Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket

Bioparc Valencia admission lets you tour Africa-themed habitats on foot in one day, with lions, elephants, hippos, lemurs, and more.

4.8(1,841 reviews)From $35 per person

I came away loving Bioparc Valencia because it feels more like a walking safari than a typical city zoo. You get a one-day admission ticket and move through four African areas—Savannah, Wetlands, equatorial rainforest, and Madagascar—plus highlights like Kitum Cave and up-close viewing from clever viewpoints.

Two things I like a lot: first, the park is very well kept. Visitors repeatedly note how clean it is and how carefully the animals look cared for. Second, the experiences are set up to help you actually see wildlife in a natural-feeling way, with multiple angles and trails that guide you through each habitat.

One consideration: rules are strict. No food or drinks (except water in non-glass containers) and no flash photography. If you’re hoping to snack your way through, you’ll need to adjust—or plan your meal before or after.

Simon

Lisa

Ruby

Quick take: Bioparc Valencia ticket highlights

  • Africa in four ecosystems: Savannah, Wetlands, equatorial rainforest, and Madagascar Island
  • Kitum Cave and the elephant trail: a standout recreation tied to the pachyderms’ habitat
  • Underground viewing zones: burrows and small-animal areas like aardvarks and hyenas
  • Multiple viewing angles: visitors say it can feel uncannily close in spots
  • Good facilities for a full day: restaurants, cafes, shops, and plenty of seating and toilets
  • Flexible entry slots: you enter within a set window tied to your chosen time
You can check availability for your dates here:

Africa on foot: what Bioparc Valencia feels like

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Africa on foot: what Bioparc Valencia feels like1 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Entry slots and timing: how the check-in windows work2 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Getting there: the simple meeting point3 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Step-by-step route idea: Savannah first (where lions rule the rocks)4 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Equatorial rainforest: gorillas, red buffalo, and leopards in tighter spaces5 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - The elephant trail and Kitum Cave: the photo magnet with meaning6 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Wetlands: hippos, crocodiles, and that underwater fish viewing7 / 8
Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Madagascar Island: lemurs as the final crowd payoff8 / 8
1 / 8

Bioparc Valencia is the kind of place that works fast on your brain. Instead of seeing animal after animal in separate cages, you walk through themed habitats that try to mimic how animals live together in the wild.

You’ll move along trails that link each area into a story. Start with the savannah energy—antelope-style herds, giraffes, and rhinos—then shift into more shadowy forest spaces. After that, you’ll hit the Wetlands with hippos and crocodiles, and finish with Madagascar Island where lemurs are a major crowd magnet.

And yes, people keep mentioning how the park design helps you feel close to animals without the harsh fence-and-distance vibe you get elsewhere. That’s a big reason this place gets such consistently high marks.

Chandni

Lisa90c

Dalia

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Valencia

Ticket value: is Bioparc Valencia worth the €? (and the $35 figure)

The ticket price you’re looking at is about $35 per person for a full day. For a city attraction, that’s not “cheap,” but it also isn’t one of those pay-to-click places. You’re paying for a full, self-guided walk across multiple habitats plus access to the park’s activity program (including guided tours and animal-related routes).

From traveler feedback, the value shows up in three ways:

  • Time spent on site: many visitors say 2–4 hours is enough for a thorough pass, while others stay longer if they eat, watch demonstrations, or just take their time.
  • Animal access and viewpoints: lots of reviews point out you can see animals from several angles, including spots where it feels like you’re watching them more naturally.
  • Care and maintenance: people repeatedly call out cleanliness and well-kept surroundings.

So, if you want a serious nature-and-animals day in Valencia that’s more than just a quick stop, this ticket usually pencils out.

Entry slots and timing: how the check-in windows work

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Entry slots and timing: how the check-in windows work

Your ticket is valid for 1 day with a chosen time slot. Entry works like this:

  • If you pick 10:00 AM, you can enter 10:00 AM to 11:59 AM
  • If you pick 12:00 PM, you can enter 12:00 PM to 12:59 PM
  • If you pick 2:00 PM, you can enter 2:00 PM to 2:59 PM
  • If you pick 4:00 PM, you can enter 4:00 PM to 4:59 PM
  • If you pick 6:00 PM, you can enter 6:00 PM until closing
Tomasz

Tomasz

Diogo

There’s also an important rule: you can access the park from your chosen time until before the start of the next slot. In plain terms, don’t show up late expecting to glide in.

My practical tip: if you’re going for the best animal-watching, choose an earlier slot so you’re not sprinting between areas in crowds.

