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Terris Recommends Entertainment 10 min read

6 Best Trampoline Parks in Singapore (2026)

My picks of the 6 best trampoline and indoor adventure parks in Singapore for 2026, from all-in-one family parks to freestyle jump arenas and ninja courses, with prices, grip-sock rules and who each suits.

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This guide is part of Terris Recommends, my independent, hands-on picks of the best local businesses and services in Singapore. Every recommendation is researched and ranked by me.

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The best trampoline park in Singapore is the answer to two things at once: tiring out energetic kids, and staying active without melting in the heat. These big, padded, air-conditioned playgrounds are packed with trampolines, foam pits, dodgeball courts and obstacle courses, and they are a brilliant weatherproof outing for families, teens and even fitness-minded adults. The trick is knowing which type you want.

The real split is between a pure freestyle trampoline park, where bouncing, dodgeball and airbags are the whole point, and a multi-activity indoor adventure park, where trampolines are just one zone alongside climbing, ninja courses and more. Add the age of your group into the mix, from toddlers to adults, and the right choice becomes clear. So I have picked across both types, flagging who each suits.

This is part of my Terris Recommends Entertainment series and a companion to my guide to the best indoor activities in Singapore.

01

What I look for in a trampoline park

Bouncing is bouncing, but the parks differ a lot. Here is what I weigh up.

  • Pure trampoline or multi-activity. A freestyle park is all about the jump; a multi-activity adventure park mixes in climbing, ninja courses and play zones. The right one depends on your group's age and what they enjoy.
  • Age suitability. Toddler sessions, kid-friendly zones and challenging courses for teens and adults are very different things. I have flagged who each park suits.
  • Safety and rules. Marshals on the floor, one-jumper-per-trampoline rules and clear age or weight limits are the mark of a well-run park. This matters a lot with kids.
  • Grip socks. Every park requires its own branded grip socks, an extra couple of dollars that you keep. Regular socks are not allowed on the mat.
  • Value and booking. Hourly versus session pricing, and whether you should book ahead for busy slots. I note the model for each.

My practical tip: book online for peak and school-holiday slots, which sell out, and factor in the grip-sock cost. Keep the socks, since the same park will let you reuse them next time.

Next: How the best trampoline parks in Singapore compare
02

How the best trampoline parks in Singapore compare

ParkTypeBest for
SuperParkMulti-activity adventureAll-in-one family day, all ages
BOUNCEFreestyle trampolineTeens, adults, freestyle athletes
AmpedFreestyle trampolineKids and teens all-rounder
KatapultFreestyle trampolineBudget families, toddlers
AirzoneSuspended net playKids and teens wanting novelty
Adventure HQNinja and climbingTeens, adults, fitness and thrill
Next: 1. SuperPark Singapore
03

1. SuperPark Singapore

SuperPark is my all-round pick and the best choice for a one-ticket family day out. Spread across 25,000 square feet at Suntec City, it packs in more than thirty activities across three zones, from a Freestyle Hall with trampolines and an airbag to a Games Arena and an Adventure Area for younger kids, all covered by a single wristband. That variety means everyone from toddlers to adults finds something, and nobody gets bored.

It carries a strong 4.7 rating across hundreds of reviews and was revamped recently, so it feels fresh. Grip socks are required. For a family with a spread of ages who want maximum play for one price, it is the easy winner.

Website: superpark.com.sg
Location: Suntec City, 3 Temasek Boulevard, #02-488
Google Rating: 4.7 stars (700+ reviews)
Best known for: An all-in-one indoor activity park with 30-plus activities on one wristband

Contact SuperPark Singapore directly

Next: 2. BOUNCE Singapore
04

2. BOUNCE Singapore

BOUNCE is my pick for the serious freestyle scene, and the one for teens, adults and anyone who wants to properly jump. Its arena is built for freestyle, with free-jump zones, a big airbag, a slam-dunk area, dodgeball, a wall-running feature and an X-Park ninja course, so it rewards skill and energy in a way the gentler parks do not. There is a Junior Jumper zone for little ones too.

