REVIEW · NADI
Kula Eco Park Admission
Book on Viator →Operated by Kula WILD Adventure Park · Bookable on Viator
Sea turtles and forest boardwalks are the main event here. With hand feeding Hawksbill sea turtles and walking elevated paths through the wildlife exhibits, Kula WILD Adventure Park is a feel-good day out that’s easy to build around. My favorite part is how much of the visit happens outdoors, so it feels like a real nature preserve instead of a showroom. The only thing to watch is value: your ticket includes park admission, but some big rides like the zip line and water slide may not be covered, and sometimes they aren’t running.
You’ll start at 10:00 am and you can take it slow, since the park is open until 4:30 pm. Plan on 1 to 6 hours depending on how long you linger at the Land & Sea exhibits, the reef pool, and the forest canopy walkways. There’s a cafe and restrooms on-site, which matters more than it sounds when you’re with kids.
If you’re expecting a huge, all-day theme park, you might feel a bit let down. The experience is strong when you lean into the animals, the walking paths, and the “hands-on but gentle” nature moments. If you want nonstop high-energy rides, you’ll need to confirm what’s operating and what’s included before you commit to the full price.
In This Review
- Quick Take: Kula Eco Park Admission at a Glance
- Where Kula WILD Adventure Park Fits Into Your Nadi Day
- Turtle Feeding and Iguana Photo Ops: The Parts You’ll Remember
- Walking the Forest on Elevated Boardwalks and Reaching the Canopy
- Land & Sea Building: Exhibits That Make the Whole Park Make Sense
- Water Rides, Zipline, and the Big Question of What’s Included
- How Long You’ll Actually Need (From 10:00 am to 4:30 pm)
- Value for Money: When It Feels Worth It, and When It Doesn’t
- Who This Admission Works Best For
- Practical Tips So Your Day Goes Smoothly
- Should You Book This Admission?
- FAQ
- What does the Kula Eco Park admission ticket include?
- How long is the experience?
- When does the park visit start, and when does it close?
- Are food and drinks included?
- Do the zipline and water slide come with admission?
- Can I cancel and get a full refund?
Quick Take: Kula Eco Park Admission at a Glance

- Sea turtle feeding at the outdoor reef pool gives you a real, up-close wildlife moment
- Wooden boardwalks and canopy views turn a simple stroll into a proper outing
- Land & Sea exhibits help you connect the animals to Fiji’s ecosystems
- Rides like ziplining and a water slide may not be included with basic admission
- Cafe and restrooms on-site mean you can actually stay all day
- Runs in all weather but you’ll want to dress for sun, rain, and wet ground
Where Kula WILD Adventure Park Fits Into Your Nadi Day
Kula WILD Adventure Park is on Viti Levu, and it’s built for an all-in-one day plan from Nadi. This is the kind of place you go to with a flexible schedule: you can do a quick 1 to 2 hour loop if that’s all you want, or stretch it to most of the day while the park is open until 4:30 pm.
The admission price is $32.93 per person, and your ticket covers entry to the park itself. That matters for how you judge the value. If you end up using the nature walk, the exhibits, and the reef pool time well, it can feel worth it. If you mainly wanted high-adrenaline rides, you may feel the cost more strongly, especially if some attractions aren’t included with admission or aren’t working that day.
Another practical note: the park can handle up to 1,000 travelers. That doesn’t automatically mean it feels crowded, but it does explain why you should expect some busyness during peak times. The experience is best when you treat it like a slow nature visit, not a fast ride-and-go stop.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Nadi.
Turtle Feeding and Iguana Photo Ops: The Parts You’ll Remember

The headline moment is the hand feeding at the outdoor reef pool. You help the keepers feed Hawksbill sea turtles, and it’s one of those activities that turns the day from “nice walk” into “we actually did something.” If you’re traveling with kids, this is the exact kind of memory that sticks—short, clear, and centered on an animal that most people rarely see up close.
Right nearby, the park also leans into resident creatures like iguanas. You’ll get a photo op with Fiji’s iguanas, which is fun, and it’s also a good warm-up to the rest of the visit. Even if you don’t care about photos, it helps you start noticing the details: how the park organizes habitats, how the exhibits explain what you’re seeing, and how visitors move through the space.
This is also where you should manage expectations. Feeding moments are usually structured and time-based, so don’t assume you can linger for hours at the reef pool. Aim to be present, focused, and patient. If you give yourself buffer time, you’ll feel less rushed and more in control.
Walking the Forest on Elevated Boardwalks and Reaching the Canopy

After the animals, the park becomes a walking experience. The nature trails use elevated wooden walkways, so you don’t just wander on uneven ground. You cross bridges, climb steps up valley walls, and eventually reach areas that feel higher and more forest-like—almost like a gentle hike inside the preserve.
This section is worth doing slowly. In a lot of zoos and animal parks, the “walking part” feels like a hallway between exhibits. Here, the walk is part of the attraction because it sets the stage: you’re moving through the forest and working your way toward bigger views and more wildlife displays.
Along the route, you’ll also find the park’s medicinal and traditional use display. That gives you a reason to pause beyond just “spot the animal.” It’s not just pretty plants—it’s a reminder that island environments come with deep knowledge systems. You don’t need a background in botany to enjoy it, but taking a few minutes to read the signage can turn the walk from scenery into a story.
One more practical point: the park operates in all weather, so you’ll want shoes that handle wet surfaces and a light layer if conditions shift. If the ground is slick, your best strategy is to go slow on the steps and bridges.
Land & Sea Building: Exhibits That Make the Whole Park Make Sense

