Family Days Out: Waterparks And Swimming Pools With Slides For Kids To Splash Around In

You'll enjoy it as much as your kids (whatever the weather).

You don’t have to wait until you go on holiday somewhere warm to head to a waterpark with your family, because there are plenty here in the UK (and they’re designed with our weather in mind).

If your children love playing in the pool and want to take it up a notch with flumes, slides and whirlpools, plan a day out in a water wonderland.

Top tip: Before you go, check if the centre has height restrictions for certain slides, so your kids aren’t disappointed when they get there.  

Calypso Cove Waterpark

Where? Barnsley, South Yorkshire. 

Price: Adults from £6.60, children from £5.30, under-threes £2.

This island-themed waterpark will keep your kids entertained for hours and you will probably enjoy it just as much, too. There are flumes, slides and large waves to battle. Can you brave the Terror Torrent, the fastest indoor flume in the park? Or the Eruption, where you slide down inside a volcano? There’s also Coconut Creek for toddlers to make sure they don’t miss out on all the fun. Find out more here

New Forest Water Park

Where? Hampshire.

Price: £15 per person for a one-hour session.

This one’s best saved for a sunny day, but with the title of the UK’s largest outdoor waterpark (we can’t imagine there’s that much competition), it’s well worth a trip, so long as your kids are aged six or over. The whole area measures at an impressive 4,000 square meters and has two trampolines, monkey bars, springboards and a climbing wall. Literally a playground on water. How far can you get round without falling in? Find out more here

The Dome

Where? Doncaster. 

Price: Adults £4, children £3 and under-fives free.

This water wonderland in Doncaster is inexpensive, yet full of fun. There are seven interlinked pools, full of fountains, jets, airbeds, geysers and not forgetting the flume rides, slides and the whirlpool spa. Find out more here

The LC Swansea

Where? Glamorgan and Cardiff. 

Price: Adults from £4.50, children aged four to 15 £4.50, under-fours £2 and under-ones free.

The best thing about this waterpark has got to be the surfboard simulator, where kids don a helmet and hop on the surfboard to see if they can stay on while the waves splash around them. Of course, there are all the usual waterpark attractions too, including a lazy river, wave machine and an aquatic maze with bridges and ball pits. Find out more here

Wet N Wild

Where? Tyne and Wear, Newcastle. 

Price: Spectator £3.95, over 1.2m £11.95, under 1.2m £6.95, under-threes free.

Boredom is not a possibility at this swimming complex as there are 10 flumes, which range from small and slow, to racy and fast. One of them - perhaps more for the adults - is called the Black Hole, where you’re dropped into a pitch black spiral of darkness on an inflatable. If that sounds too nail-biting for you, thankfully you can relax bobbing along the lazy river or take little ones to “discovery island”. Find out more

Before You Go

Yes, You CAN Make A Family Walk Fun
Don't say 'who wants to go for a walk?'(01 of08)
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Reframe a walk so it's enticing and exciting using words like explore, play, adventure.Who wants to climb a castle or who wants to find some treasure or skim stones? (credit:Alexander Nicholson via Getty Images)
Don't plod in a straight line - and back again.(02 of08)
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Choose a wiggly walk and terrain made for adventuring. "It's all about keeping children's minds off putting one foot in front of another," says Clare Lewis. (credit:Stephen Lux via Getty Images)
Always have an appealing destination - and make pit-stops along the way.(03 of08)
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It could be a café with their favourite hot chocolate or their 'secret' place like a climbing tree. Make regular stops to admire natural curiosities, make a den, whittle a stick or play in water or whatever you fancy. Encourage your kids to take photos. Clare Lewis's family always take 'scroggin'; a New Zealand name for a hikers' mix of nuts and seeds, dried fruit and chocolate to keep energy levels up. (credit:ArtMarie via Getty Images)
Join forces with another family or get the kids to bring their friends.(04 of08)
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Children love the sociability of a walk and bringing friends increases their activity as they challenge each other to jump the highest or widest, splash in puddles, climb trees or find the best stick. (credit:Alistair Berg via Getty Images)
Walk together in a chatty clod, not a single line with you barking 'come on, keep up'(05 of08)
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There may be times you have to walk in a line, but take turns with who's the leader. Also, let your children choose the route (within reason!). (credit:Bounce via Getty Images)
Play games as you go.(06 of08)
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Hide-and-seek, capture the flag or ambushes - sending kids on ahead so they can jump out on you - are all favourites. Bring a ball or a Frisbee to play with too. (credit:JLPH via Getty Images)
Turn your walk into a treasure hunt. Or an obstacle course.(07 of08)
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Children love places to clamber over like a rocky beach or challenges like climbing trees or jumping over streams. Challenge children to touch that tree and run back, hopscotch between the pavement cracks or run along the low wall. "You could go on a shape walk, finding stones, shells and leaves that are all the same shape," suggests Clare Lewis, co-author of Adventure Walks for Families in and Around London. (credit:Imgorthand via Getty Images)
End on a high.(08 of08)
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Match a walk to your kids' ages. You don't want want to leave them exhausted. Talk up what fun you had, so next time you suggest an adventure walk they leap at the chance. (credit:ArtMarie via Getty Images)