A Thai-themed water park in Costa Adeje
Siam Park opened in 2008 AD and occupies about 185,000 m² (1,991,000 ft²), which gives it room for very different experience zones in one venue. You feel this scale on arrival at Av. Siam: high-thrill towers on one side, beach-style recovery spaces on another. That mix is why the park works for mixed-age groups.
Prioritize rides by energy curve, not by map order
If your priority is adrenaline, hit Tower of Power and Singha early, then slow down later at Siam Beach or Mai Thai River. A newer benchmark ride is Saifa, launched in 2023 AD with an approximately 82 m (269 ft) drop start, around 306 m (1,004 ft) route length, and speeds near 10 m/s (22 mph). This sequence keeps your legs fresher and your afternoon more enjoyable.
Milestones that explain today’s demand
Demand today makes more sense when you look at the timeline: opening in 2008 AD, passing 10 million visitors by the end of 2021 AD, adding Saifa in 2023 AD, and taking another major industry award in 2024 AD. For you as a visitor, this means strong global awareness and recurring peak windows, especially on weekends and holiday periods.
Who gets the strongest value from a Siam Park day
Families usually get the biggest win because the park combines child-friendly zones and headline thrills in one place. Couples and friends often pair it with one contrast stop, such as
Teide National Park or
Lago Martianez, while repeat visitors often add
Teide Observatory on a separate slot. Keep it to one major add-on per day so you enjoy Tenerife instead of racing it.