Parque de Atracciones Madrid – Entry Tickets & Visitor Guide

Set inside the vast Casa de Campo park, Parque de Atracciones is easy to blend with a green afternoon or a ride on the cable car. The park is compact enough to cross in 15–20 minutes, yet varied: high-adrenaline launch coasters, water rides for heat waves, and gentle attractions for little ones.
Entry Tickets & How to Choose
Buying Parque de Atracciones Madrid entry tickets online secures your date and often the best price. Timed entries help smooth the morning rush; re-entry is typically allowed with a hand stamp—confirm on arrival.
- Parque de Atracciones Madrid – standard entry (Tiqets)
- Add-on: Welcome to Madrid guided visit (GetYourGuide)
- Child, senior, and family bundles appear seasonally—check dates.
- Some dates offer “Afternoon” tickets at lower prices.
- Lockers are paid; budget a small extra if you plan water rides.
Park Zones & Headliners
Organize your day by anchors—one big ride per zone—then fill gaps with nearby attractions.
- Machinery & Coasters: launch and loop coasters that headline the park; expect height checks.
- Water Rides: log flume and splash attractions—perfect in summer; bring a light poncho.
- Family & Kids Areas: mini-coasters, carousels, and gentle spins clustered for easy loops.
- Shows & Characters: seasonal street shows and meet-and-greets—good rest windows.
- Start with your top coaster at rope drop.
- Do water rides late morning (warm + shorter queues).
- Break for lunch during peak queue times (13:30–15:30).
- Circle back for repeat rides the last hour before close.
Food & Breaks
Expect classic theme-park fare (burgers, pizza, ice cream) plus a few shaded terraces. Hydration points are frequent; carry a reusable bottle if allowed (policies vary by season). For a calmer meal, exit to Casa de Campo kiosks and re-enter—confirm stamp policy at the gate.
Plan Your Day
Typical visits last 4–6 hours. If you’re with small kids, plan two activity blocks with a long shaded break after lunch. Teens and thrill-seekers can cover the coaster circuit in a focused afternoon, then repeat favorites near closing.
- Comfortable shoes + light layer for evenings.
- Small backpack; zip bags for phones on water rides.
- Sunscreen, hat, and refillable bottle.
Getting There & Access
- Metro: Lines to Batán or Casa de Campo (walkable to the gates).
- By bike: Casa de Campo has cycle paths; lock at designated racks.
- Accessibility: step-free routes to most areas; some rides have transfer requirements—ask at Guest Services.
- Lockers & services: paid lockers, first aid, baby care rooms.
With Kids
- Measure heights at home; mark must-do rides accordingly.
- Alternate thrills with playground or show breaks.
- Use shaded queues midday; save open plazas for late afternoon.
Make a Day of Casa de Campo
Pair the park with a lakeside stroll, rowboats on Lago de la Casa de Campo, or a sunset ride on the Teleférico (cable car). Madrid Zoo Aquarium sits nearby for animal-mad kids; mix and match based on energy.
Best Times to Visit
- Weekdays (school term): shortest queues.
- Spring/Autumn: mild temps, longer comfortable days.
- Summer: go late afternoon to close; prioritize water rides.
- Winter openings: check calendar; some rides close for maintenance.
Suggested Itineraries
- Top coaster at rope drop
- Second coaster + water ride
- Snack + repeat favorites
- Kids’ zone loop
- Show + shaded lunch
- Gentle water ride + carousel finale
- Morning rides
- Siesta by the lake
- Teleférico at sunset