Quick answer: Ludiparc has permanently closed — its Google Maps listing says so in black and white, and the park did not reopen for the 2026 season. If you were going for the price, go to Palmiya (250 DH adult, 150 DH child), now the cheapest open water park in Marrakech. If you were going with young children, go to Oasiria (Kids Club, wave pool, free under 80cm, free shuttle). If you were going for the quiet, go to Le Vizir Center. Marrakech now has 9 water parks instead of 10.

If you're searching for Ludiparc, you'll run into a lot of outdated information. Most of the sites that list it — TripAdvisor, tourist directories, booking platforms — still show it as open, complete with hours and prices. That's wrong. The park has permanently closed, and this page exists to save you the trip and point you to what actually replaces what you were looking for.

How we know Ludiparc is closed

No official announcement was made. That's common for small Moroccan businesses: they stop operating without a statement, and the news rarely spreads. Three verifiable facts nonetheless line up.

Its Google Maps listing shows "Permanently closed." That's the deciding factor. Google is the only platform that actively flips a listing to closed, based on reports and inactivity signals. When Google shows it, it's reliable.

The last sign of life dates to summer 2025. The most recent Google reviews are about ten months old. One, posted in early September 2025, mentioned the pool was officially closing the next day — the usual end-of-season pattern. The park never reopened after that.

The 2026 season is empty. No reviews, no photos, no posts since. We're in mid-July, at peak season: an operating water park in Marrakech in July inevitably leaves a trail. There isn't one.

A word on the sources that say otherwise, because it's worth the detour: we got this wrong ourselves two weeks ago. A check relying on TripAdvisor, Facebook pages and booking platforms concluded that Ludiparc was open. Those platforms almost never remove an inactive listing — a dead park stays "open" there indefinitely, with hours that no longer mean anything. The lesson applies to any business you're researching in Marrakech: on an open/closed status, only the Google Maps listing is authoritative.

What the closure actually changes

Ludiparc was never a big park. Rated 3.3/5 on Google (425 reviews), it was the lowest-rated in Marrakech, with ageing facilities and irregular upkeep that visitors regularly flagged. Nobody was coming to Marrakech for Ludiparc.

But it held a position that nothing else fills: it was the only park under 100 DH. Around 60 DH child and 90 DH adult on weekdays, 80 and 110 DH at weekends. The next cheapest park is 250 DH.

In other words: Marrakech's cheapest water park ticket just went from around 90 DH to 250 DH. It nearly tripled. For a tourist, that gap is a footnote. For a Marrakchi family of four, that's the difference between roughly 300 DH and 800 DH for the outing — not the same decision anymore. The budget end of Marrakech's water park market has simply disappeared.

What replaces Ludiparc, depending on what you needed

Ludiparc ticked three different boxes for different visitors: price, very young children, and quiet. No single park covers all three. Here's the alternative for each.

You were going for the price → Palmiya

Palmiya Aqua Fun Park, in the Palmeraie, is now the cheapest open water park in Marrakech: 250 DH adult entry, 150 DH child, with a family pass around 500 DH. Rated 3.8/5 on Google (133 reviews), it leans into a beach-club vibe, in a quiet, green setting, with free parking included.

Let's be clear about the gap: it's nearly three times Ludiparc's old rate. But it's also a different park altogether — cleaner, better rated, with proper slides. If your constraint was really the tight budget rather than the water park experience itself, know that a 90 DH option no longer exists in Marrakech.

Two things to know before you go: there's no free shuttle (budget for a taxi or Careem from the centre), and a few visitors report the park being closed or reserved for private groups on a given day despite an online confirmation. Call the park that same morning before making the trip.

You were going with young children → Oasiria

Oasiria is the park built for families: Kids Club, shallow pools, a wave pool, 11 slides, and about ten hectares of gardens. Rated 3.7/5 on Google (3,858 reviews), it's the most complete park in the city.

On budget: 300 DH adult in high season (240 DH in April), 160 to 200 DH for a child between 80cm and 1.50m, and free under 80cm — which matters if your child is exactly in the age bracket you had in mind for Ludiparc. Two ways to ease the cost: the free shuttle from Jemaa El Fna (Koutoubia) and Guéliz, which removes the taxi fare, and the resident rate on presentation of a Moroccan ID (CIN) (around 250 DH instead of 300 DH). The park is open from April to early November, daily until 6pm.

If the child rate is your sticking point, also look at Eden Aquapark: 250 DH adult but 120 DH child, the cheapest child rate in Marrakech. The park is rated 3.6/5 (692 reviews) on its own listing — not to be confused with the rating of the Delta by Marriott hotel that hosts it, which is notably higher but says nothing about the water park itself.

