Choosing the right Siam Park ticket is mostly a trade-off between money and time. If you’re happy to queue and you’re on a tighter budget, Standard is usually enough. If you’re visiting in peak season, have limited time, or you’re travelling with kids who don’t cope well with long waits, a Fast Pass or All‑Inclusive ticket can save your day.
Below, you’ll see what each option typically includes, when it’s worth paying more, and how to plan a family visit around lockers, meeting points, height limits, heat, and safety.
Key takeaways
- • Standard tickets buy you entry only; you’ll rely on timing and strategy to manage queues.
- • Fast Pass is best when you want to maximise rides in a single day, especially during busy periods.
- • All‑Inclusive is the “least hassle” choice because it typically bundles unlimited Fast Pass plus locker, towel, and food/drinks.
- • For families, plan around height restrictions, a fixed meeting point, shade breaks, and keeping kids warm between slides.
Standard vs Fast Pass vs All‑Inclusive: what you’re actually buying
Siam Park sells several ticket types and extras, but most visitors are really choosing between three “levels”: Standard entry, Fast Pass access, and the All‑Inclusive package that bundles convenience add-ons.
Always double-check inclusions on the official Siam Park ticket page before you buy because packages can change, and some third-party sellers describe them differently.
- Standard: Entry to the park; queues are normal for rides and slides.
- Fast Pass: Priority access to attractions, typically limited to once per ride (and may exclude some attractions depending on the product and day).
- All‑Inclusive: Typically includes entry plus unlimited Fast Pass, plus essentials like locker and towel, plus food and drinks in participating venues.
The official Siam Park online ticketing page describes the All‑Inclusive ticket as including unlimited Fast Pass, food and drink consumption, plus towel and locker included. Source: Siam Park official ticketing
Some resellers summarise All‑Inclusive as including Fast Pass access (with noted exceptions like Tower of Power on certain products), plus locker, towel, and buffet-style food and drinks in designated restaurants. Source: Sunbonoo Source: TripTenerife
Which ticket should you choose? A simple decision guide
Use your “pain point” to choose: is it budget, time, or hassle?
- Choose Standard if you can arrive early, you’re flexible, and you’re okay doing fewer headline slides.
- Choose Fast Pass if you’re visiting in school holidays, on a weekend, or you have a one-day window and want to hit the big rides.
- Choose All‑Inclusive if you want a low-friction family day with minimal queue stress and fewer decisions about lockers, towels, and lunch.
Fast Pass availability can sell out in-park on busy days according to recent visitor reports, which is one reason some families prefer booking packages that include it. Source: r/VisitingTenerife discussion
- Families with toddlers: Standard can work if your focus is the kid areas and wave pool rather than the biggest slides.
- Families with school-age kids: Fast Pass often pays for itself in mood management if your kids struggle with lines and heat.
- Mixed group (thrill-seekers + chillers): Consider splitting: some adults upgrade while others do lazy river and beach areas.
Pricing: what drives the cost (and what you can control)
Siam Park ticket prices change by date, age category, and demand. Instead of memorising a number, it’s more useful to understand what drives the total cost.
- Season and day of week: Peak holiday dates and weekends tend to be more expensive and busier.
- Queue pressure: The “value” of Fast Pass rises when waits are long.
- Add-ons: Lockers, towels, and meals add up; bundles can be cost-effective for families.
- Group dynamics: If you’ll be doing lots of big rides, you get more benefit from Fast Pass than if you’re mostly relaxing.
As a rough planning range, Standard entry is usually the lowest cost, Fast Pass adds a noticeable premium, and All‑Inclusive is the highest up-front price but can reduce in-park spending on towels, lockers, and food. Check the official ticketing page for your exact date and party size. Siam Park ticketing
Family day planning: lockers, meeting points, heights, shade, and kid comfort
Families have two different “itineraries” at Siam Park: the rides you plan, and the logistics that keep everyone calm. The second one matters more.
Lockers: Plan locker use like you would plan a basecamp. Siam Park lists lockers as a paid service, with small and big locker price points shown on its services page. Source: Siam Park services
- Pack one dry-bag inside the locker for phones, cards, and a small “warm-up kit”.
- Bring a spare hair tie and a small snack for post-slide meltdowns.
- Take one photo of the locker area sign so you can find it again fast.
