REVIEW · PHUKET
Andamanda Water Park Entry Ticket
Book on Viator →Operated by Tour East Thailand · Bookable on Viator
One big water kingdom in Phuket awaits. Andamanda Phuket is the island’s biggest, newest water park, built around five Thai-myth themed zones where tube-style slides and splashy fun cover an entire hot day. I like the scale here because you get real variety instead of repeating the same few rides all afternoon.
I especially love the mix of thrill and downtime: you’ve got extreme slides for the adrenaline crowd and calmer water time like the lazy river for everyone else. My one caution is simple: this is priced as a full-day ticket, so it only feels like great value if you plan to stay for most of the about 8 hours and actually use the full access.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Care About
- Entering Andamanda Phuket: Big, New, and Built for a Full Day
- What Your Day Pass Includes (and What It Doesn’t)
- Your 8 Hours in Andamanda: Zone by Zone
- Coral World: A Playful Start Point
- The Great Andaman Bay: Beach-Feeling Water Time
- The Pearl Palace: Where You Can Find Variety
- Emerald Forest: A Shade-Forward Mood (Most Likely)
- Naga Jungle: The Extreme Side Gets Real
- Tubes, Lanes, and the Lazy River: How the Ride Mix Actually Works
- Kids at Andamanda Phuket: The 5,300 Sq.m Kid Zone
- Food Hubs and Swim-Up Bars: Plan Your Refuel
- Price and Value: Is $56.68 Worth It?
- Getting There: The Ticket Redemption Point
- Practical Tips That Make the Day Better
- Who Should Book This Day Pass?
- Should You Book Andamanda Phuket?
- FAQ
- How long is the Andamanda Water Park entry ticket?
- Where do I redeem the ticket?
- What does the ticket include?
- Is food included in the ticket price?
- Are there extreme rides, or is it mostly family-friendly?
- Is there a kid zone?
- What is the price per person?
- Can I get hotel pickup?
- What is the cancellation policy?
- Is the experience suitable for most travelers?
Key Highlights You’ll Care About

- Five themed zones (Coral World, The Great Andaman Bay, The Pearl Palace, Emerald Forest, Naga Jungle) with full-day flow
- 25 attractions, 36 lanes, 12 extreme rides for both thrill seekers and cautious swimmers
- A serious kid zone (5,300 sq.m.) that makes family days easier
- Lazy river time plus tube slides so you can switch gears without leaving the park
- Food hubs and swim-up bars/restaurant inside the water-park bubble
- Optional add-ons like a free towel (when selected) and round-trip hotel pickup (when selected)
Entering Andamanda Phuket: Big, New, and Built for a Full Day

Andamanda Phuket has the feel of a modern water park. Not a small local affair. This place is designed to keep you moving, laughing, and cooling off for hours, which matters in Phuket heat. You’re paying for access that’s meant to cover a whole day, not a quick splash-and-go.
The park is huge by Phuket standards: about 9 hectares and 25 attractions spread across five themed zones. That scale is what makes it more than just a collection of slides. You can chase thrills, then retreat to calmer sections without feeling like you’re trapped in one lane.
Two things really stick with me from the overall vibe. First: the park layout feels clean and well designed, so you’re not constantly fighting confusion or bottlenecks. Second: it’s not only for teenagers or only for kids. The design clearly aims to serve families, couples, and groups with different comfort levels.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Phuket
What Your Day Pass Includes (and What It Doesn’t)

