Scape Park turns one ticket into a full day of water and jungle thrills. This eco-adventure park sits in the Cap Cana area on the Dominican Republic’s eastern coast, spread across about 247 acres (100 hectares)—big enough that you’ll feel like you’re moving through different mini-worlds all day long.
I like that you can mix and match activities instead of being locked into a single route. I also love the star draw: time with the blue cenotes and waterfalls, where the water looks unreal against the rock. One key consideration: you’ll be on your feet a lot, and the park isn’t set up for wheelchair users.
In This Review
- What I like (and what you’ll feel fast)
- Key things to know before you go
- Cap Cana’s Scape Park: one park, many mini-adventures
- The 7-hour flow: build your day, then commit to it
- Blue Hole Cenote Trail: turquoise water plus real jungle work
- Cave Expedition and the Cultural Route: more than scenery photos
- Saltos Azules: rope swings, swings in the air, and water hammocks
- Zip Line Eco Splash: flying through water fountains and cannons
- Iguanaland and Rope Runners: slower pace with nature and height
- Super Ride Zip-Line: the superhero zip people talk about
- Beach getaway at Juanillo Beach Club: nice finale, not guaranteed
- Food, drinks, and downtime: plan for shopping on-site
- What to bring (and what not to): pack for wet and active
- Price and value: why a 10-attraction ticket can be worth it
- Should you book? My practical take
- FAQ
- How long is the Scape Park day?
- What attractions are included with this ticket?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Is food or drinks allowed from outside?
- What should I bring for the day?
- Is the experience wheelchair accessible?
- Will the Juanillo Beach Club stop always happen?
What I like (and what you’ll feel fast)

First, the big-ticket moments are built around action: flying through the trees, zipping through water, and riding the water hammocks that splash you as you go. Second, the cenote experiences aren’t just a photo stop—you walk trails, cross hanging bridges, and cool off in hidden blue water.
A final note to plan for reality: some people find the day pricey for a “single outing,” so you’ll want to go in with energy to do multiple attractions rather than one or two.
Key things to know before you go

- 10 attractions included, so your best value comes from doing more than the headline rides
- Blue Hole Cenote Trail combines wetland paths, waterfalls, a hanging bridge, and a swim option
- Saltos Azules brings rope swings, a swing ride, a zip-style option, and those splashy water hammocks
- Super Ride Zip-Line is the superhero-style zip moment people remember
- Juanillo Beach Club is a nice finale, but it’s weather and sargassum dependent
- Bring water shoes and repellent—you’ll want grip, and mosquitos are part of the outdoor mix
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Punta Cana
Cap Cana’s Scape Park: one park, many mini-adventures

Scape Park is the kind of place where you don’t just “visit,” you get pulled into a sequence of activities. You start with a smooth air-conditioned coach pickup from the Punta Cana/Bávaro area, then you’re delivered into Cap Cana’s eco-adventure zone.
The park’s layout makes sense for a full day. You’ll bounce between jungle walking, caves and cenotes, and rides that get your heart rate up. It’s also why the included attractions matter: you can design your day around your mood—cool water first, adrenaline first, or a careful combo.
The 7-hour flow: build your day, then commit to it

Your ticket is a full-day admission that includes all 10 attractions available at Scape Park. The schedule isn’t rigid in the sense that you can choose what you do first. A common smart approach is to start with something higher-energy (like a zipline-based option) and save the water-and-cave time for later when you’ll want to cool down.
The day is timed enough that you’ll likely fit several highlights. Still, you should assume there will be walking between stations, lines for the bigger rides, and time needed to change into swimwear when you want the most out of the cenotes.
Also, the day comes with a simple reality: the park has three on-site restaurants where you can buy snacks and drinks. Food and drinks aren’t allowed from outside, so plan to purchase what you need on site rather than expecting to pack a picnic.
Blue Hole Cenote Trail: turquoise water plus real jungle work