Getting there: the simple meeting point

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Getting there: the simple meeting point

The meeting point is straightforward: head directly to Bioparc Valencia. That’s it. No complicated hotel pickup or shuttle maze.

Once you arrive, plan on using the park map system quickly. One traveler specifically recommends the QR code map given at the gate because it’s live and helps you navigate without guessing.

Anamaria

Marina

Sarah

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Step-by-step route idea: Savannah first (where lions rule the rocks)

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Step-by-step route idea: Savannah first (where lions rule the rocks)

Most people start where the park makes it easiest—into the Savannah. This is where the “African heart without leaving Europe” promise becomes real.

Expect to walk among landscapes with herds of antelope, plus giraffes and rhinos. Lions are positioned so they’re easier to spot from higher rocks and viewpoints. It’s a good area to start because you’ll naturally build momentum: wider spaces, more open sightlines, and animals that move at different rhythms.

What to watch for: take a moment at the main viewpoints before rushing onward. Savanna areas often reward waiting a few minutes because animals may cross paths you didn’t see at first glance.

Underground world: burrows, aardvarks, hyenas, and the Seba Python

After the open savannah vibe, Bioparc Valencia switches gears with an underground-feeling section. You’ll find recreations of underground burrows that house animals like aardvarks, hyenas, and warthogs.

Jenny

Jenni

Steve

You can also encounter smaller, high-interest sights such as naked mole rat nests and a mention of the Seba Python, described as Africa’s largest snake.

This is one of those areas where the park design does a lot of the work for you. Rather than you wandering in confusion, the layout guides your attention to what’s there—especially if you use the QR map to get yourself to the right viewpoints.

Equatorial rainforest: gorillas, red buffalo, and leopards in tighter spaces

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Equatorial rainforest: gorillas, red buffalo, and leopards in tighter spaces

Next comes the equatorial rainforest. Think: more shade, thicker-feeling paths, and a slower pace. Visitors mention it as part of what makes the park feel like a walk through real habitats rather than a checklist of exhibits.

The park’s descriptions and expected sightings include animals such as gorillas, red buffalo, and leopards. Even when you’re not seeing everyone at once, the forest setup changes your experience. Your eyes adjust. The sounds shift. It feels like a different temperature even on the same day.

Practical note: rainforest areas can be easier to miss if you rush. Slow down here. Give yourself time to scan viewpoints properly.

The elephant trail and Kitum Cave: the photo magnet with meaning

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - The elephant trail and Kitum Cave: the photo magnet with meaning

If there’s one “don’t skip” stop, it’s the elephant trail and the recreation tied to Kitum Cave. The descriptions say elephants dug a huge cave, and the park builds the experience around following that path to see the cave setup.

Why it matters to your visit: elephants are often the hardest animals to appreciate in zoos because they’re big and impressive but sometimes far away. Here, the park’s focus is on creating a trail that makes the cave part of the story, not just a backdrop.

And traveler feedback backs up the importance of this section. Multiple people flag the elephant area as a major highlight, including ones who say breakfast or sitting areas near habitats are memorable too.

Wetlands: hippos, crocodiles, and that underwater fish viewing

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Wetlands: hippos, crocodiles, and that underwater fish viewing

Then you’ll reach the Wetlands zone. This is where Bioparc Valencia leans into the dramatic water-life side of Africa.

The park description includes hippos and crocodiles, plus a feature where you can see thousands of colorful fish submerged in the water. It’s also described as a follow-the-trail experience—so don’t treat it like a single stop. Walk the route and pause at the viewpoints that match the direction of the habitats.

Weather reality check: one review mentions that even with rain, you can still see animals resting through side windows. So if the forecast turns ugly, you’re not necessarily losing the whole day.

Madagascar Island: lemurs as the final crowd payoff

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket - Madagascar Island: lemurs as the final crowd payoff

Finally, the park sends you to Madagascar Island, where the big name is lemurs. The description says lemurs jump on their heads, which tells you two things: (1) you’ll be close, and (2) this is a “watch them interact in your space” kind of moment.

Even if your own lemur encounter is more subtle than you imagined, Madagascar is still a great closer because it caps the day with something playful and distinct from the mainland African habitats.

Navigation that actually helps: QR map, viewpoints, and pacing

Bioparc Valencia is big enough that good navigation matters. The best advice from travelers is to use the QR code map you get at the gate. It helps you move efficiently and find the correct viewing points without backtracking.

