REVIEW · TENERIFE
Tenerife: Siam Park All-Inclusive Entry Ticket
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A water park day can feel endless, not here. This Siam Park all-inclusive ticket is built around one thing: letting you spend more time sliding and less time waiting, with fast-track access, a proper lunch with drinks, and the practical stuff like towels and locker use.
I also like how much you get for one full day. You’re not just doing a couple of highlights; you can realistically hit the big rides, repeat favorites, and still have time to relax at the wave pool. A small drawback to plan for: even with fast-track, some attractions may still have their own queue patterns (especially the Tower of Power and sometimes the lazy river), and peak-season crowds can still stretch parts of the day.
In This Review
- The fast lane, plus the everyday conveniences
- Key things to know before you go
- Siam Park in One Day: why this ticket feels different
- Getting in, getting sorted: sea lions, lockers, and early entry strategy
- Tower of Power: the almost-100-foot vertical plunge
- Siam-Style design: a rebuilt Kingdom of Siam on Tenerife
- Wave Beach and the biggest man-made wave experience
- Planning your route: from lazy river runs to high-speed slides
- Floating Market: where Thai-style shopping and massages fit in
- All-inclusive food and drinks: what you can expect on a wristband day
- Towels, lockers, and the comfort details that matter
- Safety and weight limits for the float rides
- Price and value vs regular entry: when the math works
- Who this ticket suits best (and who might skip)
- Should you book this Siam Park all-inclusive ticket?
- FAQ
- What does the ticket include at Siam Park?
- Does the ticket include fast-track or skip-the-line entry?
- Is lunch included, and is drinks included with it?
- What should I bring to Siam Park?
- Are towels and floats included?
- Are there weight limits for rides?
- Is free cancellation available?
The fast lane, plus the everyday conveniences

Here’s the trade: the ticket costs more, but it pays you back in time and comfort. You’ll want that, because regular lines at Siam Park can run long, and a long queue is exactly what cuts into a family’s energy. I’d especially prioritize this pass if you’re visiting during high season or you know your group doesn’t handle standing around well in cold, wet weather.
One more consideration: the all-inclusive food and drink coverage is great, but it’s not a blanket rule across the entire park. You’ll have plenty included at the participating bars, while some packaged snacks (like certain sweets or crisps) may be excluded.
Key things to know before you go

- Fast-track access that changes the whole day so you can stack multiple rides instead of burning time waiting.
- Lunch with drinks included, so you’re not hunting for a meal break that costs extra.
- Towels and locker use included, which makes it easier to keep your stuff safe and dry.
- Wave Beach is the centerpiece, with the park’s signature man-made wave experience.
- Plan around the Tower of Power since it may not follow the same fast-lane rules as other rides.
- Food is included at selected spots, so grab the map and learn where the included options are.
A few more Tenerife tours and experiences worth a look
Siam Park in One Day: why this ticket feels different

Siam Park is the kind of place where a normal day can turn into a queue simulator. The park is popular, the slides are constant, and once crowds swell, even the “fun break” lines start to feel like work. This all-inclusive ticket flips that equation by pairing skip-the-ticket line entry with fast-track access to keep you moving through the park.
In plain terms, you buy back hours. That matters because Siam Park works best as an all-day rhythm: ride, cool off, ride again, eat, repeat. When lines stay short, you’re more likely to try the whole park instead of just the first few attractions you reach.
You also get the small-but-important comforts. A locker helps you leave valuables behind without worry. Towels and on-site facilities make it easier to enjoy back-to-back rides instead of scrambling for supplies. It’s not luxury; it’s logistics that keep the day smooth.
Getting in, getting sorted: sea lions, lockers, and early entry strategy

Check-in is straightforward: show your ticket at the entrance to Siam Park, and you can use the skip-the-ticket line benefit. Once you’re in, the park greets you with a fun touch: sea lions around the entry area.
The most useful strategy is timing. On busy days, lockers can be a hot commodity, and some people find that it’s smart to head to your locker setup early—before the park gets fully loaded. You’ll also want your towels sorted quickly so you can move into ride mode fast.
If you care about beach seating, treat the first hour like your “setup window.” The park is reported to start letting people in earlier than the posted opening time, so arriving early gives you a better shot at loungers and a calmer start. After that, your day will feel like a series of short trips: slide stairs up, splash down, then back through the fast lane.
Tower of Power: the almost-100-foot vertical plunge

