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When the medina walking and the tagines start to wear on younger travellers, Morocco's water parks and amusement parks are the pressure valve. This guide rounds up the big names in Marrakech, Casablanca, Agadir and Rabat, with a steer on seasons, age suitability and approximate prices so you can slot a splash day into the trip without a wasted journey.
Marrakech water parks
Oasiria and Aqua Fun, both seasonal
Casablanca
Tamaris Aquaparc (water) and Sindibad Park (rides + zoo)
Agadir
Atlantica Parc water park near the beach strip
Rabat area
Magic Park amusement park on the coast road
Water-park season
Mainly late spring to early autumn (heat-dependent)
Typical entry
~150-250 MAD per person for water parks (approximate)
Best for
Breaking up a beach or city week with kids
Daniel Okafor· Adventure & Outdoors Editor
Trekking guide and outdoor writer who has summited Toubkal more times than he can count and surfed every break from Taghazout to Imsouane. He covers hiking, surfing, climbing and adrenaline activities. Agadir · 13+ years covering Morocco
Published 3 August 2025 Last updated 15 July 2026
Morocco is not built around theme parks the way Florida or the Costa Brava are, but its main tourist cities each have at least one solid water park or amusement park, and for families they are worth knowing about. They serve two purposes: a cooling-off day when summer heat makes sightseeing punishing, and a bribe-and-reward for children who have patiently trailed through souks and monuments. Most sit on the edge of the big cities, a short taxi or car ride from the resort strips.
The single most important planning point is seasonality. Water parks live and die by the weather and largely open from late spring through early autumn, closing or running reduced hours in the cool months, whereas the ride-based amusement parks tend to stay open year-round. Always check current opening dates and times directly before you travel, as schedules shift year to year and some parks close midweek out of peak season.
Marrakech, being hot and inland, is where a water park earns its keep most. Oasiria, south of the city, is the best known: a large landscaped park with a wave pool, a lazy river, a cluster of slides for thrill-seekers and a shallow pirate lagoon with gentle features for smaller children, plus lawns, palms and eateries for a full day out. Free shuttle pick-ups from central points are sometimes offered, which spares you a taxi negotiation.
On the other side of town, Aqua Fun is a second option among the palm groves, again mixing slides and pools with poolside lounging and often an animation programme in season. Both run roughly through the warm months and charge entry in the region of 150-250 MAD per person, with children's rates (10 MAD is about 1 USD, mid-2026, approximate). A day here pairs neatly with the calmer, culture-led ideas in the Marrakech with kids family activities guide.
Casablanca offers one of each. Tamaris Aquaparc, out toward Dar Bouazza west of the city, is the summer water park, with slides, a wave-style pool and shallower zones for young children, running seasonally through the warm months. It suits a hot-day escape when the Corniche beach feels too exposed for small swimmers.
For a year-round option that works in any weather, Sindibad Park near Ain Diab combines a small zoo with fairground rides and gentler attractions pitched at younger children, so toddlers and primary-age kids are the sweet spot rather than teenagers chasing white-knuckle coasters. Both fold easily into a family city break; the wider Casablanca picture, from the mall aquarium to the beaches, is in the Casablanca with kids family guide.
In the beach resort of Agadir, Atlantica Parc is the local water park, set among gardens near the hotel strip with slides and pools designed for a family day between beach sessions. As a resort town with 300 days of sun, Agadir keeps its splash-park season long, though it still tilts toward the warmer half of the year. It complements the crocodile park, cable car and camel rides mapped in the Agadir with kids family guide.
Up on the Atlantic coast near the capital, Magic Park is the Rabat area's amusement park, an outing of fairground rides and attractions on the coastal road, giving families in Rabat and its beaches a ride-based day out to rival the water parks elsewhere. As with all these parks, confirm opening days before setting out, since some run a reduced midweek schedule outside the school holidays.