Centrally located at Cineleisure on Orchard, with hourly pricing, it is the most athlete-credible trampoline park here. For older kids, teens and fit adults who want a proper workout disguised as play, it is my pick.

Website: bounceinc.com.sg
Location: Cineleisure, 8 Grange Road, #09-01
Google Rating: Well reviewed
Best known for: A freestyle-focused arena for teens, adults and athletes

Contact BOUNCE Singapore directly

Next: 3. Amped Trampoline Park
05

3. Amped Trampoline Park

Amped is my pick for a solid all-rounder, particularly for kids and teens. Near Outram at Raeburn Park, it combines a big open jump arena with an AIRena, a Ninja Warrior area, dodgeball and interactive games, giving a good mix of free jumping and structured challenges. Under-threes go free with a paying adult, which is a nice touch for families with a toddler in tow.

With a 4.2 rating across hundreds of reviews and hourly pricing that suits shorter visits, it is a dependable, well-rounded choice. For a kids-and-teens outing that balances bouncing with a bit of challenge, it works well.

Website: ampedsingapore.com
Location: 10 Raeburn Park, #02-33 Block C (near Outram)
Google Rating: 4.2 stars (600+ reviews)
Best known for: A well-rounded jump-and-challenge park for kids and teens

Next: 4. Katapult Trampoline Park
06

4. Katapult Trampoline Park

Katapult at ORTO in Yishun is my pick for budget families and toddlers, being the cheapest on this list. It packs in more than thirty interconnected trampolines and seven stations, including a three-metre free-fall into an airbag, a slack line, a wall run, dodgeball and a rock wall, all in an open-air, nature-park setting that is a pleasant change from a mall. Young children go free with a paying adult.

The low prices and toddler-friendly setup make it a great value choice for families, and the ORTO surroundings mean you can pair it with a wider day out in the north. For affordable bouncing with young kids, it is the one.

Website: katapult.com.sg
Location: ORTO, Yishun (near Khatib MRT)
Google Rating: Well reviewed
Best known for: The cheapest trampoline park, toddler-friendly, in a nature setting

Contact Katapult Trampoline Park directly

Next: 5. Airzone
07

5. Airzone

Airzone at City Square Mall is my pick for something genuinely different, and it is not a trampoline park at all but a world-first suspended-net playground. Giant nets span several storeys of the mall atrium, threaded with slides, a ball pit, a 3D maze and more, so kids and teens can climb, bounce and slide through the air in a way no standard park offers. It is a real novelty.

Recently refreshed for accessibility, it is a unique active outing especially suited to kids and teens who have done the usual trampoline parks and want something new. For novelty and a bit of gentle adventure, it stands out.

Website: airzone.sg
Location: City Square Mall, 180 Kitchener Road, #02-K4 (Farrer Park)
Google Rating: Well reviewed
Best known for: A world-first suspended-net playground with slides and a maze

Next: 6. Adventure HQ
08

6. Adventure HQ

Adventure HQ at HomeTeamNS Khatib is my pick for teens, adults and the fitness-minded who want challenge over bouncing. It is a proper indoor adventure centre with a genuine ninja-warrior course, high-elements ropes, climbing walls and tunnel crawls, so it appeals to anyone who finds a standard trampoline park too tame. This is where you go to test yourself, not just jump around.

The combo of ninja, ropes and climbing sits at the premium end of the price range, reflecting the scale of the facility. For older kids, teens and active adults after a real physical challenge, it is the standout.

Website: hometeamns.sg
Location: HomeTeamNS Khatib Clubhouse (Khatib MRT)
Google Rating: Well reviewed
Best known for: Ninja-warrior course, high-elements ropes and climbing for teens and adults

Next: How much does a trampoline park cost in Singapore?
09

How much does a trampoline park cost in Singapore?

