REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Aquaboulevard Water Park Entrance Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by AQUABOULEVARD · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Paris has a water park obsession. Aquaboulevard is a city-sized indoor water park with serious thrills, and I’m a fan of how smoothly it moves from adrenaline to calm. I love the 11 water slides and the big wave pools, and you’ll usually find there’s enough going on to keep the day from feeling repetitive. The main thing to consider is the strict swimwear and rules at the entrance, plus food and drinks aren’t included.
I also like the hygiene and safety level. The water is treated and recycled in real time, and the park checks it 15 times a day, with lifeguards on duty on rotating shifts. If you come later, expect more crowds—one Saturday pattern is calm until about mid-afternoon, then the wave pool area gets busier.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Feel Immediately
- Aquaboulevard in Paris: What This Place Is Actually Like
- Tickets, Timing, and How to Plan Your 1-Day Water-Park Day
- Entrance Rules That Matter: Swimwear, Food, and “No Surprises” Checks
- The 11 Slides and Wave Pools: Where the Adrenaline Lives
- Jacuzzis, Sandy Beach, and Straw Huts: The Break You’ll Actually Use
- Water Features Everywhere: Water Cannons, Waterfalls, and Geysers
- Safety and Hygiene: Why the Lifeguard Factor Changes Everything
- Kids, Ages, and Who This Park Fits Best
- Food and On-Site Costs: Plan Ahead or You’ll Cut Your Day Short
- What to Bring (and What to Skip)
- Should You Book Aquaboulevard Water Park in Paris?
- FAQ
- What’s included in the Aquaboulevard ticket?
- Can I bring food or drinks into the park?
- What should I bring with me?
- Is Aquaboulevard wheelchair accessible?
- Are shorts allowed in the water park?
- What are the age rules for children?
- Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
- Can I cancel or change my plans?
Key Highlights You’ll Feel Immediately

- 11 water slides across the park for repeat rides and different difficulty levels
- Two large wave pools where the energy spikes and lines form first
- Jacuzzis and a 4,000-square-meter sandy beach with straw huts imported from Mauritius
- Certified lifeguards always on duty to keep things safer and more controlled
- Water treatment you can trust with recycling in real time and frequent testing
- Skip-the-line entry through a separate entrance
Aquaboulevard in Paris: What This Place Is Actually Like

Aquaboulevard (Parc Aquatique) is an indoor water park that’s built for one thing: a full day of water play without the logistics of leaving town. You’re in the heart of Paris’s region, so the vibe is different from a remote resort. It’s more like a high-energy indoor city block devoted to slides, splashes, and relaxation.
What I like most is the mix. You can go hard on the rides, then switch to calmer zones—jacuzzis, a sandy beach, and quieter water features. It’s not just one big slide tower. It’s a whole system of water experiences spread across the park, including waves, waterfalls, geysers, and water cannons.
Also, the park is designed to feel family-friendly and supervised. Lifeguards are permanently present and work rotating shifts, which helps keep the rules consistent as the crowd changes.
A few more Paris tours and experiences worth a look
Tickets, Timing, and How to Plan Your 1-Day Water-Park Day

Your ticket is valid for one day, so you’ll want to treat it like a full outing, not a quick stop. With a park like this, the best strategy is to arrive when you’ll still feel fresh for the slides, then build in breaks.
Here’s how the day usually “pans out” if you time it well: one reported pattern is arriving around lunchtime on a Saturday, feeling fairly light until mid-afternoon (roughly 3–4 pm), then getting busier—especially around the wave pools. That matches how most water parks work: the wave areas are popular, and they’re usually the first place to tighten up.
A practical flow that works:
- Start with the big-ticket rides early (slides and wave pools)
- Take a break in the jacuzzis or on the sandy beach while others catch up
- Come back for more slides later when you already know which ones you liked
If you want a calmer experience, aim for earlier entry. If you’re okay with crowds and want the most lively atmosphere, mid-to-late afternoon can still be fun—just expect more waiting at the wave pool.
Entrance Rules That Matter: Swimwear, Food, and “No Surprises” Checks

Aquaboulevard is strict at the entrance, and that’s not a small detail. It affects what you can wear, what you can bring, and how fast you move through the entry process.
From the rules:
- No shorts are allowed.
- No food is allowed inside.
- Unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed.
- If you’re traveling with kids, children from 4 to 11 must show proof of age for child entry, and they must come with a person over 18.
Swimwear restrictions are the biggest “oops” risk. One review described getting turned away because their swim trunks were considered incorrect and having to buy swimwear on-site at a steep price. Another review mentioned that the rule is enforced for men and boys: loose/baggy options don’t work, and you may need tight swim trunks or speedo-style swimwear.
Good news: there’s a practical fix nearby. One person noted a Decathlon in the same building area selling swimwear for a low price (they cited €6). So if you forget or pack the wrong thing, you might be able to solve it fast.
How to avoid stress:
- Pack the right swimwear before you leave the hotel.
- Bring a towel.
- Bring cash, since the park is set up so you can purchase things on site.
The 11 Slides and Wave Pools: Where the Adrenaline Lives

The headlines are the slides and the waves, and they’re exactly where you’ll spend your first hour. There are 11 water slides spread through the park, so you can’t just do one loop and call it a day. You’ll have enough variety for repeat rides, and the layout is built for moving between attractions rather than getting stuck in one narrow queue area.
Then there are the wave pools. The park has two large wave pools, which means you can get different wave experiences depending on which pool is running harder at the moment. This is also the area that tends to get busy first. If you want shorter waits, plan wave time earlier rather than later.
What I like about the wave-and-slide setup is pacing. Slides give you bursts. Waves give you a longer session. You can switch between them without the day feeling like one long sprint.
A small note on operation: outdoor slides can be weather-dependent. One visit reported that outdoor slides were closed while indoor slides were available. So it’s smart to be mentally ready for an indoor-heavy day, even if the weather looks promising.
Jacuzzis, Sandy Beach, and Straw Huts: The Break You’ll Actually Use