The table pulls the main parks together so you can match one to wherever you are based and to the ages in your group. Treat prices and seasons as approximate mid-2026 guidance and always confirm current opening directly, especially for the weather-dependent water parks.
| Park | City / area | Type | Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oasiria | Marrakech (south) | Water park | Warm months |
| Aqua Fun | Marrakech (palm groves) | Water park | Warm months |
| Tamaris Aquaparc | Casablanca (Dar Bouazza) | Water park | Warm months |
| Sindibad Park | Casablanca (Ain Diab) | Rides + small zoo | Year-round |
| Atlantica Parc | Agadir (hotel strip) | Water park | Mostly warm months |
| Magic Park | Rabat coast road | Amusement rides | Year-round |
Most Moroccan water parks cater across ages, with a genuine children's zone of shallow pools and small slides alongside the bigger flumes; height or age limits apply on the fastest slides, so check signs on the day for teenagers keen to ride everything. Amusement parks like Sindibad and Magic Park skew younger, best for toddlers to pre-teens rather than thrill-seeking older kids used to major coasters.
Budget roughly 150-250 MAD per person for water-park entry, less for children, with amusement-park pricing varying by whether you pay per ride or buy a pass. Bring your own towels, water shoes for hot poolside paving, high-factor sun cream and a refillable water bottle; on-site food and lockers cost extra. Lifeguard cover is normal but supervise your own children, especially non-swimmers, at all times.
Go early. Parks are quietest and coolest in the morning, the queues shortest, and you beat the fierce midday inland sun that makes Marrakech in particular gruelling by afternoon. Aim to arrive at opening, take the hottest hours in the water, and leave before the late-afternoon crowd peaks. Weekends and Moroccan school holidays are the busiest, so a weekday visit in term time is calmer.
Combine sensibly with the rest of your itinerary rather than treating the park as a lone excursion. In Marrakech, a water-park morning rewards children after a medina day; in Agadir and Casablanca, it varies a beach-heavy week. For gentler, non-park family ideas in each city, see the linked with-kids guides, and remember that demand around the cities is climbing as Morocco gears up for the 2030 World Cup.
The main ones are Oasiria and Aqua Fun in Marrakech, Tamaris Aquaparc in Casablanca and Atlantica Parc in Agadir. All mix bigger slides with shallow children's zones and open mainly through the warm months. Marrakech's parks are the most useful given the inland heat. For ride-based fun, Sindibad Park in Casablanca and Magic Park near Rabat run year-round.
Water parks are seasonal and largely open from late spring through early autumn, closing or running reduced hours in the cool months when the pools are too cold to enjoy. Amusement parks such as Sindibad and Magic Park tend to stay open year-round. Schedules shift annually and some parks close midweek off-season, so always confirm current opening before you travel.
As a mid-2026 guide, water-park entry runs roughly 150-250 MAD per person, with reduced children's rates (10 MAD is about 1 USD, approximate). Amusement parks vary depending on whether you pay per ride or buy a day pass. On-site extras like lockers, sunbeds and food add to the bill, so bring your own towels and water where you can.
Yes. The larger parks like Oasiria have dedicated shallow zones with small slides and gentle features for toddlers and young children, separate from the bigger flumes that carry height or age limits. Amusement parks such as Sindibad and Magic Park are pitched at younger children too. Lifeguards are normal, but always supervise your own non-swimmers closely.
It depends where you are based. Marrakech makes the strongest case, since a water park is a genuine relief from the inland heat and pairs well with a medina-heavy trip. Agadir and Casablanca suit families already on a beach holiday, and Rabat has Magic Park. Pick the park nearest your base rather than travelling far for one.
Usually not; most parks sell tickets at the gate. The bigger planning risk is turning up when a park is closed, so confirm opening days and times directly before you go, especially off-season and midweek. Arriving at opening time gives you the shortest queues and lets you take the fierce midday sun in the water rather than in a line.
Pack your own towels, water shoes for hot poolside paving, high-factor sun cream, hats and a refillable water bottle, since the sun is strong and on-site prices add up. Bring some cash for lockers, sunbeds and snacks, which cost extra. A rash vest gives children extra sun cover on the slides. Lifeguards are on duty, but always keep your own non-swimmers within arm's reach.
Rabat has Magic Park, an amusement park of fairground rides on the coastal road, which gives families in the capital a ride-based day out. Fes and the imperial-city interior have fewer dedicated parks, so families there tend to combine sightseeing with pools and gardens instead. The biggest concentration of water and theme parks is in Marrakech, Casablanca and the beach resort of Agadir.
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