Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket

REVIEW · TENERIFE

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket

  • 4.3361 reviews
  • 1 day
  • From $14
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Operated by Pirámides de Güímar · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Six pyramids, and the sun does the timing. The Pyramids of Güímar park turns a strange archaeological puzzle into an easy, walkable day out, with museum stops and garden paths that don’t require any special gear. I especially liked the idea that the six stepped pyramids are aligned with the sun on key dates, and I also love the park’s bold contrast: a serious poison garden with 70 poisonous plants.

One thing to watch: ticket confusion is real. If you think you’re getting the big add-ons but buy the simpler option, you may end up paying extra on-site for premium areas like the poison garden or the exhibition.

Key Things to Know Before You Go

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Key Things to Know Before You Go

  • Sun alignment adds purpose: the pyramids are arranged to match the sun on key astronomical dates.
  • A full park day is doable: you can roam about 64,000 m² at your own pace.
  • The poison garden is not a joke: it features over 70 poisonous plants, including some of the most dangerous on the planet.
  • Botany lovers get a big win: the botanical garden is one of the five largest in the Canary Islands.
  • You can choose your learning style: guided explanations with a certified expert or an optional audio guide in multiple languages.
  • Wheelchair access is built in: the park is described as wheelchair accessible with well-maintained routes.

Entering The Güímar Pyramids Park: Part Museum, Part Garden Walk

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Entering The Güímar Pyramids Park: Part Museum, Part Garden Walk
This is one of those places where the format is the whole point. Instead of one big indoor museum, you get an open-air layout that mixes archaeology-style storytelling with the practical joy of moving through gardens and trails.

The setting helps. You’re in a volcanic-area feel, with paths that are well maintained and clearly signposted. There are rest areas too, so you’re not stuck doing a full sprint. And because nothing about the visit needs special equipment, the visit is friendly if you’re just dressing for comfortable walking.

If your idea of a great day on Tenerife includes a break from beaches and a chance to learn something odd, this delivers. The pyramids give you mystery. The plants give you something real to look at and read. And the museum bits help connect the story.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Tenerife

Sun Alignment: The Astronomy Angle That Makes the Pyramids Click

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Sun Alignment: The Astronomy Angle That Makes the Pyramids Click
The main attraction is the group of six stepped pyramids. They’re mysterious, and the exact origin isn’t nailed down. But the park uses a simple hook to turn that uncertainty into an experience: on key astronomical dates, the pyramids line up with the sun.

Here’s why you’ll likely enjoy this: even if you don’t know your astronomy terms, the idea is easy to follow. The sun becomes the “exhibit guide.” You’re not just looking at rocks. You’re looking at a pattern that has meaning, at least in the way the structures are arranged.

If you choose a guided visit, a certified expert guide explains several theories about how and why these pyramids might have been created. You won’t get one universally accepted answer, because the origins remain unknown. But you will get context that helps you place the mystery rather than just stare at it.

If you’re self-guiding with an audio guide, the same benefit holds. You can pause, look, and piece together the theories at your own pace—no group pressure, no rushing.

Practical note: the park highlights the alignment on key dates, so if you can time your visit around daylight hours, you’ll get the best chance to notice the intended effects.

Walking 64,000 m² of Trails: How to Actually Structure Your Day

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Walking 64,000 m² of Trails: How to Actually Structure Your Day
The park covers about 64,000 m², which sounds huge until you realize the layout is designed for strolling. Paths are described as clear, and the visit is meant to be flexible—especially since ticket types can change what areas you access.

I recommend thinking of your day as three layers:

  1. Pyramids + museum context

Start with the core attraction, then connect it with the museum stop so the story doesn’t float off on its own.

  1. Botanical gardens

This is where the visit slows down in a good way. The botanical garden is one of the five largest in the Canary Islands, so you’re not just walking past a few beds of plants. You’re spending time in a proper garden environment that gives you a different kind of learning.

  1. Specialty areas (poison garden and exhibition, if your ticket includes them)

If you’re choosing premium access, plan extra time. The poison garden in particular pulls you in because it’s built around a theme—plants that can seriously harm people.

You can do this in a full day without feeling like you need to sprint. The whole point is wandering with purpose.

The Poison Garden: 70 Risky Plants You Can Learn From

If you’re the type of person who reads plant labels and wants to know what’s safe, what’s not, and why, the poison garden will likely be one of the most memorable parts of the day.

The park’s poison garden has over 70 poisonous plants and is described as featuring some of the most dangerous plants on the planet. That doesn’t mean you’re being reckless; it’s an educational experience. You’ll be walking through the park with the theme turned up: identification, risk, and how dangerous beauty can be.

The biggest practical takeaway for you: wear comfortable shoes and take your time reading. This is one of those areas where skimming defeats the purpose. Also, because it’s themed around toxicity, you’ll likely be extra glad the park keeps paths maintained and signposted.

A small caution for planning: premium poison garden access may depend on your ticket. So double-check whether your entry includes it before you arrive.

Botanical Garden Time: One of the Canary Islands’ Biggest

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Botanical Garden Time: One of the Canary Islands’ Biggest
The botanical garden is listed as one of the five largest botanical gardens in the Canary Islands, and that matters because it changes how you experience the park.

Instead of treating the gardens as a “nice extra,” you can treat them as a full segment of the visit. You’ll have time to wander through specialized garden sections and see plants grouped for learning.

This is also where the park’s overall personality comes through. The pyramids give you the human-mystery side. The gardens give you the living-world side. Together, it makes the day feel more rounded than a typical archaeological stop.

