Poi

Aqualand Torremolinos

Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Kristina Bekher on Pexels
Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Joaquin Carfagna on Pexels
Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Joaquin Carfagna on Pexels
Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Joaquin Carfagna on Pexels
Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels
Aqualand Torremolinos
Photo by Ana Hidalgo Burgos on Pexels

Aqualand Torremolinos sits on a hilltop in the northwest of town — high enough that you occasionally catch open views over the rooftops toward the coast while you're queuing for a slide. That slight elevation gives the place an airy, unenclosed quality you don't always find at water parks. The headline act is the Kamikaze, a 22-metre near-vertical drop that is, by the park's own reckoning, among Europe's tallest. Around it: the disorienting darkness of the Black Hole, the 1,440-square-metre wave pool ringed with hammocks, and a boomerang halfpipe that sends you back up the other side before you've decided whether you enjoyed the first.

💛 What travellers fall for

People who've been more than once tend to arrive right at 10:00, head straight for the Kamikaze before the queue builds, and buy the Fast Pass online if they're going in July or August. Carrying your own ring up the stairs is part of the deal on several slides — factor it into your pacing.

Good to know
Walk 15 minutes from Torremolinos centre or take the C1 train from Málaga to Torremolinos station, then walk up via Calle Cuba. Open mid-April to end of October; peak hours run 10:00–18:00 in summer. Book tickets online to save a few euros. The Crocodile Park next door offers combo tickets if you want to extend the day.

Deals in Aqualand Torremolinos

Book directly at the provider
The story

How Aqualand Torremolinos came to be

The park has been running since the 1980s under the name Aquapark — long enough to be part of the furniture for several generations of Costa del Sol holidaymakers. At some point it was rebranded Aqualand Torremolinos and absorbed into the Aspro Parks group, which runs a network of water parks across Spain and Europe.

The Hurakan ride section was updated for the 2025 season, adding five distinct slides to a lineup that has otherwise kept its core identity: big drops, a wave pool, and enough green lawn to lie flat between rounds.

People & landmarks

Who and what shaped it

Landmark buildings

Kamikaze
Water slide with 22-metre descent, among Europe's tallest.
Wave Pool
1,440 square metre wave pool surrounded by grass and hammocks.
Black Hole
Dark slide with unexpected twists and turns.
Boomerang
15-metre-high halfpipe slide that sends riders back up the opposite side.
Hurakan
Five unique slides added in 2025 season update.
Practical

Plan your visit

On the map

When to go

The park is open from mid-April through October. Midsummer — July and August — brings reliably hot, dry days that make the water welcome, though those same conditions fill the queues. Shoulder months like June and September offer shorter lines and temperatures still warm enough to make a full day comfortable.

Right now

35°C
Partly cloudy
Fri
37°
26°
Sat
34°
24°
Sun
32°
23°
Mon
34°
24°
Weather data: Open-Meteo

Background & history adapted from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA) · specs from Wikidata (CC0) · weather from Open-Meteo · map data © OpenStreetMap contributors · photos from Wikimedia Commons / Unsplash with per-image credit. No third-party reviews or social posts reproduced.

Top