The big adrenaline headline is the Tower of Power. You ascend and then drop almost 100 feet—a near-vertical plunge that’s famous for feeling intense even before you hit the shark-tank moment.
Two practical points for managing it with this ticket:
- The Tower of Power is widely treated as the one attraction that may not follow the same fast-track pattern as other rides. Some ticket users still report little or no wait when they time it for early entry.
- Even when fast-track helps elsewhere, it’s still smart to decide when you want your “must-do” thrill ride. If it’s the one ride your group cares about most, I’d try to schedule it early so you’re not negotiating with changing queues later.
If your group is sensitive to cold or wet weather, Tower-of-Power timing can matter. Waiting in the wrong spot with wind and spray can feel colder than you expect.
Siam-Style design: a rebuilt Kingdom of Siam on Tenerife

Siam Park isn’t just a pile of slides. The park recreates the vibe of an older Kingdom of Siam, relocated to Tenerife, and it shows up in the design language as you move between attractions.
That matters because the park feels like a journey, not a checklist. The theme helps you flow between zones: ride heavy areas, calmer sandy spots, and the more market-and-massage style atmosphere near the Floating Market.
It’s also part of why this ticket makes sense. If you’re skipping lines and repeating rides, you’ll still want variety in the day. The Siam theme gives you an easy psychological “reset” between adrenaline hits, so you’re not just sprinting from slide to slide.
Wave Beach and the biggest man-made wave experience

If Siam Park has a “wow” signature, it’s the wave pool at Wave Beach, including the claim of the largest man-made wave in the world, reaching up to about 10 feet high.
Here’s how to use it effectively:
- Treat the wave pool like your anchor. With fast-track access, you can ride other attractions, but plan to return for multiple sessions.
- It’s also a good place to take a breather. Even thrill-first families slow down here, because the energy is different: you’re not constantly climbing stairs, and you can actually enjoy the setting.
Some people spend hours here just hanging near the wave area. That’s not wasted time—it’s the emotional payoff of Siam Park’s reputation.
Planning your route: from lazy river runs to high-speed slides

Siam Park works best when you organize around ride flow. You want a mix: one high-energy ride, one longer chill segment, then back to rides again.
A few practical tips based on how the fast lane seems to behave:
- Some users report that the lazy river and certain other attractions may not be part of the same fast-track queue shortcut as the main ride lineup. That means you should not assume every slide is equally quick on the express route.
- The lazy river can still be worth it because it offers long, gentle riding and a chance to reset your body between faster attractions.
For the rest of the day, aim for stacking repeats. When queues stay short, your group will naturally start doing “favorite loops.” That’s where the ticket earns its keep: you’re not paying just to enter; you’re paying to ride more times.
Floating Market: where Thai-style shopping and massages fit in

The Floating Market area adds a different flavor. It feels like a typical Thai village setup, and it’s a convenient stop when you need snacks, souvenirs, or a break from slide time.
You can also find traditional Thai massage here, but it’s extra cost. I like pairing it with a mid-afternoon lull. If you’ve done several big rides and your legs are tired, a massage can help you keep going instead of calling it quits.
Also note that this area can be a good way to switch gears away from pure water activity. It gives you a change of pace without leaving the park.
All-inclusive food and drinks: what you can expect on a wristband day