Not every water park forces you to choose between chaos and comfort. Aquaboulevard gives you both.
After you’ve hit slides and waves, go to the jacuzzis. They’re one of the best “recovery stations,” especially for kids who bounce back quickly but still need a rest stop. The park also has a 4,000-square-meter sandy beach, which is a big deal in a water park. It’s not just a tiny patch of sand—it’s a real place to stretch out.
There are also more than 30 straw huts made to feel beachy, and they’re described as being imported from Mauritius. Even if you don’t care about the origin story, you’ll care that they create shade and a place to sit that doesn’t involve standing in a wet area.
If you’ve got kids, this is where you regain energy without dragging them away from fun. If you’re visiting in hot weather, outdoor pool time can be a big part of the day too—just remember loungers can be a paid extra.
Water Features Everywhere: Water Cannons, Waterfalls, and Geysers

Beyond the main slides and waves, the park runs a whole set of water features—waves, waterfalls, geysers, and water cannons. Think of these as the “in-between attractions” that keep you moving around even when you’re not lining up for the biggest rides.
This matters because it changes how the day feels. If your only choices were a few slides and nothing else, waiting would be harder to tolerate. Here, you can shift to something active and playful while you let the queues cool down.
It also helps smaller kids and non-riders. Even if they aren’t doing every slide, there are still plenty of water-play options that feel like part of the park, not separate from it.
Safety and Hygiene: Why the Lifeguard Factor Changes Everything
Water parks are fun, but safety is the real selling point for families. Aquaboulevard leans hard into that.
You’ll get:
- Certified lifeguards on a rotating shift system
- Permanent lifeguard presence throughout key areas
- Frequent water checks—15 times a day
- Water treated and recycled in real time
That combination adds up to comfort. You spend the day in wet clothing and sandy feet, so hygiene matters more than people think. The frequent testing and recycling also helps reduce the feeling of “stale” water over time.
Lifeguards also show up in reports by name, including friendly mentions of staff like Adil and Ryan. Even if you won’t know who’s on duty on your date, the key point is that lifeguards aren’t an afterthought here—they’re part of the operating model.
Kids, Ages, and Who This Park Fits Best

Aquaboulevard isn’t for every age group.
- Not suitable for children under 3
- Child entry rules apply for kids 4 to 11, including proof of age
- Kids 4 to 11 must come with a person over 18
This makes the park best for families with elementary-age kids and older. One parent noted their 11-year-old fit the park perfectly, with enough thrill without feeling like it’s only for tiny kids.
It’s also a solid choice for groups that want a day away from museums. If your goal is to burn energy in a controlled setting, the water features help with that.
If you’re visiting with teenagers, you’ll still find enough slides and wave time to keep them engaged. The vibe is energetic but not chaotic.
Food and On-Site Costs: Plan Ahead or You’ll Cut Your Day Short

Food and drinks aren’t included with your ticket, and that turns on a simple reality: your schedule can get shorter if everyone gets hungry.
The options once you’re inside can feel limited. One review specifically called out that the food choices weren’t great and were expensive enough that the group left earlier than planned. Another person mentioned that food-related costs add up quickly once you’re committed to the day.
What this means for you: if you want a full-day plan, either:
- budget for on-site purchases, or
- plan your day around when hunger will hit
Also note: you can’t bring food into the park. So you can’t do the usual “we’ll snack between rides” workaround with outside bites.
What to Bring (and What to Skip)
This part is simple, but it saves headaches.
Bring:
- Swimwear (double-check it meets the no-shorts rule)
- A towel
- Passport or ID card for children
- Cash
Also useful:
- A plan for buying swimwear if you’re short on the correct type (there’s a Decathlon nearby per one report)
- Water-resistant storage for phones if you care about photos (phones are allowed, and some people use waterproof cases)
Skip:
- Shorts
- Food
- Any plan that involves leaving a minor unaccompanied
Should You Book Aquaboulevard Water Park in Paris?
If you’re traveling with kids (especially ages 4 to 11) and you want a fun, supervised break from Paris walking, Aquaboulevard is an easy yes. The combination of slides, wave pools, jacuzzis, and a real sandy beach makes it a full-day experience, not a quick splash.
I’d especially recommend it if:
- you want a one-day activity that burns energy
- you’re okay paying extra for convenience once inside
- you pack swimwear that fits the strict rules
Skip or reconsider if:
- you’re counting on bringing outside food to manage costs
- you hate rules at entrances and think you’ll wing swimwear
- you’re traveling with a child under 3
Best move: show up ready. Correct swimwear, a towel, and cash in your pocket. Then spend the day bouncing between slides and waves, with jacuzzis and the sandy beach as your reset button.
FAQ
What’s included in the Aquaboulevard ticket?
Your ticket includes entry to Aquaboulevard and locker facilities.
Can I bring food or drinks into the park?
Food and drinks are not included, and you’re not allowed to bring food into the park.
What should I bring with me?
Bring swimwear, a towel, and passport or ID for children. Cash is also recommended.
Is Aquaboulevard wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the park is wheelchair accessible.
Are shorts allowed in the water park?
No. Shorts are not allowed.
What are the age rules for children?
Children under 3 are not suitable. Children from 4 to 11 must show proof of age for child entry, and they must come with a person over 18.
Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
No. Unaccompanied minors are not allowed.
Can I cancel or change my plans?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
