Trampoline parks charge by the hour or by session, with grip socks extra. As a rough guide for 2026:

TypeTypical price per person
Budget trampoline, per hourAbout S$15 to S$19
Two-hour or multi-activity sessionAbout S$23 to S$30
Premium adventure (ninja, high elements)From around S$65
Grip socks (compulsory, reusable)About S$2 to S$3.50

The pure trampoline parks are the cheapest, while multi-activity and adventure venues cost more for the extra facilities. Every park requires its own grip socks, so budget the extra couple of dollars and keep them for next time. Booking online ahead is often cheaper and secures a peak slot.

Next: How I put this list together
10

How I put this list together

These are my own picks, not a paid directory. I sorted the field into pure trampoline parks and multi-activity adventure parks, then weighed age suitability, safety and rules, the grip-sock and pricing model, and value. I have flagged who each park suits, from toddlers to fitness-minded adults, so you can pick the right one for your group.

Details and prices are checked at the time of writing, and I revisit this guide as parks open and close. Worth noting: Zoom Park, once the largest, has closed, so I have listed only venues confirmed to be operating. Always confirm the current price, session times and any age or height limits before you go.

Next: Are trampoline parks in Singapore safe, and what are the rules?
11

Are trampoline parks in Singapore safe, and what are the rules?

Reputable parks have floor marshals and enforce rules like one jumper per trampoline, no double-bouncing and no unsupervised somersaults. Follow the briefing, jump within your ability, and supervise young children. Choosing a well-run park with clear rules is the main thing for safety.

Next: Do I have to buy grip socks, and can I bring my own?
12

Do I have to buy grip socks, and can I bring my own?

Yes, every trampoline park requires its own branded grip socks, usually S$2 to S$3.50, and regular socks are not allowed on the mat. You keep them, so bring the same park's pair next time to avoid buying again.

Next: What are the age and weight limits at trampoline parks?
13

What are the age and weight limits at trampoline parks?

Most parks run toddler or junior sessions for very young children and set maximum weight limits for airbags and free-fall features. Under-threes often go free with a paying adult. Limits vary by park, so check the specific venue before visiting with toddlers.

Next: Which trampoline park is best for toddlers?
14

Which trampoline park is best for toddlers?

Katapult, SuperPark's Adventure Area and Amped's junior zones are all good for toddlers, with gentler areas and free entry for under-threes with an adult at several parks. Airzone's nets suit slightly older children who can climb confidently.

Next: Do I need to book a trampoline park in advance?
15

Do I need to book a trampoline park in advance?

For peak evenings, weekends and school holidays, yes, as timed sessions sell out. Booking online via the park's own site or a platform like Klook is often cheaper too. Off-peak weekday visits are usually fine to walk into.

Next: Need a website for your trampoline park or attraction
16

Need a website for your trampoline park or attraction

When a parent is planning a day out or a birthday, they search first, and the park that shows up with clear pricing, session times and easy booking wins the visit. Those are high-intent local searches, and a lot of attraction businesses lose them to a slow or confusing website.

I design and build fast, search-optimised websites for Singapore leisure and attraction businesses, with the local SEO and clear booking-focused pages that turn searches into visits. If your website is not bringing in customers, that is often the cheapest growth you can buy.

Ready to talk? Get a quote here and tell me about your venue, and I will give you a straight answer on what would actually move the needle.

The best trampoline park in Singapore comes down to type and age. SuperPark is my all-round pick for an all-ages family day, BOUNCE is the freestyle choice for teens and adults, Katapult is the budget and toddler favourite, and Adventure HQ is the one for a real ninja-and-climbing challenge.

Decide pure trampoline versus multi-activity, budget for grip socks, and book peak slots ahead. This is part of my Terris Recommends Entertainment series, alongside my guide to the best indoor activities in Singapore.

Terris, the recommender behind Terris Recommends

Professional Opinion-haver

Terris

Chief Recommender · I do the digging so you don't have to

Terris is a Singapore-based web designer and digital strategist who has spent 8+ years building websites for local businesses. His Terris Recommends series shares personal picks for the best service providers across Singapore, informed by his experience working with businesses across industries.

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