REVIEW · MALLORCA
Costa d’en Blanes: Entry Ticket for Marineland Mallorca
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Dolphins steal the show, fast. At Marineland Mallorca in Costa d’en Blanes, your one-day ticket lets you enjoy dolphin performances and aquarium viewing in the same visit, with live programs built into your day. I like how the park keeps things moving, so you’re not stuck waiting around without something to watch or learn.
One thing to consider: this is a small park. If you’re the type who wants lots of wandering time, you might wrap up sooner than you expected after the shows and animal areas.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Getting There, Entry Points, and the Timing That Matters
- What Your One-Day Ticket Actually Includes
- Dolphin Shows: The Big Performance Built for Repeat Watching
- Sea Lions and Exotic Birds: More Than One Style of Show
- Aquariums with Freshwater, Saltwater, and Shark Viewing
- Aviary Time: Flamingos and Humboldt Penguins
- Tropical House Rainforest: Iguanas, Parrots, and Poison Frogs
- A Small Park With Smart Pacing: How to Plan Your Day
- Refurbished Playground and Family Flow
- Food and Souvenirs: Budget Realities Inside the Park
- Value for Money: Is the $35 Ticket Worth It?
- Who Should Book This and Who Might Skip It?
- Should You Book Marineland Mallorca Entry Ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is the Marineland Mallorca entry ticket meeting point?
- How much does the entry ticket cost?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- What time is the last entry to the park?
- What is included in the ticket price?
- What is not included?
- Is the park wheelchair accessible?
- How can I get there by public transport?
Key things to know before you go

- Two all-action dolphin displays daily with a total of 7 dolphins up on show
- 5 shows per day spread across sea lions and exotic birds alongside the dolphin program
- Three aquarium environments for freshwater, saltwater, and shark viewing
- Aviary highlights include flamingos and Humboldt penguins
- Tropical House rainforest set with iguanas, parrots, and poison frogs
- Refurbished playground for kids between animal viewing stops
Getting There, Entry Points, and the Timing That Matters

Marineland Mallorca sits at Carrer Garcilaso de la Vega, 9, 07181 Costa d’en Blanes, and the visit is designed around the park’s show schedule. If you’re driving, there’s free parking, but you’ll need to grab a parking ticket from the ticket desk.
The “don’t mess this up” detail: enter via the main gate using your online ticket. Also, plan around the day’s boundaries. Last entry is at 12:45 PM, so don’t treat this like a late-morning stroll you can drift into whenever.
If you prefer public transport, check bus line 103, 104, 106, or 107 and get off at the Marineland stop. That’s helpful when you want a low-stress day and don’t want to think about car logistics.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Mallorca
What Your One-Day Ticket Actually Includes

This isn’t a museum-and-maybe-a-show kind of ticket. You’re buying entry to Marineland Mallorca and access to the park’s core animal areas and daily programming.
Your ticket includes:
- Entry into the park
- 5 daily shows
- Free parking (with the parking ticket pickup at the ticket desk)
Not included:
- Food and drinks
- Hotel pickup and drop-off
That matters for budgeting. The ticket price is $35 per person, and you should assume you’ll spend extra on snacks or lunch inside the park. If you’re traveling with kids, this becomes the key “value math”: how many shows you can comfortably catch, plus how hungry you get between them.
The good news is that the park is wheelchair accessible, so if you’re traveling with mobility needs, you won’t be shut out of the main viewing areas.
Dolphin Shows: The Big Performance Built for Repeat Watching

The dolphin program is the headline, and for good reason. The park features 7 dolphins putting on performances, with two all-action displays every day. Translation: you’re not relying on one single show time to get your fix.
What I like about this setup is how it gives you flexibility. If you miss the first display or you spend a little extra time in the aquariums, you still get another shot later the same day. For families, that’s a huge deal because kids (and adults) often need a little pacing room.
Expect an energetic show format that blends performance and education. It’s also the easiest part of the day to plan around because the dolphin displays act like anchors in your schedule. Build your visit around them and everything else becomes easier.
Sea Lions and Exotic Birds: More Than One Style of Show

Beyond dolphins, Marineland Mallorca also runs live shows featuring sea lions and exotic birds. The show lineup is part of what makes this ticket feel like a “structured day out” rather than a free-form walk.
Why this is smart: if you’re traveling with a group where not everyone is equally focused on marine life, you still get variety. Sea lions keep a strong presence with their own style of performance, and the exotic bird program adds a different energy—something visually distinct and easier for many kids to follow.
Also, because your ticket covers 5 daily shows, you’re not stuck watching the same thing over and over. You can rotate attention: show for excitement, then quiet browsing in one of the animal areas.
Aquariums with Freshwater, Saltwater, and Shark Viewing
One of the best “between shows” sections is the aquarium area. You get access to three aquarium environments, including freshwater and saltwater setups, plus shark viewing.
This is where you can slow down a bit. Shows are scheduled and fast. The aquariums are your reset button. Look at the way sharks glide through the water compared to the smaller fish species. It’s not just entertainment—it helps you understand how different ocean life uses different spaces and behaviors.
If you’re the type who likes photos, the aquariums often give you the most reliable viewing angles because visitors tend to linger less during this part than during the shows. Plan for a little waiting at popular exhibits if you arrive at peak time.
Aviary Time: Flamingos and Humboldt Penguins

