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Week 19 of 2026
Twelve splash pads we think are worth a look right now — pulled from verified locations in states whose season is currently open, weighted by parent reviews and rotated each week.
Randol Mill Park Splash
Randol Mill Park is the closest splash pad to Globe Life Field, which makes it a Rangers-game-day cool-down zone for parents who don't want to pay stadium prices for water. The pad has interactive jets, ground sprays, and a wide deck with both toddler and big-kid zones. Free parking is abundant on non-game days, brutal on game days — plan accordingly. Restrooms are clean, the playground is a destination. Best on weekday mornings to dodge both heat and game-day crowds. Parent gotcha: deck temperature reaches 130-plus by 2pm; water shoes are mandatory. Rangers fan family essential.
Walnut Creek Metro Park Splash
Walnut Creek Metro Park is north Austin's quiet workhorse — splash pad, miles of dirt trails popular with mountain bikers and dog walkers, and a disc golf course threading through the woods. The water features are basic but the park's size means you can disappear for half a day without seeing the same family twice. Free parking is generous (multiple lots), basic seasonal restrooms. Best on weekday mornings to dodge the trail crowd. Pack water; closest food is a drive. Locally loved by north Austin families. A genuine Texas outdoor afternoon.
Perkins Road Park Splash Pad
Perkins Road Community Park is a leafy mid-city Baton Rouge gem with a tidy splash setup, a great playground, and walking trails through old oaks. The Perkins Rd Overpass shopping district is right there for post-splash boudin or sno-balls. Free parking, clean restrooms. Pair with Trader Joe's or Magpie Cafe nearby for lunch, or City Pork Brasserie for Cajun-French dinner. Baton Rouge summers are 95°F with thick humidity and daily afternoon storms June-September. Mornings are the only sane window. Hurricane-season closures hit on short notice; BREC posts updates. A more shaded, less ballpark-busy alternative to Burbank.
Kapiolani Park Splash Area
Kapiolani Park is Hawaii's oldest public park — 300 acres at the foot of Diamond Head, a five-minute walk from Waikiki, with banyan-shaded grass, the Honolulu Zoo, the Waikiki Aquarium, and informal water and play features the local families have used for generations. There's no traditional splash pad but the location near rinse showers, the calm Sans Souci beach, and the zoo's water elements make it a year-round Oahu kid spot. Free street parking is competitive, paid lots near the zoo, restrooms throughout. Best for all ages. Parent gotcha: Hawaii UV is brutal, sunscreen and rashguards mandatory; rare winter north-shore swells can affect south-shore sets. Tropical climate means year-round splash potential. Pair with the zoo, the aquarium, or shave ice on Monsarrat Avenue to make a full Diamond-Head-area day.
Tempe Beach Park Splash Playground
Tempe Beach Park is the Town Lake icon and the splash playground at its heart is a Phoenix-area summer institution. Interactive jets, a wide zero-depth pad, and shade structures handle both age groups well. The lake views and ASU footbridge backdrop make for great photos. Free parking is generous in the surrounding lots; metered options on Mill Avenue are the backup. Clean restrooms throughout. Best in the morning before 10am — midday Tempe sun is genuinely dangerous. Walk to Mill Avenue for lunch after. Tempe at its absolute best.
Riverview Park Splash Pad
Riverview Park is Mesa's instant-classic family destination — a 50-foot climbing tower the kids will not stop talking about, a splash pad, a fishing lake, and miles of paths. The splash features cover both age groups and the climbing tower is genuinely impressive. Free parking is generous but the lots fill on weekends; arrive before 10am. Clean restrooms throughout. Best in the morning before the brutal afternoon Phoenix heat. Pack water — Arizona summer is no joke. Pair with a stop at IKEA across the freeway for lunch. East Valley's best free park.