Pacing also matters. Several reviews suggest:

  • 2–3 hours can be enough if you’re moving steadily and not stopping to linger over every habitat.
  • Longer if you eat, watch activities, take photos, or want a second pass through favorite areas.

I’d plan on about half a day to most of the day depending on your style. If you like photos and watching behavior (not just “spot animal, move on”), lean toward a longer visit.

Rules and animal etiquette: what’s allowed, what’s not

Bioparc Valencia has a clear set of visitor rules. Some are for safety; others are for animal welfare and your experience.

Key restrictions include:

  • No food and drinks (water is allowed in non-glass containers)
  • No flash photography
  • No feeding animals
  • No pets (assistance dogs are allowed)
  • No bikes, and no skateboards/skates
  • No smoking

Also, you can’t re-enter after leaving unless you buy a new ticket or staff authorize you in exceptional cases.

Why this matters: many visitors say animals look relaxed and well cared for. When crowds get too loud or try to touch things, it stresses animals. One review calls out guests who scream and try to attract animals—so keep your group calm and don’t pressure the animals for “one more photo.”

Food and drinks inside the park: plan for water, then enjoy meals

You can’t bring in snacks or drinks other than water in non-glass containers, but the park does offer restaurants and cafes. Multiple reviews mention that the food options were good, including a cafe near a habitat (a traveler highlights one close to the gazelle area).

If you’re visiting with kids, this is a big deal. It turns Bioparc into a “whole day plan” rather than a rushed morning.

My suggestion: arrive with water, eat before you’re starving, and treat meals as part of your route. When you build breaks into your walk, the day feels easier and you see more.

Comfort tips for Valencia weather: heat, shade, and rain

Valencia can be hot. One review warns that it gets very hot in summer, and people recommend bringing a fan and cold water. The park is open and leafy, and visitors also mention there’s shade, but you’ll still feel the sun if you arrive midday.

Rain is another factor. A few visitors note the park is still enjoyable in bad weather, and animals can be seen resting through side windows.

Practical move: wear breathable shoes and bring layers if you’re there during cooler evenings. Also, since flash photography is banned, bring a camera strategy you don’t depend on flash for.

Accessibility and logistics: wheelchair-friendly planning

Good news here: the park is wheelchair accessible. That doesn’t mean every single path is perfectly identical, but accessibility is explicitly supported, so you’re not going into a “maybe” situation.

The park also has on-site services like parking (with a fee for cars) and plenty of facilities, including toilets and seating that older travelers mention are helpful.

Parking and bike options: quick cost reality

If you drive:

  • Parking fee for cars is 7 euro at the entrance.
  • Bikes can be parked for free.

Not re-entering after leaving also affects logistics—so if you’re parking, plan to stay inside your entry window and don’t build in a “quick car snack” stop.

Ready to Book?

Valencia: Bioparc Valencia Admission Ticket



4.8

(1841)

FAQs that travelers actually ask

FAQ

What’s included with the Bioparc Valencia admission ticket?

Your ticket includes entry to BIOPARC Valencia, plus access to a full program of activities such as guided tours and a feeding trail (visitors are not allowed to feed animals themselves).

How long is the ticket valid for?

The ticket is valid for 1 day.

Do I get free cancellation?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Are pets allowed in the park?

Pets are not allowed, but assistance dogs are allowed.

Can I bring food into Bioparc Valencia?

Food and drinks are not allowed, except for water in non-glass containers.

Can I use flash photography?

No. Flash photography is not allowed.

Can I take bikes into the park?

Bikes are not allowed.

Is the park wheelchair accessible?

Yes, wheelchair accessible is listed.

How does re-entry work if I leave the park?

You may not re-enter after leaving unless you purchase a new ticket or staff authorize you in exceptional cases.

How much is parking?

Car parking costs 7 euro at the entrance. Bike parking is listed as free.

Should you book Bioparc Valencia admission?

Yes, I think you should—if you want a high-quality animal day in Valencia that’s built around habitats, not just viewing animals from one angle.

Book it especially if:

  • You care about clean, well-kept spaces and animal welfare.
  • You enjoy walking a route that mixes big animals (like elephants and lions) with smaller surprises (like underground burrows and lemurs).
  • You want good value for money for a full-day outing that multiple travelers say is worth repeating.

Consider a different plan if:

  • You really need to snack and carry food with you (the park restricts food and drinks to water only).
  • You’re coming at peak times and hate crowds—because like most popular animal experiences, busier moments can get loud.

If you match the style of visitor this park works best for, the ticket is one of the strongest uses of a day in Valencia.

You can check availability for your dates here:

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