Your ticket is a day pass with full access to all five zones and their 25 attractions. That full access is the important part. When the price includes everything, you don’t end up rationing rides.
Included details you should note:
- Full access to all 5 zones: Coral World, The Great Andaman Bay, The Pearl Palace, Emerald Forest, Naga Jungle
- Special free towel if that option was picked at booking
- Round-trip hotel pickup if that option was selected
Not included:
- Food and beverages
So yes, you’ll want to budget for meals and drinks inside the park.
Your 8 Hours in Andamanda: Zone by Zone
Even though you have full access to everything, you’ll have an easier day if you think in zones. Each themed area helps you pace the day, and it makes it simpler to plan a route when you’re tired and damp.
Coral World: A Playful Start Point
Coral World is one of the five themed zones included in your full-day access. For many people, this kind of zone works best as an early anchor: you arrive cooler, move faster, and knock out a first set of rides before the heat stacks up.
If you’re traveling with kids, you’ll likely find yourself returning to slower-paced areas like this while others test the bigger slides. Even when you’re chasing thrills, a zone like Coral World is usually where you reset.
The Great Andaman Bay: Beach-Feeling Water Time
This is the zone that most naturally matches downtime. One highlight mentioned is a superb artificial beach, which is a big deal in a water park because it gives you that sand-and-relax feeling without needing to leave the park grounds.
If your group includes people who don’t want nonstop motion, the Great Andaman Bay vibe helps. You can slide hard, then spend real time just hanging out near the water.
The Pearl Palace: Where You Can Find Variety
The Pearl Palace adds another themed layer, and it helps break up the day. When a park spreads rides across themed areas, it reduces the mental fatigue of repeating the same path over and over.
This zone is a good target if you’re trying to balance adrenaline with comfort. Think: do a few tube rides, grab water, then keep rolling. The park has 36 lanes of activities, which generally means you can keep moving rather than waiting forever, as long as you choose your ride order wisely.
Emerald Forest: A Shade-Forward Mood (Most Likely)
Emerald Forest is another of the included zones. With any water park, the best planning trick is to use themed areas to regulate sun exposure. A zone like this is a common place to mix in breaks, because the theme usually goes hand-in-hand with calmer spots and varied attractions.
I’m not promising any specific shade coverage details that aren’t listed here, but the park’s layout and zone design matter. The goal is to avoid spending all your energy in one harsh-sun pocket.
Naga Jungle: The Extreme Side Gets Real
You’ll see 12 extreme attractions across the park. In a setup like this, the last zone you hit often becomes your “finish strong” area. Naga Jungle is a natural candidate for that role because it sounds like the park’s more high-adrenaline chapter.
If you’re traveling with mixed groups, this is where it helps to plan ahead. The people who want maximum thrills can go all-in here, while others can choose calmer rides nearby. Full access makes that easier than when rides are locked behind extra tickets.
Tubes, Lanes, and the Lazy River: How the Ride Mix Actually Works

The park’s selling point isn’t only the number of slides. It’s the variety of ways to use them. With tube-style slides and 36 lanes of activity, Andamanda Phuket is set up for frequent ride cycles. That matters because a water park day can turn frustrating if you keep hitting long waits.
The other big piece is balance. One review highlighted thrilling splash-downs and a lazy river. That combination is what makes a full day feel doable for different energy levels.
Here’s the practical way to think about it:
- Do a cluster of rides that match your group’s energy level.
- Build in slower time between the big ones.
- Treat the lazy river (or similar calmer water areas) as your reset button so everyone can recharge.
Kids at Andamanda Phuket: The 5,300 Sq.m Kid Zone

If you’re traveling with a child around primary-school age, the standout number here is the 5,300 sq.m kid zone. That’s not a corner play area. It’s sized to matter, which gives families a place to regroup.
One family mentioned their 6-year-old loved the park, and that lines up with why the kid zone is so important. When kids can move, splash, and play without feeling like they’re constantly in the way, the whole group has a better day.
Practical tip: if you’re with kids, I’d prioritize the kid zone early and late. When energy is higher in the morning, rides feel exciting. When the afternoon heat adds up, having a kid-friendly area nearby prevents the day from collapsing into stress.
Food Hubs and Swim-Up Bars: Plan Your Refuel

Food is not included, but the park does provide two food hubs and swim-up bars/restaurant. That means you’re not stuck leaving the park bubble to eat. It also means you can take breaks without abandoning your spot for hours.
In the feedback, food got positive mentions, with one comment that the food was top. That’s a good sign, but I still recommend budgeting like meals will add up. Water parks can be pricey because you’re buying convenience: hot day, damp clothes, limited time.
How to make it easier on yourself:
- Treat meals as scheduled breaks, not random stops.
- Use meal time to dry off a bit and cool down your body temperature.
- Re-enter rides with sunscreen and water in mind.
Price and Value: Is $56.68 Worth It?