The Land & Sea building is where Kula connects wildlife to Fiji’s ecosystems. You’ll see displays of shells, butterflies, beetles, and stick insects, plus freshwater exhibits. There’s also coral reef content presented as some of the biggest reef displays in Fiji, and it’s designed to help you understand what you’re seeing outside.
This building is helpful in two ways:
- It gives you context so the outdoor exhibits feel more meaningful.
- It gives you a break if you’re traveling with kids or if the weather turns.
You’ll also pass through outdoor areas like the reef pool again, so the building works like a hub. Even if you’re not the type to love indoor exhibits, you’ll still get more out of the sea turtle feeding after you’ve seen what the park is trying to teach.
Water Rides, Zipline, and the Big Question of What’s Included

Kula WILD Adventure Park is marketed with water rides, ziplining, and more. But your ticket is listed as park admission only. That’s where you need to do a quick “expectation check” before you base your whole day plan on one or two thrill rides.
Some visitors have flagged that a voucher or basic admission may not cover the zip line and water slide. Also, rides can be unavailable if something is shut down on the day you go. The most practical takeaway is simple: treat those rides as a bonus, not the backbone of the experience.
If water play is a key part of your family day, plan to spend time at the splash and water areas you encounter—but don’t build a full-day schedule around the assumption that every ride will run continuously. If you can, check with staff on-site about what’s operating that day and what the additional costs might be (if any). That way you’re not caught off guard.
When rides do work, they can be a great release valve for kids. And when they don’t, the animal moments and the boardwalk trails still give you plenty to do.
How Long You’ll Actually Need (From 10:00 am to 4:30 pm)

The park offers flexible timing, and that flexibility is one of its biggest advantages. You can do a leisurely wander in about 1 to 3 hours, but you can also stay all day because the park remains open until 4:30 pm.
Here’s how to plan your time without feeling rushed:
- If you want the best value, aim for a 3 to 4 hour visit. That gives you time for iguanas and the reef pool, plus a real loop through the exhibits.
- If you’re traveling with younger kids, budget closer to 4 to 5 hours. They’ll want repeated breaks and photo stops, and the water features can eat time.
- If you’re very ride-focused, you’ll still likely need at least 2 to 3 hours, because the park isn’t designed as a “hit every button in 30 minutes” place.
Also remember that a day out in Fiji can be weather-dependent. Since the park runs in all weather, you may find indoor exhibits become more important if it’s raining. Build a little cushion so you’re not trying to do everything in one sprint.
Value for Money: When It Feels Worth It, and When It Doesn’t

At $32.93 per person, this isn’t a “cheap filler stop.” So I’d judge it like this: you’re paying for a guided-style nature experience and animal interaction within an eco-focused park, not for a giant, luxury theme park.
It tends to feel worth it if you:
- care about seeing Fiji’s wildlife up close (especially sea turtles),
- enjoy walking and learning through exhibits,
- want a family-friendly day that isn’t overly complicated.
It may feel overpriced if you:
- primarily came for ziplining and a water slide,
- expected a huge variety of attractions to fill the day,
- planned your schedule around thrill rides and they turn out to be limited.
You can also improve your value by going in with the right mindset. If you’re counting on “every attraction,” you’ll feel disappointed. If you’re counting on “animals + nature walk,” you’ll be happier.
Who This Admission Works Best For

Kula WILD Adventure Park is a strong match for families with kids, especially younger children who get a lot of joy out of feeding animals and watching wildlife. The mix of paved-feeling walkways, exhibits, and water fun makes it easier to keep kids engaged without needing a long, complicated itinerary.
It also works well for couples who want something relaxing and not overly urban. If you like nature walks but still want one or two highlight moments that feel special, this hits that balance.
If your group is mostly teenagers and thrill seekers, you’ll want to think carefully. The park can still be fun for them, but the “must-do” attractions depend on what’s operating and what’s included beyond admission.
Practical Tips So Your Day Goes Smoothly
The park experience works best when you show up ready for a mix of walking and water areas. Dress for Fiji weather. If it looks hot, it will feel hotter in sun-exposed areas. If it looks like rain, wet paths and stairs are part of the deal, so good footwear helps a lot.
Also, plan your day like you’re building around the highlights. Start with animal time, then do the exhibits, then take the boardwalk loop. If you reverse that order and you end up doing the longest walk first, you might reach the reef pool feeling rushed.
And bring the one thing everyone forgets: patience. Feeding and animal viewing take time, and that’s the point. If you treat it like a “watch and move fast” attraction, you’ll miss the charm.
Should You Book This Admission?
You should book Kula WILD Adventure Park admission if you want an easy, family-friendly day that mixes sea turtles, iguanas, and a genuinely pleasant forest walk. It’s also a good fit if you like learning through exhibits and you’re happy to let the day unfold until 4:30 pm.
You might skip it (or adjust your plan) if your budget is tight and you mainly care about ziplining and the water slide. Since your ticket is admission only, and some rides may not be included or may be shut down, your experience could end up shorter than you want.
If you’re on the fence, I’d base the decision on one question: do you want a nature-and-animals outing, or do you want a full set of big rides? If you’re choosing nature and animals, this one is easy to justify.
FAQ
What does the Kula Eco Park admission ticket include?
The ticket includes admission to Kula Wild Adventure Park. Food and drinks are not included, and transportation or hotel pickup/drop-off is not included.
How long is the experience?
The experience duration is listed as about 1 to 6 hours, depending on how you pace your visit.
When does the park visit start, and when does it close?
The start time is 10:00 am, and the park closes at 4:30 pm.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included, though there is a cafe on-site.
Do the zipline and water slide come with admission?
Your listed included item is park admission only. Zipline and water slide access are not clearly stated as included, so you should confirm on-site what’s covered and what’s operating.
Can I cancel and get a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, based on the experience’s local time.

