Meeting points: Pick one easy, obvious landmark in the park and agree on it before anyone runs off. The Wave Palace (wave pool) and Siam Beach are common “find us” locations, and they’re shown on Siam Park’s map PDF. Source: Siam Park map (PDF)
- Set a “lost but safe” rule: if a child is separated, they stay where staff can see them and you meet at the landmark.
- Write a parent phone number on a waterproof wristband for younger kids.
Height restrictions: Height limits decide your day more than age does. Two commonly referenced examples from visitor Q&A are The Dragon (minimum around 1.25m) and Tower of Power (minimum around 1.40m). Source: TripAdvisor Q&A
- Measure kids at home in the shoes they’ll wear walking around, then assume they may still be re-measured at rides.
- Have a “Plan B” list of kid-friendly areas so one parent isn’t improvising if a child can’t ride.
Shade and heat management: Tenerife sun plus wet skin can feel great until it doesn’t. Build shade breaks into your plan the same way you build ride breaks.
- Rotate: 45–60 minutes of slides, then 15 minutes in shade with water and a snack.
- Use a rash vest for kids who burn easily, and reapply sunscreen more often than you think you need.
- Bring a light microfiber poncho or oversized t-shirt for between slides to prevent chills.
Stroller realities: A stroller can be a lifesaver in the first and last hour, and a hassle in the middle.
- Useful for: walking to/from the entrance, carrying towels, and giving toddlers a nap spot in shade.
- Annoying for: crowded pathways, constant stopping for wet zones, and parking it before most attractions.
- Practical compromise: bring a compact travel stroller and treat it like a gear cart, not your primary child transport.
Footwear rules (what to do in practice): Many waterparks require guests to remove footwear on certain slides for safety, and Siam Park visitors commonly recommend water shoes for walking comfort. Expect to walk on hot surfaces at times, but also expect to take shoes off for rides.
- Choose snug water shoes that stay on your feet (avoid loose flip-flops for long walks).
- Carry a small mesh bag so you can clip shoes to a raft handle or leave them neatly where allowed.
- If you’re unsure at a specific attraction, follow the staff instruction at the ride entrance.
Keeping kids warm and calm between slides: “Cold and overwhelmed” looks like a tantrum, especially after repeated splashdowns.
- Do one warm-up lap on a calmer attraction (lazy river / gentle pools) between intense rides.
- Use a dry towel briefly and put on a light cover-up before queuing again.
- Keep a predictable routine: drink, snack, bathroom, then next ride.
A practical ticket strategy for families (so you don’t overpay)
If you’re travelling as a family, it’s common to overbuy upgrades “just in case”. Instead, match upgrades to who will actually use them.
- Scenario 1 (young kids, chill day): Standard tickets, budget for a locker, and focus on kids’ areas and wave pool time.
- Scenario 2 (kids tall enough for big slides): Consider Fast Pass for the riders, and keep one adult flexible for breaks and childcare swaps.
- Scenario 3 (one-day-only, peak season): All‑Inclusive can be the simplest way to reduce queue stress and avoid lots of small purchases.
If you want to compare offers from different local ticket sellers and tour providers in one place (and avoid opening ten tabs), you can post one request on MiTenerife and see what comes back.
Safety checklist + what to ask before booking
Waterparks are fun because they’re high-energy, but that’s also why small safety habits matter.
Safety checklist (family-proof your day):
- Hydration: each person drinks water at least every 30–45 minutes.
- Sun protection: SPF applied before entry and reapplied during the day (especially after towel drying).
- Wave pool supervision: choose a single adult as “eyes-on” when kids are in wave areas.
- Buddy system: no child goes to a new area without telling an adult.
- Warm-up plan: towel + cover-up ready for kids who get cold easily.
- Foot safety: keep footwear handy for hot walkways and slower areas.
What to ask before booking (5–8 questions):
- Does this ticket include Fast Pass, and is it once-per-ride or unlimited?
- Are any major attractions excluded from Fast Pass on this product?
- Does the package include a locker and towel, or will I pay separately?
- Which restaurants/venues are included if I book All‑Inclusive, and what is excluded?
- Is the ticket dated, and what is the cancellation or change policy?
- Is this ticket valid for Siam Park Day, Night, or a specific session?
- What time should we arrive to minimise queues for entry and lockers?
If you want to save time and avoid guesswork, you can compare Siam Park ticket and transport options from local providers in one request, then choose the offer that matches your family’s pace.