Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket

REVIEW · SIAM PARK

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket

  • 4.7915 reviews
  • 1 day
  • From $194
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This waterpark turns queue time into slide time. I love the fast-track access and the all-day food-and-drink perks that come with the ticket, all set inside Siam’s jungle-themed world. You walk in past sea lions, then you’re straight into the big-ticket thrills: a near-100-foot drop on Tower of Power and a wave pool that feels like weather.

The main catch is cost: $194 per person is a splurge, and in peak season you may still hit some crowding and find that a couple of headline rides (like Tower of Power or the Lazy River) don’t always behave like the rest of the fast lane.

Key highlights that make this ticket worth it

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Key highlights that make this ticket worth it

  • Tower of Power: a 28-meter vertical plunge through a shark-tank drop
  • Big Wave at Wave Pool: man-made waves reaching up to about 10 feet high
  • Siam makeover in Tenerife: a recreated ancient Siam kingdom plus a floating market area
  • Fast-track reality: most slides move fast, but some rides may have different queue rules
  • All-inclusive comfort: towel, locker use, and floats included with your day pass
  • Food and drinks included: lunch plus ongoing access at selected bars using your wristband

What the Siam Park all-inclusive ticket actually covers

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - What the Siam Park all-inclusive ticket actually covers
This is a full-day entry ticket to Siam Park Tenerife, built to cut the two biggest stress points of any big waterpark day: time and hassle. You get skip-the-line entry and fast-track access for many attractions, which is what lets you do multiple rides instead of spending your day parked in a line.

On the “keep you fueled” side, the ticket includes lunch with drinks, plus towel and locker use. Once you’re inside, you’re also working with an included wristband system that lets you grab food and drinks from selected spots during the day.

The value idea is simple. If you’re paying $194 anyway, you want that money to buy you more than a ticket stamp. This package turns your day into a sequence of rides and refuels, not a cycle of waiting, re-waiting, and negotiating with kids who are done with wet socks.

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

Arriving early and locking in your towels and locker

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Arriving early and locking in your towels and locker
The park is easy to find in Tenerife’s tourist zone, but the trick is what you do in your first 20 minutes. Your ticket is shown at the entrance, then you’ll want to get your essentials set up right away—towels and locker use are part of the deal, and they matter because you’ll be swimming and changing often.

A smart move is arriving before peak rush. Many people aim for around 9:30, and you can sometimes get inside earlier than the posted opening time. Even if you don’t get there that early, plan to head straight for the beach-and-wave area early to set up your locker base before the park thickens with families coming in later.

If you’re thinking, I’ll just figure it out when I get there—don’t. One of the most common “small annoyance” moments is scrambling for storage while everyone else already has a rhythm. Get your storage squared away early, then your day feels smoother.

Skip-the-line entry and fast-track rides: what to expect

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Skip-the-line entry and fast-track rides: what to expect
Siam Park is famous for being busy. Even with the fast-track plan, you should expect some queues at popular times, especially in high season. The fast lane doesn’t remove crowds from the park—it mainly removes the “stuck waiting forever” part.

In practice, your best strategy is to use the fast lane for the rides that eat time. That’s the stuff where a normal line can balloon and steal your whole morning. With this ticket, you’re typically jumping past those waits and stacking rides close together.

One important wrinkle: some major attractions can fall outside the exact same fast-lane rules. The Tower of Power and the Lazy River are called out as rides that don’t always run through the same express system as the rest. The good news is that this doesn’t ruin the day—it just means you should treat those rides as your “timing game” rather than your “guaranteed instant” win.

The rides that define Siam Park’s adrenaline level

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - The rides that define Siam Park’s adrenaline level
Siam Park is built around big, showy attractions—and this ticket is designed so you can actually experience them, not just watch other people float by.

Tower of Power is the signature. You climb up and then plunge vertically about 28 meters (roughly 100 feet) down through a shark-tank section. It’s the kind of ride where you feel the drop first and the rest is basically trying not to lose your composure in the splash zone.