You were going for the quiet → Le Vizir Center

Le Vizir Center (4.0/5, 762 reviews) remains the least crowded water park in Marrakech accessible without a hotel stay. If what you liked about Ludiparc was the absence of crowds and queues, that's where to look now. Contact the venue for the day-entry rate: the figures circulating online aren't confirmed by an official source, and we'd rather not publish a price we haven't verified.

What about Palooza Land?

You may see Palooza Land listed with an entry price of 69 DH, which would make it the only tariff comparable to Ludiparc's. Be careful not to get the wrong idea: it's a dinosaur-themed leisure park, not a water park. Its low entry price covers access to the site, not necessarily the pool area or the attractions, which cost extra. The park also only opens at 4pm on weekdays. If you're after water for your kids, it's not the right fit — if you're after a cheap family outing in the late afternoon, it's worth considering.

The 9 water parks in Marrakech in July 2026

We checked the status of all ten parks one by one on their Google Maps listing on 15 July 2026. Ludiparc is the only one closed. Here's the real picture:

  • Oasiria — 3.7/5 (3,858 reviews) — open, April to early November, 240–300 DH — most complete, free shuttle
  • Eden Aquapark — 3.6/5 (692 reviews) — open, 250 DH adult / 120 DH child — best child rate
  • Pickalbatros Aqua Fun Club — 4.4/5 (5,724 reviews) — open year-round — the most slides, most thrills
  • Aqua Mirage — 4.1/5 (6,571 reviews) — open, 400 DH full day, lunch included
  • Palmiya — 3.8/5 (133 reviews) — open, 250 DH — cheapest now
  • Le Vizir Center — 4.0/5 (762 reviews) — open — quietest
  • Palooza Land — 3.6/5 (2,352 reviews) — open — dinosaur theme park with water zone
  • Labranda Targa — 4.4/5 (6,882 reviews) — open, hotel guests only
  • Rose Aquapark — 4.3/5 (2,912 reviews) — open, hotel guests only
  • Ludiparc — 3.3/5 (425 reviews) — permanently closed

My final advice

If you're a tourist who came across Ludiparc in a list: don't look further, it wasn't the right park for you anyway. Go to Oasiria if you want the most complete park, to Pickalbatros if you want thrills.

If you're a local family and Ludiparc was your affordable summer outing: I don't have good news. That price point no longer exists. The best I can offer is Oasiria's resident rate with your CIN and the free shuttle to save on the taxi, or Palmiya's family pass. Either way, you're well above 90 DH.

And if someone tells you Ludiparc is open because they read it somewhere: the Google Maps listing says otherwise, and it's the one that's right.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Ludiparc Marrakech really closed?

Yes, permanently. Its Google Maps listing shows the "Permanently closed" label and no review has been posted since summer 2025. Note: TripAdvisor and tourist directories still list it as open, because those platforms almost never remove an inactive listing.

What is the cheapest water park in Marrakech in 2026?

Palmiya, at 250 DH adult entry and 150 DH child. Eden Aquapark is at the same level for adults (250 DH) and drops to 120 DH for children, the cheapest child rate in the city. Since Ludiparc closed, no Marrakech water park offers entry below 250 DH adult.

What replaces Ludiparc for young children?

Oasiria is the best-suited park for young children: Kids Club, shallow pools, a wave pool, and free entry under 80cm. Expect 300 DH adult in high season and 160 to 200 DH for a child between 80cm and 1.50m. The free shuttle from Jemaa El Fna and Guéliz reduces the transport cost.

How many water parks does Marrakech have since Ludiparc closed?

Nine, down from ten. Seven are open to the public without a hotel stay: Oasiria, Eden Aquapark, Pickalbatros Aqua Fun Club, Aqua Mirage, Palmiya, Le Vizir Center and Palooza Land. Labranda Targa and Rose Aquapark are reserved for hotel guests.

Is there still an affordable water park in Marrakech for local families?

The bottom of the market disappeared with Ludiparc: the lowest entry ticket went from around 90 DH to 250 DH. Two ways to reduce the cost: the resident rate on presentation of a Moroccan ID (CIN), applied notably at Oasiria (around 250 DH versus 300 DH non-resident in high season), and family passes like Palmiya's (around 500 DH).

Has another water park taken over Ludiparc's old location?

No. No source reports a takeover, purchase or reopening under another name. The closest water park to Ludiparc's former location, in the north of the city, is Palmiya, in the Palmeraie.