Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad
6300 Balboa Blvd · Encino / Sepulveda Basin
Lake Balboa Park is the San Fernando Valley's lakefront summer hub and the splash pad anchors the southwest corner near the playground. Zero-depth ground sprays sized for toddlers, with the lake loop trail and rental paddleboats steps away. Free parking is huge but lots fill by 10am on summer Saturdays. Restrooms by the boathouse. Parent gotcha: Valley heat regularly hits 100F+, so morning visits are mandatory; LADWP follows California drought rules and pads can shut on stage cuts. Pair with cherry blossoms in spring or a sunset walk around the lake. Quintessential Valley afternoon.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🌳Shade
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Lake Balboa Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Modjeska Park Splash Pad
Modjeska Park is the West Anaheim go-to when you need a free Disney-day decompression that isn't another theme park. The splash pad has both gentle ground sprays for toddlers and arching jets for grade-schoolers, with the Anaheim West Family Resource Center and a working skate facility on the same campus. Free parking is plentiful and restrooms are clean. Best on weekday mornings before the after-school rush around 3pm. Parent gotcha: Anaheim cycles pads off during California drought stage restrictions, so check the Anaheim Parks site the morning of. Pack a picnic for the shaded tables. The freeway noise from the 5 fades fast once kids start running.
Pearson Park Splash Pad
Pearson Park is Anaheim's oldest park and the most charming free water spot near Disneyland — about a mile north of the resort. The splash zone is small, toddler-scaled, and ringed by mature trees that throw real shade by mid-afternoon. The amphitheater hosts free summer concerts on weekend evenings, so an early splash and stay-late concert is the move. Free parking, clean restrooms. Parent gotcha: it's seasonal and Anaheim follows state drought rules, so the pad cycles off some afternoons. Walk to the Downtown Anaheim Packing District for tacos after. A hidden retreat from Harbor Blvd traffic.
The Park at River Walk Splash Pad
The Park at River Walk is the crown jewel of Bakersfield's family scene and the splash pad earns its reputation. Wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets that arc high for big kids, separate toddler ground sprays, and real shade structures — vital when Bakersfield hits 105F in July. The 32-acre campus wraps around two lakes with paved trails for stroller laps. Free parking is huge but fills by 11am on summer Saturdays. Parent gotcha: California drought rules apply and the pad sometimes runs reduced hours; check the Bakersfield Parks site. Pack water shoes — concrete bakes hot. The best free hot-day cooldown in Kern County.
Yokuts Park Splash Pad
Yokuts Park sits along the Kern River bike path and is the locals' choice when River Walk is packed. The splash zone is modest but the shade trees are mature and the picnic tables are first-come free. Toddler-scaled ground sprays mean preschool families dominate weekdays. Free parking, clean restrooms. Best on weekday mornings before the heat tops 100F around 1pm. Parent gotcha: drought-stage rules can shorten the operating window — verify with Bakersfield Parks. Pair with a stroll on the bike path or ride the Kern River Parkway. Bakersfield summer the affordable way.
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Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Arden Park Splash Pad
Arden Park is a leafy old-school Sacramento neighborhood splash pad — the kind of spot that locals brought their kids to twenty years ago and now bring grandkids. Interactive jets and gentle ground sprays cover both age groups, with mature trees ringing the playground for actual shade (rare for Sacramento). Free parking is generous, restrooms are clean. Best in the morning before Sacramento's brutal afternoon heat (think 100+). Pack water and sunscreen even though the trees help. Walk or drive to American River Parkway after for a stroller cool-down. A Sacramento neighborhood classic.
The Park at River Walk Splash Pad
The Park at River Walk is the crown jewel of Bakersfield's family scene and the splash pad earns its reputation. Wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets that arc high for big kids, separate toddler ground sprays, and real shade structures — vital when Bakersfield hits 105F in July. The 32-acre campus wraps around two lakes with paved trails for stroller laps. Free parking is huge but fills by 11am on summer Saturdays. Parent gotcha: California drought rules apply and the pad sometimes runs reduced hours; check the Bakersfield Parks site. Pack water shoes — concrete bakes hot. The best free hot-day cooldown in Kern County.
Emma Prusch Farm Park Splash Pad
Emma Prusch Farm Park is San Jose's working farm in the city — 47 acres with chickens, goats, fruit orchards, and a community garden that's free to walk. The seasonal water play is modest but pairs perfectly with the farm-day vibe. Big shade trees throughout. Free parking is generous, restrooms in the visitor center. Best in the morning when the animals are most active and the heat is bearable. Pack a picnic. Walk the orchard loop after. A genuinely unique San Jose family experience that costs nothing.
Aviara Community Park Splash Pad
Aviara Community Park is one of North County San Diego's tidiest splash pads and a reliable free win on a warm Carlsbad afternoon. Zero-depth deck, interactive jets for grade-schoolers, gentle ground sprays for toddlers, and shaded picnic structures spaced around the deck. Free parking is generous but Saturday mornings fill by 10am. Restrooms are spotless. Parent gotcha: San Diego County operates under California drought rules and the pad can run reduced hours during stage cuts — check Carlsbad Parks site. Pair with an afternoon at Carlsbad Village or Encinitas beach 15 minutes west. The affluent-suburb experience without the price tag.