The Complete Lottemaa Tickets Guide 2026: What You’ll Pay and What You’ll Get
By Lottemaa Team • Updated May 22, 2026.
Most families looking at Lottemaa for the first time ask the same question: “How much is this going to cost?” — and the answer is, by theme-park standards, refreshingly simple. There are no per-ride fees, no upcharges for the theatre shows, no “fast pass” tier, no day-bracelet pricing maze. One ticket covers everything inside the gates. This guide breaks down exactly what each ticket costs in 2026, what’s included, what isn’t, and how to choose between the one-day and the two-day option. Honest, no marketing fog — because the #1 worry first-time visitors tell us about in reviews is the unknown cost. We’d rather you know.
2026 ticket prices at a glance
| Ticket type | Price | Notes |
| Regular ticket (age 2+) | €28 | Same price for adults and children. One day. |
| Two-day ticket | €41 | Valid for two consecutive days. |
| Child aged 0–1 | Free | No ticket needed. |
| Pensioner | €21 | With pension certificate. |
| Adult with special needs | €21 | With disability card or pension certificate. |
| Child with disability (age 2+) | €16 | With disability card. |
| Companion of disabled person | Free | For visitors with severe or profound disability needing assistance. |
| Parking | €4 | €3 with the Snabb mobile app. |
| Park train (one direction) | €2 | From parking to entrance, or entrance to parking. |
The model: one ticket, everything included
Here’s what most first-time visitors don’t immediately realise. The €28 standard ticket — or €41 for the two-day version — covers every single attraction inside the park. That includes:
- Every character house in the village (over a dozen named houses with interactive content)
- All four daily theatre performances
- The planetarium and its scheduled shows
- The adventure park
- Beach access
- The maze
- All playgrounds and themed activity areas
- All character meet-and-greets with costumed actors
- All seasonal workshops and special programmes
What’s not included: food, drinks, souvenirs, parking (€4), and the optional park train (€2/direction). That’s the complete list. There is no “premium” tier, no add-on packages, no thrill-ride wristband. If you’re inside the gates with a ticket, you can do everything.
This is fundamentally different from how many bigger amusement parks work, where a “free admission” headline often hides a wristband fee that quickly adds up to 50+ euros per person. At Lottemaa the headline price is the actual price for the experience itself.
1-day or 2-day: which ticket should you buy?
This is the single decision most families wrestle with, and the honest answer depends on three factors: where you’re driving from, how old your kids are, and whether you want to pair the visit with a Pärnu spa weekend.
Choose the 1-day ticket (€28) if:
- You live near Pärnu (15–30 minutes away) and can come back another day if you didn’t see everything
- Your visit is part of a multi-stop holiday and you only have one Lottemaa day
- Your kids are 8+ and energetic enough to cover the 17 hectares in one day
- You’re testing the park before committing to a longer trip
Choose the 2-day ticket (€41) if:
- You’re driving 2+ hours to reach the park (Tallinn, Riga, anywhere by ferry)
- Your kids are 3–7 and need a slower pace
- You want to combine Lottemaa with a Pärnu spa-hotel weekend
- You’ve never been before and want the comfort of a return day
The math: €41 versus €28 is only €13 extra per person for double the time. The most-repeated reviewer line we hear is some variation of “We thought one day would be enough — it wasn’t.” Almost every family driving from Tallinn, Riga, or Helsinki ultimately recommends the 2-day option.

Special tickets: pensioner, disability, and companion
Lottemaa’s inclusive ticket structure is genuinely one of the more generous in the Nordic-Baltic region. The details matter for families they apply to:
Pensioner ticket — €21: Available with a pension certificate from any country. EU pension certificates are accepted. €7 saving versus the standard adult ticket. The two-day version isn’t separately discounted; pensioners can simply buy two consecutive day tickets.
Adult with special needs — €21: Same price as pensioner. Available with a disability card or pension certificate. Self-identified accommodation needs are respected by staff without requiring proof of specific condition.
Child with disability (age 2+) — €16: Available with a disability card. €12 saving versus the standard child ticket. Most major mobility, visual, and cognitive disabilities qualify.
Companion of disabled visitor — Free: If the disabled visitor has severe or profound disability and needs assistance, their companion enters for free. This is a significant policy — most Nordic parks charge full price for companions. Lottemaa carries it as a stated principle.
For families with a disabled child plus accompanying parent, the combined ticket cost is therefore €16 (child) + €0 (companion) = €16 total. This makes Lottemaa one of the most accessible major theme park days out in the region from a cost perspective.
Family bundle math: real examples
Here are four typical family compositions and what they’d spend, in 2026 prices:
Example 1: Two adults + two children, ages 5 and 8 (one day)
4 × €28 = €112 in tickets. Add parking (€4) and lunch (€40–60) and you’re at €156–176 for the day.