If you want the most visually famous part of the park, start here. The Blue Hole | Cenote Trail is built like a guided nature walk with actual variety: wetland ecosystems, a hanging bridge, waterfalls, and then a cenote experience with that strong bright-blue look.
Why this matters: cenotes can be hit-or-miss when they turn into a quick stop. Here, the trail structure gives you time to move at a comfortable pace and enjoy the setting. You’re not just standing by water—you’re walking through the approach, crossing structures, and then having the payoff.
Practical tip: wear shoes that can handle wet ground. Many people prefer water shoes so you don’t have to baby your feet on slippery areas, and you can move more confidently when the ground changes from trail to water-adjacent.
Cave Expedition and the Cultural Route: more than scenery photos

Next up is the more rugged side of Scape Park: the Cave Expedition and the Cultural Route.
The Cave Expedition sends you hiking up into Farallon Cliff and then down stairs to enter a cave network with chambers and tunnels. This is the part of the day where you’ll likely want to slow down and pay attention—stairs, rock textures, and the transition from light to cave darkness all change how you move.
The Cultural Route is a calmer nature walk where you see markings connected to the Tainos, the original indigenous inhabitants of the island. Even if you’re not a “history person,” this works because it’s part of the physical environment, not an indoor lecture.
A balanced way to do this: don’t stack every intense walk back-to-back. I’d pair cave time with an adrenaline ride afterward, or vice versa, so you’re not constantly switching between strenuous hiking and splash rides.
Saltos Azules: rope swings, swings in the air, and water hammocks

This is one of those attractions that sounds like fun in the brochure and delivers the chaos in real life. Saltos Azules includes jumping from the Mabo rope, soaring on the Macuya Swing, and then the super-splash rides: zip elements plus the water hammocks that propel you fast and splash you hard as you go.
Why I like this section for value: you’re getting multiple action formats in one broader attraction area. If you’re traveling with a mix of thrill levels, this is also the zone where you can decide where to push yourself and where to enjoy.
Safety is a big deal here. One confirmed experience from Alvaro (Costa Rica) specifically highlighted how much they appreciated the safety across the activities, with extra praise for the Súper Ride (Superman slide) moment. That’s encouraging because at a park like this, confidence matters as much as excitement.
Zip Line Eco Splash: flying through water fountains and cannons

After you’ve had your heart rate up, this is the “cool down while you go fast” option. Zip Line Eco Splash is a fusion of zipline motion with water fun: you glide into water fountains, cascades, and water cannons.
This matters because it turns a wet activity into an experience you can’t easily replicate on your own. You get the unique perspective from the air and the surprise of being hit with water along the line—exactly the kind of day memory that sticks.
Tip for comfort: keep your sunglasses secure and be ready for splashes. Also, towel planning helps—some people think they can dry later. Don’t assume it. Pack your towel so you can clean up when you shift from water rides to walking.
Iguanaland and Rope Runners: slower pace with nature and height

Not every high point is a nonstop adrenaline blast. Two attractions balance the day:
Iguanaland gives you an up-close encounter with rhinoceros iguanas, a reptile found only on this tropical island. That kind of encounter can be educational without feeling like a museum visit, as long as you respect the rules and keep a safe distance.
Rope Runners is your treetop challenge course—swing, sway, and soar through the treetops. This is a good fit if you want height and obstacles but don’t want a full zipline day every time.
One planning note from a confirmed booking: Jéssica (Brazil) recommended repellent and also warned that you’ll do a lot of walking through the attractions. That lines up with how the park feels—active, outdoors, and spread out.
Super Ride Zip-Line: the superhero zip people talk about

