Deerfield Hills Splash Pad
4290 Deerfield Hills Rd · East Colorado Springs
Deerfield Hills is east Colorado Springs' neighborhood-favorite spray pad, set in a Springs Parks complex with a community center, real restrooms, and a playground that keeps siblings entertained between rounds. Ground sprays cover a modest pad with a couple of arching jets for the bigger kids. Free parking, picnic tables on grass nearby. Best on weekday mornings before the day-camp buses roll in around 11. Parent gotcha: Colorado Springs sits at 6,000+ feet, and the UV combined with thinner air dehydrates kids fast — pack twice the water you think you need. Monsoon afternoons in July and August see thunderstorms build over Pikes Peak by 1-2pm and the pad will shut at lightning, so plan an early visit. Recent wildfire summers have also produced smoke days that make outdoor play unpleasant.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Deerfield Hills Splash Pad free?
Yes — Deerfield Hills Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Deerfield Hills Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Deerfield Hills Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Deerfield Hills Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Acacia Park Splash Pad
Acacia Park is downtown Colorado Springs' historic public square and the Uncle Wilber Fountain is the show — interactive musical water jets that dance to choreographed music shows daily through summer. Kids run through the dancing jets and grade-schoolers can predict the patterns by show three. Free street parking and paid garages nearby, restrooms in the park. Best timed to a fountain show (typically every hour 11am-7pm). Parent gotcha: Colorado Springs sits at 6,035 feet — UV is brutal and the dry mountain air dehydrates kids faster than they realize, so push water and reapply sunscreen often. Wildfire smoke from southern Colorado fires (Pikes Peak Region, Sangre de Cristos) regularly pushes AQI past safe play levels in July-August. Pair with a Pikes Peak Cog Railway day.
Memorial Park Splash Pad
Memorial Park is Colorado Springs' flagship park — skate park, pool, fields, and a splash pad that draws the south-side neighborhood crowd all summer. The pad is sized for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, with the destination playground attached and shaded picnic spots along the edge. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms by the pool building. Best on weekday mornings before noon. Parent gotcha: Colorado Springs at 6,000+ feet means UV hits hard and dry mountain air dehydrates kids in under an hour — bring water bottles and reapply sunscreen religiously. Late summer wildfire smoke from front-range fires (Hayman, Black Forest historical scars) returns most years and can force closures. Check El Paso County air quality before driving. Real Springs summer staple.
Stenger Sports Complex Splash
Stenger Sports Complex is northwest Arvada's go-to summer landing pad, where the splash zone sits next to the baseball diamonds and gives little siblings something to do while older kids finish a game. Ground sprays and a couple of arching jets cover a midsize concrete pad — toddler-safe in the morning, big-kid energy by mid-afternoon. Free parking, real restrooms in the complex, picnic tables on grass nearby. Best on weekday mornings before camp groups roll in around 11. Parent gotcha: Front Range UV at 5,300 feet is brutal even when it feels mild — sunscreen the kids before they hit the pad, not after. Late afternoon monsoon thunderstorms in July and August will close the pad at the first lightning strike, so plan to wrap by 2 if clouds are stacking over the foothills.
Gateway Park Splash Pad
Gateway Park is the neighborhood spray spot for east Aurora families near the airport corridor, and it gets the kind of multicultural lunch-cooler crowd that makes a regular city park feel like a community block party. Ground sprays sized for toddlers and early elementary, a real playground attached, and shade structures over the picnic tables — a small but legitimate detail Aurora got right. Free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best in the late morning before the heat peaks. Parent gotcha: Aurora afternoons in July see fast-building monsoon thunderstorms rolling in off the foothills around 2-3pm — the pad shuts immediately at lightning. The high-plains UV combined with the dry air dehydrates kids faster than parents expect; pack twice the water you think you need. Quiet weekday mornings are the move.
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Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Utah Park Splash Pad
Utah Park is one of Aurora's older neighborhood parks and the splash pad has the well-worn, locals-only feel that makes it a quiet weekday win. Ground sprays cover a modest pad, the playground is dated but functional, and big mature trees give actual shade — which matters more than parents think on a 95-degree Front Range afternoon. Free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best on weekday mornings; by 1pm the after-camp crowd shows up. Parent gotcha: Aurora's high-plains elevation means UV is no joke even on hazy days, and the Cameron Peak smoke seasons of recent years have shut Front Range outdoor play on short notice — check Colorado AQI before you commit. Monsoon thunderstorms build fast in July and August, so morning trips beat the afternoon shutdowns.
Village Greens Park Splash
Village Greens sits in southeast Aurora near the Cherry Creek line and gets the slightly more polished suburban-park feel — the splash pad is small but well-maintained, and the playground next to it has been recently refreshed. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, real restrooms in the rec center across the lot, free parking. Best on weekday mornings before the camp buses arrive around 11:30. Parent gotcha: at 5,400 feet the UV index regularly hits 10+ on summer afternoons, and parents from sea-level cities consistently underestimate how fast kids burn. Afternoon monsoon storms can roll in by 2pm in mid-summer, so plan a morning trip and pair with lunch at one of the strip-mall spots on Yosemite. Locals know — out-of-towners drive past it.
Edora Park Splash Pad
Edora Park is Fort Collins' quiet workhorse — a city park with a spray ground next to the recreation center that gets the regulars-only vibe of a college-town neighborhood spot. Ground sprays for toddlers and early elementary, a playground next door, and shaded picnic tables along the edge. Free parking, real restrooms in the EPIC rec center. Best on weekday mornings before the after-camp crowd shows up around 1pm. Parent gotcha: Fort Collins UV at 5,000 feet is sneaky — kids burn faster than parents from coastal cities expect. Afternoon thunderstorms during the July-August monsoon will close the pad on short notice, and recent Cameron Peak/Cache la Poudre fire seasons have produced smoke days that drop AQI hard. Check the Larimer County air quality alerts before you commit. Pair with Little Bird ice cream after.
Gateway Park Splash Pad
Gateway Park is the neighborhood spray spot for east Aurora families near the airport corridor, and it gets the kind of multicultural lunch-cooler crowd that makes a regular city park feel like a community block party. Ground sprays sized for toddlers and early elementary, a real playground attached, and shade structures over the picnic tables — a small but legitimate detail Aurora got right. Free parking, seasonal restrooms. Best in the late morning before the heat peaks. Parent gotcha: Aurora afternoons in July see fast-building monsoon thunderstorms rolling in off the foothills around 2-3pm — the pad shuts immediately at lightning. The high-plains UV combined with the dry air dehydrates kids faster than parents expect; pack twice the water you think you need. Quiet weekday mornings are the move.