Example 2: Two adults + two children, ages 5 and 8 (two days)
4 × €41 = €164 in tickets. Add parking (€8 over two days), two lunches and a dinner (€80–120), and a Pärnu spa-hotel night (€120–180) and you’re at €372–472 for the weekend.
Example 3: Two adults + one child age 5 + one grandparent (one day)
2 × €28 (adults) + 1 × €28 (child) + 1 × €21 (pensioner) = €105. The pensioner saving lowers the family budget by €7 without changing the visit experience.
Example 4: Two adults + one disabled child age 5 (one day)
1 × €28 (adult, the parent not acting as primary companion) + 1 × €0 (companion parent for severely disabled child) + 1 × €16 (disabled child) = €44. The companion-free policy makes a major accessibility difference for families that need it.
Parking and the park train: the two extras
Parking — €4 (or €3 with the Snabb app): The Lottemaa car park sits about 5 minutes’ walk from the gates. There’s plenty of space — even on peak July weekends it doesn’t fill. The Snabb app (available in snabb.ee) gives you the €1 discount and lets you extend the parking by phone if your day runs long. Worth setting up before you arrive.
Park train — €2 per direction: A small in-park train runs between the car park and the gates. Most families with kids under 5 use it for the morning trip in (when little legs are saving energy) and walk back at the end of the day. Optional, not required, but a small treat in itself.
What you’ll realistically spend on top of tickets
For full transparency, here’s what most families spend in the park beyond the tickets themselves:
- Food (4-person family, lunch + snacks): €40–60. Restaurant lunches are typical European theme-park prices — sandwich-and-drink combos around €8–10, full kids’ meals €6–9.
- Souvenirs: €10–30 if you choose to. Plush Lotte and Bruno around €15–20, smaller items €5–12. No pressure — most kids leave with one small thing.
- Ice cream and drinks during the day: €10–20 for a family.
- Picnic alternative: Bring your own. Picnic areas are available and the park doesn’t charge for outside food.
Realistic all-in for a family of four on a one-day visit: €160–180. On a two-day visit with a Pärnu hotel: €370–470.
How to buy tickets
Three options:
- Online in advance at lottemaa.ee/en/ticket-information/. Recommended for July weekends — same price, no queue. Print or show on phone.
- At the gates on arrival. Card and contactless mobile payment accepted. Short queue early morning, longer between 11:00 and 13:00 in peak summer.
- Through partner channels like ticket aggregators if you’re booking as part of a longer Estonian holiday. Same price.
There’s no membership programme, no annual pass, no early-bird discount. The headline prices are what everyone pays.
How Lottemaa pricing compares to other Nordic parks
For context, an honest comparison with other family theme parks in the region:
| Park | Day ticket (adult) | Pricing model |
| Lottemaa | €28 / €41 (2-day) | All-inclusive |
| Linnanmäki (Helsinki) | ~€47–53 wristband | Free entry + per-ride or wristband |
| Moomin World (Naantali) | ~€38–44 | All-inclusive |
| Gröna Lund (Stockholm) | ~€38 entry + per-ride or wristband | Two-tier |
Lottemaa is the lowest-headline-price family theme park in the Nordic-Baltic region of comparable scale and quality. The two-day option at €41 is roughly the same total as a single-day adult Linnanmäki wristband — but you get two full days.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a Lottemaa ticket for an adult in 2026? €28 for a single day, €41 for two consecutive days.
Do children pay the same as adults? Yes — children aged 2+ pay €28 same as adults. Children aged 0–1 enter free.
Is there a family bundle discount? No formal “family ticket” with a discount, but the two-day ticket (€41 per person) acts as the de facto family value option because most families need more than one day.
What does a Lottemaa ticket include? Every attraction inside the gates — character houses, planetarium, adventure park, beach, maze, four daily theatre performances, all playgrounds, all costumed character meet-and-greets. No add-on fees inside the park.
What’s NOT included? Food and drinks, souvenirs, parking (€4 or €3 with Snabb app), and the optional park train (€2 per direction).
Can I buy tickets at the gate or do I need to book online? Both work. Online booking saves time on peak summer weekends; at-the-gate purchase is fine on weekdays and shoulder-season weekends.
Is there a refund if it rains? Lottemaa is largely outdoor but doesn’t close for rain. There are enough indoor attractions (planetarium, character houses, theatre, restaurant) to make a wet day workable. Refund policies are outlined at the time of booking.
Are the disability tickets available without paperwork? An EU-issued disability card or pension certificate is required at the ticket window. Staff are trained to be respectful and confidential about the process.
Buy your tickets: [See 2026 opening dates and buy online →]
Author: Lottemaa Team, Content & Family Travel Editor at Lottemaa (Lotte Village Theme Park).
Lottemaa Team writes practical planning guides for visiting Lottemaa and the Pärnu region with children, covering seasonal opening dates, ticket inclusions, accessibility, and transport logistics from Tallinn, Riga, and Helsinki. This guide was last updated on





