Pecos Park Splash Pad
17010 S 48th St · Ahwatukee / South Phoenix
Pecos Park is Ahwatukee's main community park — a skate park, sport fields, and a seasonal splash play feature. The water play is toddler-scaled with gentle ground sprays, and the South Mountain views west are a nice bonus. Free parking is generous, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings before South Phoenix heat tops 110F. Parent gotcha: Arizona monsoon storms (July-September) shut the pad on lightning detection; verify with Phoenix Parks site. The deck is brutal midday — water shoes mandatory. Pair with a Foothills Towne Center lunch or a South Mountain hike in cooler months. Ahwatukee suburban summer.
Features
- 🧒Toddler zone
- 🚻Restrooms
- 🅿️Parking
- 🛝Playground
- ♿Wheelchair accessible
Map
🧭 Get directionsFAQ
Is Pecos Park Splash Pad free?
Yes — Pecos Park Splash Pad is free to use. Drop-in, no reservation needed.
Is Pecos Park Splash Pad good for toddlers?
Yes — Pecos Park Splash Pad has a dedicated toddler zone with gentle ground spray and zero-depth surface.
When does Pecos Park Splash Pad open?
Most splash pads in this region run Memorial Day through Labor Day, weather permitting.
Parent reviews
Other splash pads nearby
Cesar Chavez Park Splash Pad
Cesar Chavez Park is Laveen's regional anchor — a beautiful public library, multiple sports fields, a stocked fishing lake, paved walking paths, and an active splash pad popular with South Phoenix families. The water features cover both age groups with interactive jets for older kids and gentle ground sprays in a wide zero-depth zone. Free parking is generous in multiple lots, clean restrooms in the library and rec center are well-maintained. Best in the morning before the brutal afternoon Phoenix heat hits — and check the library's kid programming for a free air-conditioned backup if the splash pad gets too hot. Pack water bottles and sunscreen. Locally loved by South Phoenix families. A real Phoenix neighborhood park, free.
Encanto Park Splash Pad
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Anthem Community Park Splash Pad
Anthem Community Park is a master-planned-community showpiece 30 minutes north of central Phoenix — and the splash pad shows the HOA money. Wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets, separate toddler ground sprays, real shade structures, and the miniature train and skate park on the same campus. Free parking is enormous. Best on weekday mornings — Anthem kids show up after school by 3pm. Parent gotcha: Arizona monsoon afternoons (mid-July through September) regularly close the pad on lightning detection — never assume it's open after 1pm in monsoon. Pair with a train ride and picnic. The North Valley's biggest free family afternoon.
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Splash pads with similar features and vibe.
Purple Heart Park Splash Pad
Purple Heart Park sits in Tucson's east side near Rita Ranch, a quieter alternative to the more crowded Reid Park splash. Ground-spray jets are sized for the preschool-to-early-elementary crowd; older kids will lose interest in 30 minutes but younger ones will play until lips turn blue (yes, even in 105-degree Tucson). Playground is right next to the pad with shade structures over the equipment. Free parking, free entry. Open seasonally roughly April through October. Best window is early morning or after 5pm when the sun drops behind the Rincons. Monsoon afternoons close the pad — check Tucson Parks before heading out. Pack a sun shelter; the picnic tables get full sun.
Snedigar Recreation Center Splash
Snedigar Recreation Center anchors South Chandler's sports campus — softball fields, soccer, courts — and the seasonal splash pad is a tidy bonus near the playground. The water play is toddler-scaled with gentle ground sprays. Free parking is enormous, restrooms inside the rec building. Best on weekday mornings before tournament traffic on weekends. Parent gotcha: Arizona monsoon storms (July-September) can shut the pad on lightning detection; verify with Chandler Parks. The deck is brutal at midday — water shoes mandatory. Pair with lunch at SanTan Village a few minutes north. South Chandler suburban summer.
Surprise Community Park Splash
Surprise Community Park is the unofficial west-Valley HQ for splash pad afternoons, and locals know to arrive before 10am in monsoon season — by noon the desert sun bakes the pavement to dangerous levels. The pad itself is a classic ground-spray layout with mushroom dumpers and arching jets, perfect for the under-8 crowd. The adjacent playground sits in actual shade (rare for AZ), and the restrooms are kept clean by Surprise Parks staff. Free parking, no entry fee. After play, drive five minutes to the Spring Training facility area for lunch options. Closed during the rare Arizona freeze events; otherwise runs March through October. Pack electrolytes, not just water — AZ kids dehydrate fast.
Anthem Community Park Splash Pad
Anthem Community Park is a master-planned-community showpiece 30 minutes north of central Phoenix — and the splash pad shows the HOA money. Wide zero-depth deck, interactive jets, separate toddler ground sprays, real shade structures, and the miniature train and skate park on the same campus. Free parking is enormous. Best on weekday mornings — Anthem kids show up after school by 3pm. Parent gotcha: Arizona monsoon afternoons (mid-July through September) regularly close the pad on lightning detection — never assume it's open after 1pm in monsoon. Pair with a train ride and picnic. The North Valley's biggest free family afternoon.