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Toddler Time at Trampoline Parks
A trampoline park at Saturday peak is no place for a three-year-old — and the reason is physics, not fussiness. Big kids and little kids bouncing on the same courts is the main way small jumpers get hurt: a heavier kid's landing can launch or flatten a lighter one, which is why parks separate jumpers by size. The fix is Toddler Time — dedicated hours (usually weekday mornings) when the big kids are off the courts and the park belongs to the under-6 crowd, often with quieter music, parents allowed on the courts, and discounted admission. The parks here carry the Toddler time badge because there's real evidence, from the park's own site or from parents' reviews, of toddler sessions or a dedicated little-kid jump area. 773 parks qualify so far. Pick your city below, or start with the national standouts.
Standout toddler-time parks across the US
Ranked by local reputation — rating weighted by review count — with one pick per chain.
Ninja Kidz Action Park (Previously Airbound)
4.9 ★★★★★ 6,118 reviews
Amusement center offers 30,000 sq. ft. of trampolines space, plus a rock wall, arcade & more.
Airborne Draper
4.7 ★★★★★ 5,533 reviews
Wall-to-wall trampolines attract jumpers of all ages to this complex with air dodgeball & foam pits.
Big Air Trampoline Park
4.7 ★★★★★ 5,258 reviews
Jump park featuring dozens of rock walls plus a ropes course, dodgeball area, obstacle course and massage chairs.
Cosmic Air Adventure Park & Arcade
4.7 ★★★★★ 4,514 reviews
Family-friendly amusement center offering indoor trampolines, climbing and obstacle courses, plus video games.
Sky Zone Trampoline Park
4.4 ★★★★☆ 4,673 reviews
Chain of indoor trampoline parks featuring freestyle bouncing, dodgeball, fitness programs & more.
Area 53 - Adventure Park
4.5 ★★★★★ 4,244 reviews
Adventure park featuring sky ropes courses, a rock-climbing wall and laser mazes, alongside paintball.
Find toddler jump sessions in your city
Every city below has at least two trampoline parks with toddler-time evidence, so you have a backup if one's schedule doesn't fit.
Arizona
California
Florida
Illinois
Indiana
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Mississippi
Missouri
Nebraska
Nevada
New York
North Dakota
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Texas
Utah
Virginia
Washington
Taking a toddler to a trampoline park: what helps
- Why does Toddler Time matter so much?
- Because mixing jumper sizes is the main injury factor on a trampoline court. A big kid landing near a little one transfers real force — it's how sprains and scary tumbles happen even when nobody's being reckless. During toddler hours the big kids simply aren't there, which removes the biggest risk in one move.
- When do toddler sessions run?
- Weekday mornings, as a rule — school-age kids are in school, so parks schedule little-kid hours then. Exact days and times shift more than regular hours do, so check the park's listing and confirm by phone before driving over. Weekend afternoons are the big-kid rush; avoid them with a new walker.
- What should we bring?
- Grip socks — trampoline parks require them for every jumper, toddlers included. Most parks sell them at the desk for around $3 and they're reusable, so hang onto the pair. You'll also need to sign a waiver for your child; nearly every park lets you do it online before you go.
- Can I get on the courts with my kid?
- During toddler sessions, usually yes — many parks let a parent jump or spot for free, which is half the point. During regular open jump the rules are stricter and paid adult admission may apply. Ask when you confirm the schedule.
- Is toddler-time admission cheaper?
- Often — toddler sessions are commonly discounted against regular open-jump pricing, and some parks include a parent free. Policies differ park to park, so it's a 30-second phone question along with "when's your next toddler session?"