Travel spots in Lithuania

Dino Park Radailiai: a full family day among moving prehistoric giants

Dino Park Radailiai is a family amusement park opened in 2013 with more than 50 life-size moving and roaring dinosaur models. Set among woodland and ponds, the model route is joined by a 5D cinema, mirror maze, carousels, trampolines, pedal boats, climbing activities, and a small zoo, with active attractions included in the day ticket. Google Maps showed a 4.5-out-of-5 rating on 13 July 2026.

Place
Klaipėda District Municipality
Region
Klaipėda Region
Type
family amusement park with life-size moving dinosaur models
Address
Pušyno g. 9, Radailiai, Klaipėda District
Coordinates
55.78611, 21.21917
Visit duration
4-6 hours; a family can spend all day when all attractions are operating
Best time
a warm dry day from May to September; morning helps avoid the largest weekend crowds
Names and variants

Radailiai Dinosaur Park, Dino.lt Radailiai, Dinosaur Park near Klaipėda

More than 50 dinosaurs along a woodland trail

The main Radailiai route winds through the green grounds of Radailiai Manor among more than 50 life-size dinosaur models. Some figures move, roar, or react in other ways, making this a theatrical walk through separate prehistoric scenes rather than a row of static sculptures.

The park list includes child favourites such as Tyrannosaurus rex, Triceratops, Stegosaurus, Spinosaurus, and Brachiosaurus alongside less familiar Iguanodon, Parasaurolophus, and Oviraptor. Labels present names and principal features, giving families a way to compare horns, neck length, back plates, and movement.

Keep the nature of the display in mind: these are colourful animatronic models, not fossils or a scientific palaeontology collection. The park is particularly good at sparking curiosity in younger children, while more exact learning should distinguish its playful scenery from continually changing scientific reconstructions.

From a 2013 dinosaur park to an all-day complex

The dinosaur park in Radailiai opened on June 23, 2013, immediately before Lithuania's Midsummer holiday. Its organisers presented it as the first and largest park of its kind in the Baltic States; the initial distinction was life-size moving models in an outdoor natural setting rather than an indoor exhibition.

Over more than a decade, the site grew from a dinosaur trail into a family amusement complex. The venue says activities are renewed each year, which is why older descriptions count about 40 models while the current figure exceeds 50, accompanied by an expanding range of mechanical, water, and active attractions.

The park remains connected to Radailiai Manor, on whose grounds it was developed. The neighbouring complex has a restaurant, accommodation, and spa, but these are separate services and are not included in a standard Dino Park day ticket.

What to do beyond the dinosaurs

The park map lists a 5D cinema, Cosmo mirror maze, carousel, small train, turbo cars, Dino Rally, shooting gallery, and oversized outdoor musical instruments. Trampolines, an air pillow, treetop climbing, playgrounds, and football and volleyball areas provide the more physical part of the day.

Large and small pedal boats and other water activities operate around the pond in warm weather, while the small zoo holds domestic animals. Some attractions depend on season, weather, technical condition, or a child's height, so admission does not guarantee that every piece of equipment will operate on a particular day.

Families can alternate intense and quieter zones: after a carousel or trampoline, return to the dinosaur trail, musical instruments, or birch grove with hammocks. The park's scale and variety explain why a rushed two-hour visit often feels too short.

What admission includes and how the Upside-Down House differs

The venue says all active attractions operating within Dino Park on the day are included in admission and can be repeated. Families therefore do not need a separate token for each carousel, 5D film, or maze, although food, souvenirs, special programmes, and services in the neighbouring complex cost extra.

The Upside-Down House stands beside the park and is a separate ticketed attraction. Furniture and everyday objects fill a full-size house built on its roof, creating optical illusions and unusual photographs rather than another dinosaur display.

A combined Dino Park and Upside-Down House ticket is available for visitors who want both experiences. Walking through a tilted, visually inverted interior can make some people dizzy, so it is sensible to leave the house until the end and take it slowly.

Planning a family day

Most of the park is outdoors, so dress for the actual forecast in Radailiai rather than central Klaipėda. Waterproof shoes and spare children's clothes help after rain; on hot days bring hats, water, and sun protection. Moving and roaring models may startle a young child with sound sensitivity.

The grounds include a pizzeria, grill café, ice-cream parlour, toilets, and a car park. The official website describes the park as pet-friendly, but dogs must remain under control; confirm current entry rules and consider the noise, small-zoo animals, and large number of children before bringing one.

The venue does not publish a detailed statement covering pushchairs, mobility access, and every ride. Natural outdoor paths and different equipment designs produce uneven conditions, so discuss individual access requirements with the administration before buying tickets.

Opening hours, 2026 prices, and getting there

In July 2026, the official website publishes daily opening hours of 10 am-7 pm. The operating season, individual attractions, and hours can change with weather and events, so check the official information on the morning of the visit, especially in spring or autumn.

In the season beginning May 1, a Dino Park ticket costs €22 for an adult and €20 for a child, with children under two free. The combined park and Upside-Down House ticket costs €24 and €22 respectively; lower off-season prices are published. Prices are not permanent, so recheck the official ticket page before paying.

The address is Pušyno g. 9 in Radailiai, about 7 km from Klaipėda; the official coordinates are 55°47′10″N, 21°13′9″E. Driving is the simplest option, while public-transport routes and timetables change and should not be planned from old park announcements.

Dino Park Radailiai sources