
Las Vegas Splash Pads 2026
Every splash pad in the valley — City of Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Clark County. Hours, addresses, and real local tips.
Summer in Las Vegas is no joke. When it hits 110°F, you need a plan. The good news: the Las Vegas valley has over 24 free splash pads spread across four jurisdictions — and every single one is free.
This guide covers every verified splash pad across the City of Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, and unincorporated Clark County — with real hours, addresses, and tips from parents who've been there. No fake data. No guessing. Just what's actually open and when.
2026 update: The City of Las Vegas opened several splash pads early this spring due to extreme heat arriving ahead of schedule. Always confirm hours on the official parks website before a trip — closures for maintenance can happen anytime.
Summer Survival Tips for Splash Pad Days
City of Las Vegas
28 splash pads28 city-operated splash pads across Las Vegas neighborhoods. Featured here: the 6 highlighted pads from this year's early opening.
Local tip: Get here before 9am on weekends — this is one of the most popular pads in the valley and it fills fast. The grassy areas around the splash pad are perfect for spreading out a blanket while kids play.
Local tip: The Buffalo Drive corridor runs through a dense residential area — midweek mornings are significantly quieter than weekends here.
Local tip: This park serves the east valley community and is one of the most family-welcoming spots in Las Vegas. Community events happen here throughout summer.
Local tip: Cliff Shadows is in one of the newer northwest Las Vegas neighborhoods — the park is newer and well-maintained. Less crowded than some of the older, more established pads.
Local tip: Part of the Doolittle Complex — one of Las Vegas's most historic community recreation centers. The full complex has additional amenities if you want to make a half-day of it.
Local tip: One of the best-equipped parks in northwest Las Vegas. The splash pad anchors a larger park complex with extensive playground equipment — budget 2+ hours.
22 more City of Las Vegas splash pads
The City of Las Vegas operates 28 total splash pads. Beyond the six featured above, additional locations include: Alyn Beck Memorial Park (9220 Brent Lane), Angel Park (241 S. Durango Dr), Bill Briare Family Park (650 N. Tenaya Way), Bob Baskin Park (2801 Oakey Blvd), Bruce Trent Park (8851 Vegas Drive), Douglas A. Selby Park (1293 N. Sandhill Rd), Estelle Neal Park (6075 Rebecca Rd), Gary Dexter Park (800 Upland Blvd), Gilcrease Brothers (10011 Gilcrease Ave), Justice Myron E. Leavitt/Jaycee Park (2100 E. St. Louis Ave), Lorenzi Park (3333 W. Washington Ave), Patriot Park (4050 Thom Blvd), Polly Gonzalez Memorial Park (5425 Corbett St), Raptor Play Park at Thunderbird Complex (6075 N. Durango Dr), Rotary Park (901 Hinson St), Sunny Springs Park (7620 Golden Talon Ave), Teton Trails (7850 N. Bradley Ave), West Charleston Lions/Essex Circle Park (600 Essex Circle), Winding Trails Park (7250 N. Ft. Apache Rd), Woofter Family Park (1600 Rock Springs Dr), Baker Park (1020 E. St. Louis Ave), and more. All operate May 1–Sep 30, 10am–8pm. All free.
Full City of Las Vegas parks listHenderson
17 splash pads17 splash pads operated by the City of Henderson. Recycled rubber surfaces keep the ground cooler on bare feet.
Local tip: Green Valley families swear by this one. Paseo Verde Pkwy has good shade from mature trees lining the street — the park itself is well-kept and the splash pad is one of the larger ones in Henderson.
Local tip: This is the dog-friendly splash situation in Henderson — the splash pad features here are within the Bark Park area. There are two splash pad features here. Bring your pup if you have one.
Local tip: One of the older and well-established Henderson splash pads in the Pittman neighborhood. Quiet on weekday mornings.
Local tip: Anthem families love this one — it's tucked inside the Anthem Highlands neighborhood and feels like a neighborhood secret even though it's a City of Henderson facility.