The all-inclusive part is the other half of the deal. It’s not just lunch; it’s a day of eating and drinking in a way that’s actually useful at a water park.
You get:
- Lunch with drinks included
- Access to food and drinks throughout the day at selected bars
- Soft drinks and other options listed in user experiences, with alcohol mentioned as included (like beer and cider) based on ticket use
Two details I’d keep in mind so you aren’t surprised:
- Some menu items may be excluded. For example, some users report exclusions around certain packaged snacks and some sweets/chocolate and items like crisps.
- Not every food venue may participate in the included program, so your best move is to look for the places where your wristband gets you in.
In practice, this means you can stop for a pizza, burgers, chips, chicken nuggets, pasta, and ice cream options (where included), then keep sliding. That reduces the usual water-park strategy of “save money by eating less,” because you’re already paying the price up front.
Towels, lockers, and the comfort details that matter
This ticket includes towels and locker use, and the park also lists floats as part of the amenities. For me, lockers are one of the biggest hidden value points. You’ll be changing wet states all day, and having a safe place for dry clothes, phones, and bags keeps you confident.
A few comfort and safety notes from on-the-ground use patterns:
- Water shoes can make life easier. Many people find that flip-flops are not practical on slides, and they’ll often recommend waterproof water shoes instead.
- Your feet can get sore from repeated climbs and splashing. Going in with the right footwear helps you keep riding instead of hobbling back to your towel area.
- Some users note they got towels at entry, while others had a minor moment where towels weren’t immediately handed out. Don’t ignore that. Check your wristband setup and your towel plan right away so the day stays smooth.
Safety and weight limits for the float rides
Siam Park includes specific maximum weight rules for some attractions. If you’re traveling with a larger rider or sharing a floater, you’ll want to check before you line up.
From the provided limits:
- Jungle Snakes and the Giant
- Max 110 kg for single floaters
- Max 180 kg for shared weight on double floaters
- Other attractions
- Max individual weight 130 kg (depending on how many people are on the floater)
When in doubt, treat weight rules as a hard stop, not a “maybe.” It’s better to confirm early than to discover at the ride entrance that a switch is needed.
Price and value vs regular entry: when the math works
At about $194 per person for a 1-day experience, this is not cheap. But water parks are a time-and-comfort purchase, and this ticket directly buys that.
Here’s how to decide if it’s worth it for you:
- If you can only do a short window at Siam Park, the fast lane helps you see the most in the time you have.
- If your group has kids, the all-day schedule usually needs breaks that don’t involve standing in line for long stretches.
- If you hate waiting, the value gets obvious. When normal queues are an hour or more for popular slides, a fast-track system turns a day from stressful into manageable.
Also consider that the all-inclusive food and drinks reduce hidden costs. A normal day means buying meals between rides, and those add up quickly. With lunch included and additional food/drink at participating bars, you can plan around riding instead of rationing spending.
The trade-off is that you should still expect some lines even with this ticket during peak season. Fast-track doesn’t mean empty queues; it means you’re far more likely to spend your day on the water.
Who this ticket suits best (and who might skip)
This pass is a strong fit if:
- You want a thrill-heavy day with repeats and minimal waiting
- You’re visiting during busy periods and you’d rather pay than gamble on queue lengths
- Your group values food and drink included so you don’t keep breaking the flow of the park
You might skip the all-inclusive version if:
- Your group is comfortable with longer waits and you’re happy doing fewer rides
- You’re visiting at a time when queues are naturally shorter (timing can help)
- You’d rather pay less and accept that your day will be more schedule-dependent
If you do book, arrive early and lock in your plan quickly. That’s how you get the day to feel effortless.
Should you book this Siam Park all-inclusive ticket?
If your ideal Tenerife day includes serious slide time and minimal waiting, I think this ticket is an easy yes. The best part isn’t only the entrance; it’s the combination of fast-track access with lunch, drinks, towels, and locker use that keeps the day moving.
Book it if the park is your main event and you want to make the most of every hour. Consider it less if you’re price sensitive and you don’t mind spending more of the day standing in line.
FAQ
What does the ticket include at Siam Park?
It includes entry to Siam Park, lunch with drinks, and towel and locker use.
Does the ticket include fast-track or skip-the-line entry?
Yes. You can skip the ticket line, and the ticket includes fast-track access to attractions at Siam Park.
Is lunch included, and is drinks included with it?
Yes. Lunch is included, and it comes with drinks.
What should I bring to Siam Park?
Bring your passport, swimwear, and sunscreen.
Are towels and floats included?
Towels are included, and floats are listed as part of the special amenities in the all-inclusive setup.
Are there weight limits for rides?
Yes. Jungle Snakes and the Giant have max 110 kg for single floaters and 180 kg for shared weight on double floaters. Other attractions list a max individual weight of 130 kg, depending on how many people ride on the floater.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

























