Mason Park Splash Pad
541 75th St · East End
Mason Park is the East End's most reliable family stop, with seasonal splash jets, picnic shelters, and walking trails along Brays Bayou. The splash pad covers both age zones with ground sprays and gentle interactive features. Picnic shelters book up on summer weekends but plenty are first-come. Free parking is generous and restrooms are clean for a city park. Best in the morning before the East End's summer humidity peaks. Walk to the East End District's growing lineup of taquerias and panaderías after. Genuine Houston, no tourist traps.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🧑Big-kid zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Mason Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Mason Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Mason Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Mason Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Mason Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Bear Creek Pioneers Park Splash
Bear Creek Pioneers Park is west Houston's sprawling Harris County destination — splash features, a small zoo with peacocks and exotic birds, ballfields, and miles of equestrian-friendly trails. The water play is sized for younger kids; older kids will spend more time at the zoo and playground. Free parking is plentiful but the lot near the splash pad fills on weekends. Restrooms are basic but available. Best on weekday mornings to beat both the crowds and the Houston heat. Pack lunch and bug spray; the bayou is close. A genuine throwback county park experience.
Buffalo Bayou Park Splash
Buffalo Bayou Park's Lost Lake area has small water features that pair well with the larger park's miles of trails, kayak rentals, and the bat colony at Waugh Bridge. The water play here is gentle and modest — Buffalo Bayou is more about the broader outdoor experience than destination splash. Free parking but lots fill on weekends; arrive before 10am or use the Sabine Promenade lot. Restrooms in the Water Works center. Best in the morning or at dusk for the bats. Pack walking shoes. Houston's best urban nature reset.
Discovery Green Gateway Fountain
Discovery Green's Gateway Fountain is the free downtown Houston ritual — choreographed jets pulse from a granite plaza right next to the lawn, with toddlers running shrieking and parents drinking iced coffee from The Grove cafe steps away. No fence, no fee. Paid garage parking is easiest; the convention center deck is closest. Parent gotcha: the fountain is shut during Houston drought-stage restrictions and during big convention events, so check the park calendar. Best on weekday evenings when downtown empties and the breeze kicks. Pair with the Children's Museum or a lunch at Phoenicia. The signature downtown Houston afternoon.
Discovery Green Splash Pad
Discovery Green's Gateway Fountain is the downtown Houston move when the kids are losing their minds and you need a free, fast, gorgeous reset. The fountain erupts on a timer — the bigger blasts come every few minutes and that's when you hear the squeals. There's a model boat pond, a dog run, and a destination playground all within steps. Garage parking under the park is paid but convenient; metered street parking is harder. Restrooms in the Lake House. Best in the morning or early evening to beat Houston's brutal afternoon humidity. Walk to The Grove for lunch. Houston's downtown crown jewel.
More like this
Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Mueller Lake Park Splash Pad
Mueller Lake Park is Austin's most-photographed splash pad for a reason — themed jets, a wide zero-depth pad, and the iconic Thinkery children's museum a short walk away. Big kids gravitate to the higher arching streams while toddlers stay safe on the gentle ground sprays at the edges. The lake loop is a perfect stroller cool-down route after. Free parking fills by 10am on weekends; arrive early or use Aldrich Street garage. Clean restrooms, food trucks at the Mueller plaza, and HEB across the street for snack runs. Best on weekday mornings to dodge the heat. Austin family weekends start here.
Allen Station Park Splash Pad
Allen Station Park is North Texas suburban splash done right — wide interactive pad with arching jets and ground sprays sized for both toddlers and grade-schoolers, all on a free-parking community park with a destination playground and a skate park nearby. Restrooms are clean and the pavilions are first-come free. Best on weekday mornings; Allen families pack the deck by noon on weekends. Parent gotcha: the Texas sun is brutal on the deck by 11am — water shoes are not optional, and reapply sunscreen every hour. Pack a cooler and use the pavilion. Suburban Allen's go-to for the 105-degree day.
Eastside Regional Park Splash Pad
Eastside Regional Park is the El Paso Far East Side's flagship and the splash pad earns its keep on those 100-degree desert afternoons when the Franklin Mountains shimmer. Ground sprays are sized for toddlers, with arching jets that grade-schoolers chase between cool-downs. The destination playground next door has shade sails — non-negotiable in El Paso summer. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms are clean, and the pavilions are first-come free. Parent gotcha: El Paso Water can hit Stage 1 drought rules and trim hours, so call before driving across town. Best visits run before 11am or after 5pm. Pack ice water and the sunscreen you don't think you need.
Epic Waters Splash Plaza
Epic Waters Splash Plaza is the outdoor warm-up to Grand Prairie's massive indoor waterpark, and the free plaza alone is worth the drive on hot DFW afternoons. Ground sprays for toddlers, taller arcs for grade-schoolers, and a polished concrete deck inside the EpicCentral campus. Free plaza parking, restrooms inside the building. Parent gotcha: the indoor park requires paid admission, but the outdoor plaza is free during open hours; Grand Prairie drought-stage rules can trim plaza hours. Best on weekday late afternoons. Pair with a meal at Bricks & Minifigs or the food trucks on the lawn. A polished suburban-DFW afternoon.