You can leave and re-enter free, so a lunch off-site is an option, and there are two restaurants with pizza, salads, burgers and a bar for cocktails, mocktails and more.
Parking & access: On site parking for €5 per vehicle, with a TIB bus route stopping nearby. If you’re based around Alcúdia, Playa de Muro or Pollença, this is the one to pick over driving an hour south.
Worth knowing: Lockers and hammock available at a small charge for day rental. The right size for smaller children, and less overwhelming than the other two. Older children, nine or ten upwards, tend to find the slides tame after an hour or so.
More info and tickets
4.
Katopia Splash Park, magaluf
Katopia is a themed splash zone inside the Katmandu Theme Park, a busy Magaluf attraction that also includes a 4D cinema, huge soft play, mini golf and laser tag. You’re booking a Katmandu day with a water session built in, not a fourth Aqualand.
What it involves: A themed water fortress with slides and over 150 interactive elements, including two 3,000-litre dump buckets. Sessions run ninety minutes including check-in and check-out. Height requirements: 1m for open slides, 1.20m for closed ones.
Opening hours: Katmandu Park is open 10h to 18h from April through end October (with the splash park open 12-18h outside peak summer months). Last entry to the splash park is at 16:30
Prices: Included in the general Katmandu Passport ticket.
Adult (12+) from €31 | kids (3 to 12) €22.
Under 3’s free
Resident discount available.
Worth knowing: Ideally suited to children aged 5-10yrs, not a substitute for a proper slides day for older kids.
More info and tickets
5.
Other Options
Palma Aquarium, El Arenal
A new Splash Pad landed this year with interactive jets, marine-themed figures and a giant palm tree that fills and tips over unsuspecting children at intervals. It sits in the outdoor play area alongside the existing splash zone and stranded pirate ship. Beyond the water play, it’s an aquarium first: Europe’s deepest shark tank, over 8,000 animals across 700 species in 55 tanks, and a 3D whale cinema on the upgraded ticket. Good for a non-beach day or a toddler too young for a proper water park, not a substitute for one.
More info
Reserva Park, Puigpunyent
This is a nature reserve in the Serra de Tramuntana, thirty minutes from Palma, built around a 3.5km forest trail past waterfalls and a sanctuary for rescued animals (bears, birds of prey, goats, donkeys). From 1 June to 15 September, semi-natural pools with waterfalls open for swimming, included in the entrance price. The trail is not stroller-friendly, babies under three need a carrier, and outside food isn’t allowed. A different sort of day out from a slides-and-splash park, and not to be confused with Sa Coma’s La Reserva at Protur Hotel below.
More info
6.
Hotels with Water Parks
A few Mallorca resorts with their own water parks sell day passes to non-guests, often with food and drink included. Worth knowing if you’re staying somewhere without a pool, or want a change of pace without booking a proper water park. They tend to be fairly basic in terms of comfort, at three of four-star all-inclusive hotels.
Drago Land, Inturotel Esmeralda Park, Cala d’Or. A shallow freshwater splash pool with mini slides and animal-shaped fountains. It’s a hotel splash park rather than a water park, and the day-pass pricing is very steep for what’s on offer, particularly for adults. Fine for children five and under who want an hour or so of slides. Past that age, the drive to Aqualand El Arenal is a better use of the day. More info
La Reserva, Sa Coma. The closest thing to a water park on the east coast: an African-themed pool complex attached to the Protur hotel group, with two main slides, a shallow kids’ area, a large jacuzzi and a pool across different levels. Officially for Protur guests, with pricing that depends on your board basis (all-inclusive guests pay the least). Non-Protur guests can buy a day pass that includes all food & drink, so expect to may more than a standard park entry. Better suited to children under twelve than teenagers.
More info
Fergus Club Mallorca Waterpark, Magaluf. The largest hotel water park in the Balearics, with slides, a children’s splash pool and a relaxation area. All-inclusive day pass includes the buffet and drinks but is only available when the hotel is not at full occupancy. Call to enquire.
More info
Globales Bouganvilla in Cala Millor sells all-inclusive day passes with drinks and snacks included. This is your east coast option if La Reserva below doesn’t work out.
More info
HYB Eurocalas (Garden Hotels), Calas de Mallorca. All-inclusive day pass with lunch, drinks and full water park access, plus tennis and volleyball courts if the kids need to burn off more energy.
More info
Prices and exact terms change regularly and passes are usually date-specific and based on hotel occupancy, so check availability directly through the hotel’s own booking page before you plan a day around a visit.
Practical tips
Fast Pass earns its keep in July and August, less so outside peak season. Available at all three big waterparks. Purchase online where available.
Water shoes for toddlers are worth packing for all three main parks. The ground gets hot for young in July and August.
Book online rather than at the gate. All three main parks charge more at the ticket office.
Outside food policy varies. Hidropark doesn’t allow it, except for fruit. Western and Aqualand both allow picnics in designated areas, and if yo want to keep it fresh and healthy, a picnic is your best bet.
Planning a trip to Mallorca? I create personalised itineraries and experiences for families who want to go beyond the beach and experience the best of the island. Get in touch.

