If you’re traveling with kids, this portion often works well. Gardens turn learning into something you can look at instead of something you sit and hear.

The Museum and the Rapa Nui Exhibition: A Broader World View

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - The Museum and the Rapa Nui Exhibition: A Broader World View
The park includes a museum, and some ticket options add an exhibition called “Rapa Nui. Polynesia: Extreme Survival.”

This is one of the ways the park connects its own mystery with bigger stories of human survival and culture. The exhibition is described as interactive in terms of materials on aboriginal cultures, which can make the learning feel more hands-on than standard museum signage.

Here’s the value for you: even if you came for the pyramids and the sun alignment, the exhibition shifts your mind from one island to many island cultures. It also fills out your day if you want more than outdoor walking.

If you choose the full-access ticket, it’s noted as including the Rapa Nui exhibition. If you choose a more basic option, the exhibition may be available via premium add-on. So again: check your ticket type before you arrive.

Ticket Options: Full Access vs Basic vs Audio Guide

This park gives you choices, and that’s good—just be careful about what each option includes.

Here’s the practical breakdown:

  • Full-access ticket: entry to all park areas. It also includes the Rapa Nui exhibition.
  • Basic ticket: a simpler route (so you may miss some areas).
  • Audio guide: available so you can explore at your own pace. It’s offered in Spanish, English, German, French, Italian, Russian, and Norwegian.
  • Premium add-ons: access to the poison garden and the Polynesian exhibition is described as available with premium options.

This is the part where a bit of planning saves hassle. If you want the poison garden and the exhibition, you’ll want the ticket that includes those areas without surprise upgrades.

One quick piece of wisdom: if you’re the type who hates paying extra at the last minute, don’t assume. Confirm which areas are actually included before you head in.

Getting Your Bearings: What to Wear and How Long to Plan

The visit is described as comfortable and safe for all visitors, with well-maintained paths and clearly marked routes. You don’t need special equipment.

For you, that means the basics matter:

  • Wear comfortable clothing and walking shoes
  • Bring water if you tend to get thirsty on walks (food and drinks aren’t listed as included)

The park is set up so you can move freely, and you can add a guided visit if you want the certified expert guide to connect the dots for you. If you prefer self-paced learning, use the audio guide instead.

Time-wise, think in terms of a day rather than a quick stop. Even if you don’t linger at every garden label, between pyramids, museum, and botanical sections, you’ll feel better with a full day to work with.

Price and Value: Is 14 Dollars a Fair Deal?

Guïmar: Pyramids of Güímar Ethnographic Park Entry Ticket - Price and Value: Is 14 Dollars a Fair Deal?
At about $14 per person, this ticket lands in a sensible range for a Tenerife day that mixes three things at once: a notable open-air attraction, indoor/interpretive learning, and major garden time.

Where the value becomes clear is when you match your interests:

  • If you want outdoor curiosity (pyramids, sun alignment, walking trails), you’ll feel like you got your money’s worth just on that alone.
  • If you love plants and reading labels, the botanical garden size plus the poison garden theme can make the whole place feel like a real experience rather than a drive-by attraction.
  • If you want cultural context, the museum and the Rapa Nui exhibition add more meaning to the day.

If you only care about one piece—say, just the pyramids—you might feel you’re paying for more than you’ll use. Still, the route is designed to be flexible, so you can skip what doesn’t grab you.

With a 4.3 rating from 361 reviews, it’s clearly popular. What that usually means in practice: the park functions well, people tend to leave feeling they got a solid day that isn’t boring.

Best Fit: Who Should Choose the Güímar Pyramids Experience?

This is a great match for:

  • Families who want a break from beach time and a place that stays interesting as you walk
  • History-and-mystery fans who don’t need everything to be proven beyond doubt
  • Garden lovers who enjoy botanical learning
  • Anyone who likes the mix of “what if” theories and real-world observation

It’s less perfect if you expect a fully solved archaeological case. The origins of the pyramids remain unknown, and guided visits present multiple theories. If you need definitive facts only, you might find the uncertainty frustrating. But if you enjoy thinking with clues, it’s part of the charm.

Should You Book the Güímar Pyramids Entry Ticket?

I’d book it if you want a Tenerife day that feels different from the usual routine. The combination is the winner: sun-aligned pyramids, a proper botanical garden, and the unusual stop you can’t easily find elsewhere—a poison garden with more than 70 poisonous plants.

Just do one thing before you go: make sure your ticket matches the extras you actually want. If poison garden access or the Rapa Nui exhibition matters to you, don’t gamble on assumptions about what’s included.

If you’re planning a one-day choice and want value for your walking time, this is a strong pick.

FAQ

How long is the Güímar Pyramids park ticket valid?

The entry is valid for 1 day. You can check available starting times when reserving.

What’s included with entry to the park?

Tickets include access to the pyramids, the museum, and the botanical garden. Access to the poison garden and the Rapa Nui Polynesia exhibition can be included with premium options.

Is there an audio guide?

Yes. An optional audio guide is available, and it works at your own pace. Languages listed include Spanish, English, German, French, Italian, Russian, and Norwegian.

Are the pyramids connected to the sun?

Yes. The park highlights that the six pyramids are aligned with the sun on key astronomical dates.

Is the poison garden part of the visit?

It’s available with premium access and includes over 70 poisonous plants, including some of the most dangerous on the planet.

Is food included?

No. Food and drinks are not included, so plan on bringing your own or buying nearby options outside the ticket.

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