The aviary is one of those areas that feels like a different world from the marine sections. You’ll see flamingos and Humboldt penguins, including a penguin enclosure.
This is a great inclusion for two reasons. First, it broadens the animal mix beyond ocean-only viewing. Second, it gives you a “pause” activity when you’re not in show mode.
For families, this is often where kids recharge. Penguin viewing in particular tends to be a natural time-waster—in a good way. You might plan to look for a few minutes and end up staying longer because the whole area invites lingering.
Tropical House Rainforest: Iguanas, Parrots, and Poison Frogs
The Tropical House is built as a simulated rainforest environment. That theme matters because it turns animal viewing into a “walk-through setting,” not just a row of enclosures.
Inside, you can spot:
- Iguanas
- Parrots
- Poison frogs
I like this part of the visit because it mixes educational curiosity with visual variety. The plants and layout are meant to make you feel like you’re moving through an environment, and that helps you stay engaged even when you’re between big performances.
If you want quick win value, this is one of the best places to spend time after a show. People often rush through it because they’re chasing the next exhibit, but the rainforest section rewards slow observation.
A Small Park With Smart Pacing: How to Plan Your Day

Here’s the practical truth: Marineland Mallorca is described as quite small, and that affects planning. Some visitors manage to see much of everything quickly, especially if they arrive around opening and catch the shows right away.
You’ve got two workable strategies:
Strategy A: Anchor around dolphin displays.
Arrive with enough time to settle in and get oriented. Hit the first dolphin performance, then use the aquariums and aviary as your mid-day browsing. Finish with the Tropical House and the penguins so your last stretch stays interesting.
Strategy B: Arrive later, then catch show rhythm.
If you arrive in the afternoon, you still get plenty of value because the show schedule gives repeat opportunities. One key benefit here is that the park is compact enough that you don’t lose half your day just walking between zones.
Either way, don’t try to do everything at once. Pick your must-sees (dolphins, plus either penguins or the Tropical House). Then let the rest fill in around those.
Refurbished Playground and Family Flow

A lot of animal parks forget the in-between moments. Marineland Mallorca includes a newly refurbished playground, which helps make the day feel more “family friendly” between animal viewings and shows.
If you’re traveling with kids, build the day around energy cycles. Watch a show, take a short walk through an exhibit area, then let kids burn off steam at the playground. It keeps the mood calmer and makes it easier to enjoy the animal sections without everyone melting down.
Food and Souvenirs: Budget Realities Inside the Park
Food and drinks are not included in the ticket price, and you should plan for that. There’s dining on-site and souvenir options, but one common complaint is that food can be expensive, and quality may not match the cost.
My advice is simple:
- Eat before you arrive if you’re on a tight budget.
- If you do buy something inside, consider sharing so you don’t overpay for individual meals.
- Bring water if the park allows it, so you aren’t forced into frequent purchases just to stay comfortable (specific rules aren’t listed here, so it’s worth checking at the entrance).
Souvenirs are usually a standard add-on at animal parks. If you’re not trying to bring home every item, keep it to one meaningful purchase so it doesn’t turn into an expensive “because we’re here” habit.
Value for Money: Is the $35 Ticket Worth It?
At $35 per person, this ticket can be a strong value if you want a day packed with animal viewing and scheduled shows. You get:
- access to multiple animal areas
- five daily shows
- dolphin and sea lion performance time
- aquarium viewing plus birds and rainforest animals
So where can the value slip? The main risk is that the park is small, and there’s not an unlimited amount of strolling-and-discovering time after you catch the shows. If you’re expecting a sprawling full-day theme park with hours of low-effort wandering, you might end up feeling “that’s it?” sooner than planned.
For best value, match the ticket to your style:
- If you love live shows and want your animal time organized, you’ll likely feel satisfied.
- If you mostly want slow independent exploring, you may want to pair this with other activities in the Costa d’en Blanes area so your whole day isn’t just Marineland.
Who Should Book This and Who Might Skip It?
This works especially well for:
- families who want a show-heavy day with a playground built in
- marine life fans who care about dolphins and shark viewing
- visitors who like variety: birds, penguins, rainforest animals, and aquarium environments
It may not be the best fit if:
- you dislike time-based shows and prefer unscheduled visiting only
- you’re expecting a long, sprawling park day with lots of quiet space to roam
- you’re very price-sensitive once food and drinks enter the picture
Should You Book Marineland Mallorca Entry Ticket?
If your ideal Mallorca day includes dolphin performances, a mix of aquariums and animal zones, and a schedule that keeps things simple, then yes, I think booking makes sense. The combination of two dolphin displays daily and 5 shows gives you more than one way to build your day around what you care about.
Book with the expectation that it’s a compact park. Go in with a plan: catch a dolphin show early, then rotate through aquariums, the aviary, and the Tropical House. Do that, and the $35 ticket turns into a focused, animal-forward day that doesn’t waste your time.
FAQ
Where is the Marineland Mallorca entry ticket meeting point?
The meeting point is Marineland Mallorca, Carrer Garcilaso de la Vega, 9, 07181 Costa d’en Blanes, Balearic Islands, Spain. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
How much does the entry ticket cost?
The entry ticket costs $35 per person.
How long is the ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 1 day. You can check availability for starting times.
What time is the last entry to the park?
Last entry into the park is at 12:45 PM.
What is included in the ticket price?
The ticket includes entry into the park and 5 daily shows. It also includes free parking, but you must obtain a ticket from the ticket desk.
What is not included?
Food and drinks are not included. Hotel pickup and drop-off are also not included.
Is the park wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the activity is listed as wheelchair accessible.
How can I get there by public transport?
You can take bus lines 103, 104, 106, or 107 and get off at the Marineland stop.




