Then there are the classic water “parks-as-a-story” pieces. You’ll swim your way through a theme kingdom inspired by Siam, with a layout that makes it feel like you’re moving through different chapters, not just hopping slide to slide.

You can also expect more relaxed options like a gentle river float. There’s even a “beach day” vibe with white-sand areas where you can recover between thrill hits. That matters, because the most fun days at waterparks aren’t just nonstop chaos—they include deliberate pauses to cool down and reset.

Wave pool strategy: when to hit the biggest man-made wave

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Wave pool strategy: when to hit the biggest man-made wave
The wave pool is where the park feels like it’s doing something rare. You ride one of the biggest man-made waves in the world, with waves reaching up to about 10 feet high. It’s loud, it’s dramatic, and it’s the ride that usually makes people go quiet for one second—because your brain is recalculating the physics of fun.

Here’s how to plan it so it doesn’t turn into wasted time:

  • Hit the wave pool earlier in the day or when you first arrive at the main beach-and-wave area.
  • Use the fast-track system to earn time for repeat rides. With a busy park, your “second and third ride” can be the best part because you know what to expect.

Also, be ready for crowd energy. When the wave is pumping, everyone’s focused. Your day feels smoother if you’ve already set up your locker base and you’re not running around mid-wave trying to find the right place for your stuff.

Lunch, drinks, and what the all-inclusive wristband unlocks

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Lunch, drinks, and what the all-inclusive wristband unlocks
Food is often what makes or breaks a full-day waterpark ticket. This package handles it better than most.

You get lunch with drinks included, and you can eat and drink throughout the day at selected bars by scanning your wristband. The included menu isn’t just water and bread, either. Expect soft drinks and options like beer and wine, and you may see a broader drink list depending on the day’s included stock.

Reviews-style details from the park experience point to a wide range: cider and beer show up, and some days include drinks like Pepsi and even Red Bull. The exact mix can vary by location and time, so approach it as: if it’s listed at the included menu spots, it’s fair game with your wristband.

Two practical notes:

  1. Some snacks and packaged items may not be included. Things like crisps or certain sweets can be excluded.
  2. Lunch can get chaotic at the busiest counter. You’ll still usually be better off with included food than buying everything separately, but lunchtime is still lunchtime.

The big win is that you’re not constantly paying small amounts. Those add up. This ticket is built to keep the spending predictable.

Towels, lockers, floats, and the small comfort fixes

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Towels, lockers, floats, and the small comfort fixes
The included towel and locker use are more valuable than they sound. In a humid waterpark setting, you want dry storage and a predictable place to drop your stuff between rides. It’s also peace of mind. You can leave personal items secure and keep your mind on slides, not on counting where your phone is.

Floats are included, which helps if you’re traveling with kids or if you want to float without dragging in extra gear. If you’re bringing your own items, the park still works best when you keep your routine simple.

Shoes deserve a quick mention. Many people bring water shoes because flip-flops don’t work well on slick surfaces and on certain slide areas. If you’re using your own footwear, keep something grippy. One more tip: some visitors found it helpful to go in with water shoes already on so there’s no last-minute shoe shuffle while everyone else is sprinting between rides.

And don’t ignore the safety limits. The maximum weight rules given by the park matter:

  • Jungle Snakes and the Giant: 110 kg max for single floaters, and 180 kg for shared floaters (double floaters).
  • Other attractions: 130 kg max individual weight, depending on how many people are on the floater.

If you’re traveling with heavier riders or mixed-age groups, check these limits before you build your whole day around a specific slide.

The Siam Kingdom setting: more than just slides

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - The Siam Kingdom setting: more than just slides
Siam Park is a theme park first, waterpark second, and that helps your day feel varied. The recreated ancient Kingdom of Siam makes the park feel like a destination rather than a collection of tubes.

The park entrance experience includes sea lions, and the layout pushes you through different zones with different vibes—thrill, relaxation, and “wander and explore.” One of the more memorable add-ons is the floating market area, where you get a Thai village feel.

There’s even a Thai massage option in that floating market area, but it’s extra cost. Still, it’s a nice way to build in a break without leaving the park. If you’re the type who wants one calm moment between rides, this kind of themed stop helps.