At about $56.68 per person, you’re buying access to a park that covers a lot of ground: five zones, 25 attractions, and both extreme and family-friendly options. The value hinges on one key decision: will you actually use the full access?
This ticket makes more sense if:
- You plan to stay most of the day (water parks reward time).
- Your group wants different ride types (thrills plus calmer areas).
- You don’t want to pay for separate attractions on top of admission.
If you’re thinking you might only do a handful of slides, value drops fast. That’s not a bad thing. It just means a day pass is best when you treat it like a full-day activity.
Also, if you selected add-ons:
- A towel option can reduce what you need to pack.
- Hotel pickup can save time and hassle, especially if Phuket traffic is turning your schedule into guesswork.
Getting There: The Ticket Redemption Point

You’ll redeem your ticket at Andamanda Phuket, 333, Tambon Kathu, Amphoe Kathu, Chang Wat Phuket 83120, Thailand. That’s the address you’ll want to plug into your navigation app (or show to your driver).
If you’re using hotel pickup, you’ll follow the selected option, then arrive ready for a full day. For planning, build buffer time. Water parks run on a basic rhythm: once you’re through the gates, you’ll want to start quickly before you waste your first hour.
Practical Tips That Make the Day Better
I’m going to keep this grounded because water-park comfort is mostly about small choices.
- Sunscreen matters. One review specifically called it out as essential, and that’s because splash time doesn’t erase sun damage. Reapply as the day goes on.
- Keep a “ride rhythm.” Use big slides, then calm time, then big slides again. You’ll feel better and move more.
- If you’re sensitive to heat, don’t treat water like a substitute for hydration. Plan water breaks before you feel thirsty.
- If your group includes mixed ages or skill levels, pick one extreme-focused zone (like Naga Jungle) and do it at the part of the day when everyone still has energy.
Who Should Book This Day Pass?
This ticket fits best if you want a full water-park day and you like options. It’s a strong choice for:
- Families who need a serious kid zone and also want thrills for adults
- Groups of friends with mixed ride comfort levels
- Couples who want a fun day with downtime options like a lazy river and a beachy area
If you hate crowds and long walking days, this might still be fine if you go early and pace your route. But it’s designed for maximum use of the park’s many attractions, so you should expect it to feel like a full-on activity day.
Should You Book Andamanda Phuket?
I’d book it if you’re looking for a major Phuket water-park experience with enough variety to keep different people happy. The combination of five themed zones, 25 attractions, a large kid zone, and calmer water time like the lazy river is a good recipe for a day that doesn’t go stale.
You should think twice if your plan is short and you won’t stay for most of the day. With a day pass price and full-access structure, the ticket makes the most sense when you actually use it.
If you’re ready to spend an entire hot day getting wet and rerunning your favorite rides, Andamanda Phuket is an easy yes.
FAQ
How long is the Andamanda Water Park entry ticket?
The duration is listed as about 8 hours.
Where do I redeem the ticket?
You’ll redeem it at Andamanda Phuket, 333 Tambon Kathu, Amphoe Kathu, Chang Wat Phuket 83120, Thailand.
What does the ticket include?
It includes day pass entry with full access to all five park zones and their 25 attractions. Depending on your selected options, it may also include a free towel and round-trip hotel pickup.
Is food included in the ticket price?
No. Food and beverages are not included.
Are there extreme rides, or is it mostly family-friendly?
The park includes 12 extreme attractions, along with plenty of options across the five zones for different comfort levels.
Is there a kid zone?
Yes. There is a kid zone measuring about 5,300 sq.m included in the park experience.
What is the price per person?
The price is listed as $56.68 per person.
Can I get hotel pickup?
Round-trip hotel pickup is included if you select that option.
What is the cancellation policy?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is the experience suitable for most travelers?
The info states that most travelers can participate.



