Local tip: Downtown Henderson's Water Street District has a great local vibe — the splash pad here puts you right next to restaurants and local shops. Perfect for a splash-then-lunch family day.
Local tip: One of the more scenic park settings for a splash pad — the Amargosa trailhead is right here if older kids want to hike after cooling off. Great combo day.
More Henderson splash pads
Additional Henderson locations include: Amador Vista Park (1562 Amador Ln), Aventura Park (2525 Via Firenze), Capriola Park (2155 Via Firenze), Dundee Jones Park (10550 Jeffreys St), Hayley Hendricks Park (811 Ithaca Ave), Madeira Canyon Park (2390 Democracy Dr), Mission Hills Park (551 E. Mission Dr), Reunion Trails Park (44 Chapata Dr), Saguaro Park (600 Pounds Way), Wells Park (1640 Price St), and Weston Hills Park (950 Weston Ridge St). All operate April 1–Oct 31, 9am–8pm. All free.
Full Henderson splash pads listNorth Las Vegas
6 splash pads6 splash pads operated by the City of North Las Vegas. All feature recycled rubber surfaces and potable water recycled to drain.
Local tip: This is the crown jewel of North Las Vegas parks. The lake, the splash pad, the dinosaur dig area, the multi-story playground — it's a full day, not just a quick stop. Bring a picnic and plan to stay.
Local tip: Craig Ranch is one of North Las Vegas's largest regional parks — the splash pad is one piece of a massive amenity set. Great if you have kids of different ages who want different things.
Local tip: The Tropical Parkway corridor area of North Las Vegas has grown a lot — this park is newer and cleaner. Midweek mornings are especially low-key here.
Local tip: A solid neighborhood park for the central North Las Vegas community. Less traffic than the regional parks makes it easier to get a good spot.
Local tip: Serves the older central-east North Las Vegas neighborhood. A reliable, no-frills splash pad that the community has used for years.
Local tip: A neighborhood park that serves the westside North Las Vegas community. Good option if you're in the area and want to avoid driving to the bigger regional parks.
Clark County (Unincorporated)
18 splash pads18 splash pads operated by Clark County Parks & Recreation in unincorporated areas throughout the valley.
Local tip: Exploration Peak is one of the best parks in the whole valley — it's enormous and the splash pad is just one feature. The mountain backdrop makes it feel totally different from neighborhood parks.
Local tip: Right in the heart of the valley near Maryland Parkway — convenient for families living in the central corridor who don't want to drive far.
Local tip: Great option for northwest valley families — this is near the Centennial Hills area but operated by the county rather than the city.
Local tip: West Tropicana location makes this convenient for families near the Springs/Summerlin corridor who don't want to cross I-15.
Local tip: Don't confuse this with City of Henderson parks — Duck Creek is county-operated. It's a solid community park in the southeast valley.
Local tip: A great southwest valley option near the Mountains Edge and Enterprise area. This neighborhood has exploded in growth and this park serves it well.
More Clark County splash pads
Additional Clark County locations include: Doc Johnson Rose Garden Park (5330 Somerset Hills Ave), Echo Trail Park (5655 Buffalo Dr), Goodsprings Park (385 W San Pedro Ave — Boulder City area), Indian Springs Park (715 W Gretta Lane), Joe Shoong Park (1503 Wesley St), Maslow Park (4900 Lana Dr), Paul Meyer Park (4525 New Forest Dr), Pebble Park (8975 S Topaz), Red Ridge Park (7027 S El Capitan Way), Robert E. "Bob" Price Park (2050 Bonnie Lane), Ron Lewis Park (1255 Patriots Way), and Searchlight Town Park (255 S Nevada St — southern Nevada). All operate April 1–Sep 30.
Clark County Parks websiteBonus Splash Spots
Community association and private splash pads — also free
HOA/community-managed. Open to public visitors.
Outdoor mall splash pad — free, no purchase required.
Outdoor shopping district with splash pad feature in central plaza area.
The Full Count
69+ free splash pads across the Las Vegas valley. All free. All summer.
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