The headline adrenaline finish is the Super Ride Zip-Line, described as the zip line that turns you into a superhero on a mission to conquer gravity—suspended like a Superman-style moment.
In plain terms: this is the “I can’t believe I’m doing this” ride. If you’re only going to remember one attraction as the iconic Scape Park moment, this is the one that has serious pull.
It’s also why I think you should plan your pacing around it. If you’re exhausted from too much early walking, you may not enjoy the experience as much. If you’re energized, this ride hits harder—in a good way.
Beach getaway at Juanillo Beach Club: nice finale, not guaranteed
Ending at the beach is a strong idea on paper: fine white sand, turquoise water, and a tropical breeze. The Juanillo Beach Club stop is included as part of the day, but it’s subject to weather conditions and the presence of sargassum along the coast.
So here’s my best advice: treat it like a bonus, not a promise. If sargassum is present or conditions aren’t ideal, don’t let it ruin the day. You’ve already got cenotes and water rides to anchor your “beach feel,” even if it isn’t classic sand-and-swim time.
Food, drinks, and downtime: plan for shopping on-site
Food and drinks aren’t allowed from outside. That means you rely on the park’s on-site options—there are three restaurants where you can purchase snacks and drinks.
Downtime strategy that works: build short breaks into your day after major rides. Eat something simple, drink water, and keep your energy up. If you skip food and expect adrenaline to carry you, you’ll feel it later, especially after cave stairs and multiple splash activities.
Also, bring a credit card and cash. That gives you flexibility if one payment method is being slow or if you want to grab snacks quickly.
What to bring (and what not to): pack for wet and active
Scape Park is an outdoors-and-water day, so pack like you’re going to get wet and walk a lot.
Bring:
- Comfortable shoes
- Towel
- Water shoes
- Sunglasses
- Swimwear
- Credit card and cash
Not allowed:
- Food and drinks
- Luggage or large bags
- Drones
- Selfie sticks
- Professional cameras
- Weapons or sharp objects
- Pets
- Smoking and certain indoor smoking rules
- Drinks and alcohol, and drugs
- Unaccompanied minors
- Feeding or touching animals and touching plants
- Nudity
- Video recording
That list matters because it shapes what you can take with you during the activities. If you plan to bring your phone, treat it like a camera you keep protected. And if you’re used to selfies on sticks, leave the selfie stick at the hotel.
Price and value: why a 10-attraction ticket can be worth it
There’s one honest tradeoff in the mix: this type of full-day admission can feel expensive if you only do a couple of activities. The value only really locks in when you go all-in on multiple attractions.
On the positive side, your ticket includes all 10 attractions, including big draws like the cenote trail, zipline experiences, cave time, and the beach getaway (with the sargassum/weather note). That’s how you turn a single purchase into a day that feels full, not chopped up.
If you’re someone who loves variety—water, height, nature walks—this is the kind of ticket that makes sense. If you prefer a relaxed day with just one main activity, you might feel like you paid for more than you used.
Should you book? My practical take
Book this ticket if you:
- Want a single-day plan that covers multiple thrill levels
- Care about cenotes plus adrenaline in the same day
- Can handle walking and changing between water and dry moments
- Like the idea of choosing your own order among major attractions
Skip it (or rethink it) if you:
- Need wheelchair access, since it’s not suitable for wheelchair users
- Don’t want to be active or you’d rather do one short activity and relax
- Are counting on the beach stop to be perfect no matter what (it depends on weather and possible sargassum)
If you want the best day, go prepared. The people who get the most out of Scape Park are usually the ones with water shoes, repellent, and an attitude of do-it-all.
FAQ
How long is the Scape Park day?
The experience lasts about 7 hours.
What attractions are included with this ticket?
The ticket includes entry to all 10 Scape Park attractions, including Blue Hole, Cave Expedition, Cultural Route, Saltos Azules, Zip Line Eco Splash, Iguanaland, Rope Runners, Super Ride Zip-Line, and the Juanillo Beach Club beach getaway.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes. Pickup is included from hotels in the Punta Cana/Bávaro area. You’ll need to provide your hotel name to arrange pickup.
Is food or drinks allowed from outside?
No. Food and drinks are not allowed.
What should I bring for the day?
Bring comfortable shoes, water shoes, a towel, swimwear, sunglasses, and both cash and a credit card.
Is the experience wheelchair accessible?
No. It is not suitable for wheelchair users.
Will the Juanillo Beach Club stop always happen?
It can be subject to weather conditions and the presence of sargassum on the coast.



