Ala Moana Beach Park Spray
Ala Moana Beach Park is Honolulu's flagship urban beach — a calm protected lagoon, sprawling banyan-shaded grass, walking paths, and freshwater rinse showers families use as informal splash play after the saltwater swim. There's no traditional splash pad here, but the rinse-shower setup plus the protected swim lagoon makes this the practical year-round Oahu splash combo. Plentiful free parking, clean restrooms, food trucks and the Ala Moana Center across the street. Best for all ages — the lagoon is genuinely toddler-safe and the rinse showers double as cool-off. Parent gotcha: Hawaii UV is no joke, reapply sunscreen aggressively; tradewind direction shifts can stir surf even inside the lagoon. Year-round splash thanks to Hawaii's tropical climate. Pair with a stop at the Ala Moana food court or shave ice on Kapahulu after the beach day.
Acacia Park Splash Pad
Acacia Park in Henderson is the botanical-garden-meets-splash-pad combo — formal gardens around the perimeter, interactive splash pad in the center, and a playground that lets the visit stretch to a full morning. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms clean. Best in the early morning before Henderson's 110+ heat hits. Parent gotcha: Vegas Valley summer UV is brutal at any altitude and the desert sun reflects off the concrete deck — sunscreen religiously, and bring more cold water than you think you need. The pad gets blistering hot from 11am to 6pm; visit before 10am or after 5pm. Wildfire smoke from California Sierra fires occasionally drifts east into the valley. Pair with a Sweet Tomatoes (if still open) or Cafe Rio lunch in nearby Green Valley after.
Liberty Park Splash Pad
Liberty Park is Salt Lake's biggest urban park — Tracy Aviary, Seven Canyons Fountain, the Rotary playground splash zone, and the running loop all on one campus. Families turn it into a full half-day with multiple stops. The Seven Canyons Fountain is the showpiece — interactive water features representing Utah's seven canyons, with kids running between them. Free parking is plentiful, restrooms clean. Best on weekday mornings before noon. Parent gotcha: SLC at 4,200 feet still has serious UV — sunburn happens fast, sunscreen religiously. Late summer wildfire smoke from Utah, Idaho, and Nevada fires regularly pushes the Wasatch Front AQI past 150; SLC inversions can trap smoke for days. Check Utah DEQ air quality before driving. Pair with Tracy Aviary as a smoke-day Plan B.
Craig Ranch Regional Park Splash
Craig Ranch Regional Park is North Las Vegas' 170-acre flagship — skate park, dog park, amphitheater, and a destination splash pad with interactive jets and ground sprays that draws families from across the valley. Free parking is huge, restrooms clean, shaded seating along the pad. Best in the early morning — North Vegas heat is identical to the Strip's brutality. Parent gotcha: Vegas summer UV is brutal and the desert sun reflects off concrete — sunscreen and hats religiously. Visit before 10am or after 6pm; the deck is unsafe-hot midday. July-August monsoon thunderstorms close pads on lightning alerts. Wildfire smoke from California Sierra fires occasionally drifts east into the valley in late summer. Pair with a Mexico Lindo lunch in North Vegas after. Real valley family-day destination.
Orange County Great Park Splash Pad
Orange County Great Park is the closed-El-Toro-airbase reborn as a massive municipal complex — and the splash pad is tucked near the Carousel and Balloon Ride. Interactive jets and ground sprays span big-kid and toddler zones, with shade structures around the deck. Free parking is enormous, restrooms spotless. Best on weekday mornings — the Balloon Ride line forms by 11am on weekends. Parent gotcha: Irvine follows OC drought rules and cycles the pad off in stage cuts. Pair with the Farm + Food Lab tour or the carousel. The most ambitious free afternoon in OC.
Tiguex Park Splash Pad
Tiguex Park sits between Old Town Albuquerque and the Natural History Museum and the splash zone is the smart parent's secret weapon for breaking up an Old Town tourist day. Ground sprays for toddlers and early grade-schoolers, mature shade trees on the lawn (rare in ABQ parks), real restrooms in the museums next door, paid parking in Old Town garages. Best in the late morning before museum field trips arrive. Parent gotcha: Albuquerque's 5,300-foot UV burns fast and the dry-desert air dehydrates kids quick — hats and water before the run. July and August monsoon thunderstorms over the Sandias roll in by mid-afternoon and the pad closes at lightning, so plan a morning splash before the museum visit. Pair with a Church Street Cafe lunch in Old Town for the full ABQ tourist Wednesday.