Getting the most rides with a simple day plan

Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket - Getting the most rides with a simple day plan
To make this ticket feel like a win, don’t treat it like a generic day pass. Treat it like a schedule with flexibility.

A solid approach:

  • Start with the rides that open up early and take time in normal lines.
  • Use the fast lane to stack several high-thrill attractions back-to-back.
  • Put the wave pool into your early plan and then come back if you still have energy.
  • Build in a longer “cool down” window mid-afternoon at the beach-and-wave areas.

Some extra timing tips that help in real life:

  • Arriving earlier often means you can grab the locker setup quickly and start riding sooner.
  • In peak season, you’ll feel the difference right away when you pass normal lines that can stretch long.

Also, consider the weather. Even in Tenerife, you can hit cloudy days that feel cooler when you’re wet. If you’re sensitive to chilly air, a light layer for waiting periods can be surprisingly useful.

Price and value: is $194 per person really worth it

At $194 per person, this isn’t a “maybe” purchase. It’s a clear decision. So the question isn’t just What’s the cost? It’s What are you buying besides entry?

You’re buying three value drivers:

  1. Time savings from fast-track access, which lets you ride more often instead of losing your day in lines.
  2. Included meals and drinks, which can remove the constant snack-and-pay cycle that ruins budgets at waterparks.
  3. Practical essentials like towels and locker use, so you aren’t piecing together rentals and storage on arrival.

If you’re going during busy months and you want repeat rides—this ticket tends to pay for itself in sheer experience density. If you’re going in a quieter season, you might find less benefit, and you could prefer a cheaper ticket if you’re okay with some waiting.

One more practical value test: if your group includes riders who get grumpy about queues, the fast lane is basically emotional insurance. That’s not a small thing with kids.

Who this ticket suits best (and who might not need it)

This is a great fit if you want a high-energy day with minimal downtime. It’s especially good for:

  • Families traveling with children who want to ride more than once
  • Groups where at least one person is a thrill-seeker (Tower of Power and wave pool are big priorities)
  • Anyone who doesn’t want to spend half the day standing in wet queues

It might be less perfect if:

  • You’re visiting in an off-peak period and you’re comfortable with some waiting
  • Your group only wants a few rides and mostly plans to lounge
  • You’re not going to use the included food-and-drink spots much

This ticket shines when you’re trying to maximize the day.

FAQ

FAQ

What is included with the all-inclusive Siam Park ticket?

You get entry to Siam Park, lunch with drinks, and towel and locker use.

Does the ticket include fast-track access to all attractions?

The ticket includes skip-the-line and fast-track entry for attractions, but some rides (like Tower of Power and the Lazy River) may have different access rules.

Where do I show my ticket?

Show your ticket at the entrance to Siam Park.

Is Thai massage included?

No, massage is not included.

What food and drinks are included?

Lunch with drinks is included, and you can enjoy meals at selected bars with drinks (soft drinks, beer, wine, and water). Extra food and drinks are not included beyond what’s listed for the ticket.

Are towels and lockers included?

Yes, towel and locker use are included.

What should I bring to Siam Park?

Bring your passport, swimwear, and sunscreen.

Are there weight limits for rides?

Yes. Jungle Snakes and the Giant have 110 kg max for single floaters and 180 kg for shared double floaters. Other attractions have a 130 kg max individual weight depending on the floater setup.

Is there a discount for Canary Islands residents?

Yes. Residents of the Canary Islands can get special-price tickets at the box office.

Is the ticket refundable?

You have free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Should you book this all-inclusive ticket?

Book it if you want a maximum-ride day without queue fatigue, especially in busy periods. The included food-and-drink access plus towel and locker use makes it feel less like paying for a ticket and more like buying your way into a smoother day.

Skip it if you’re visiting when the park is calmer and you’re happy with some waiting, or if your group only plans to do a couple of attractions. At $194 per person, you’ll feel better about the cost when you commit to using the fast-track plan and the included meals throughout the day.

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