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Your Flexiticket is valid for the date of your visit. Head directly to the ticket verification point at the main entrance — do not queue at the box office if you have already purchased online. Show your mobile ticket or printed confirmation at the gate and you are in.
What to expect
Aqualand Torremolinos
Sitting on the Costa del Sol in Torremolinos, Aqualand has been running since the 1980s and holds a record that most water parks in Europe can only look up at: Europe's highest waterslide. Kukulcán is the park's centrepiece, and the 2024 expansion added new themed zones that give the park more variety than its headline attraction alone would suggest. Nineteen attractions in total, from near-vertical drops to a 1,500-square-metre jacuzzi.
Kukulcán: Europe's highest waterslide. The drop is exactly as dramatic as the description implies. Fast, exposed, and the undisputed talking point of every group visit.
Speed Racer: A high-speed multi-lane racing slide where riders go simultaneously. The park's competitive group attraction — simple concept, endlessly repeatable.
Wave Pool: A full-scale wave pool that generates proper surf-style waves across a large swim area. Floats are included in the entry ticket and this is where most of them end up.
Jacuzzi: At 1,500 square metres, this is not a token rest area. It is the park's designated decompression zone — warm, large, and deliberately away from the noise of the main slide areas.
Themed Zones: additional themed water zones expanding the park's layout beyond the existing attraction lineup. Worth exploring on arrival to understand the current park configuration before committing to a route.
Terraced sunbathing areas: Aqualand Torremolinos has landscaped terraced areas with greenery throughout the park. Sun loungers are available to hire separately. A proper place to dry off between slides rather than hunting for a patch of concrete.
Krakatoa: The park's volcanic centrepiece — a purpose-built structure anchoring the newest themed zone and housing both Namaka and Huari. Large enough to be visible from most of the park. Part landmark, part ride complex.
Namaka: Named after the Hawaiian sea goddess, this double slide stands at 22 metres and runs an 86-metre course, replacing the old Kamikaze with something considerably more dramatic. Currently the park's headline drop and the reason the Krakatoa zone draws the longest queues. The height is exactly as advertised.
Huari: Named after the Aztec deity of fire and the underworld. A 76-metre intertwined tube slide with a 13-metre drop — the dual-course design makes the descent feel more disorienting than the numbers alone suggest. Shares the volcano zone with Namaka, so do both before leaving the area.
Hurakán: A five-slide complex rather than a single ride: a 110-metre boomerang at 11 metres height and a 53% incline, three central slides, and the Super Bowl — a 125-metre-long, 15-metre-wide finishing bowl that is the park's most imposing single structure. The variety within one complex makes it worth returning to across the day.
Tsunami: A 102-metre course on single or double rings that builds steadily before a 360-degree spin just before the final stretch. The spin is the moment — everything before it is setup.
This product offers multiple ticket options. Some items above (like transfers or fast-track access) may only apply to specific options — confirm what's included when you select yours.
These tickets can't be rescheduled or cancelled.