TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket

REVIEW · TEGERNSEE

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket

  • 4.73 reviews
  • 1 min
  • From $129
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Operated by Tegernsee Phantastisch · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.7 (3)Duration1 minPrice from$129Operated byTegernsee PhantastischBook viaGetYourGuide

Indoor adventure beats a rainy day. Tegernsee Phantastisch turns that idea into a real plan: an indoor action park with 2700 square meters and two ticket-included play worlds, all on an exclusive Family & Friends group price. I love the all-you-can-play setup for the day you buy your ticket, and I also love how the attractions mix hands-on challenges with tech fun, from a bouldering wall to a virtual aquarium and VR.

One thing to consider: this is an activity-heavy day. The highlights include a High Ropes Course and climbing-style play, so if your group has kids who are hesitant with physical challenges, you’ll want to manage expectations and pace.

Key highlights to know before you go

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket - Key highlights to know before you go

  • Unlimited play during opening hours on your booked day, so you’re not racing a strict clock
  • Two included worlds: Tegernsee Magic + Tegernsee World, with access to all attractions
  • Tegernsee World action: Bachmair Weissach area plus a glas bouldering wall
  • Weissach Warrior and Hohe Luft: ninja-style persistence challenges and a high ropes course
  • Inside Tegernsee and High Teg: virtual aquarium fun plus an extraordinary VR attraction
  • Up to 3 check-in/check-out times during your booked day, which helps if you need breaks

Tegernsee Phantastisch: an indoor action day that scales for families

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket - Tegernsee Phantastisch: an indoor action day that scales for families
If you’re visiting Bavaria with a family group, Tegernsee Phantastisch is a strong bet because it’s designed for variety. You’re not choosing between one boring attraction and another. You’re walking into an adventure world that’s 2700 square meters indoors, built around two play-and-entertainment worlds that can handle different moods and energy levels in the same group.

The Family & Friends Special is also set up to make the day feel simple. The ticket is priced for a group of up to 4 people, and it covers access to both worlds and use of all attractions. That means you can spend your time figuring out what you want to do next, not doing math mid-visit.

I like that the park’s concept is more than “run around for fun.” It combines play with knowledge transfer and sport-like challenges. The most practical part of that promise is the mix: your day can include active zones (climbing, ropes, ninja-course style persistence) and tech zones (virtual aquarium and VR), so the fun doesn’t depend on one skill set.

Two worlds included: Tegernsee Magic and Tegernsee World

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket - Two worlds included: Tegernsee Magic and Tegernsee World
Your ticket includes entry to both Tegernsee Magic + Tegernsee World, and use of all attractions. In real-life terms, that means you can plan your time around what your group feels like doing, instead of committing to only one section.

The park describes itself as two play and entertainment worlds with knowledge transfer through play and sport. That helps explain why the highlights are spread across different kinds of challenges. Some are physical and repetitive in the good way (persistence and stamina). Others are more hands-on with screens or virtual experiences. You don’t need everyone to love the same activity to make the day work.

If you’re bringing mixed ages, this pairing is especially useful. Kids who want motion tend to gravitate toward the bouldering and course challenges. Adults and kids who prefer something less physical can pivot to virtual experiences. You can keep everyone together while still giving them an option that fits.

Tegernsee World: Bachmair Weissach and the glas bouldering wall

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket - Tegernsee World: Bachmair Weissach and the glas bouldering wall
In Tegernsee World, the highlights begin with the Bachmair Weissach area and a glas bouldering wall. Even without more technical details, the names tell you the intent: it’s built for climbing-style play and for learning by doing.

Here’s how I’d think about it for your visit. A bouldering wall is great because it rewards effort and technique rather than speed. That’s ideal for families, since you can go slowly, take turns, and build confidence. It’s also a good way to burn energy early in the day—before the group gets tired and starts making excuses.

The glas part matters only because it signals that the wall is a special feature worth checking out. If you have kids who love anything that looks like real climbing gear or a climbing environment, this is one of those “must-try” stops. If your group isn’t into climbing, you can still use the wall zone as a quick activity while others swap to something less physical.

Weissach Warrior: the ninja warrior persistence challenge

TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends Ticket - Weissach Warrior: the ninja warrior persistence challenge
Next up is Weissach Warrior, described as a ninja warrior course that tests your persistence. That’s a nice phrase to remember, because it sets expectations better than “it’s hard.” Courses like this tend to be about trying, failing, adjusting, and trying again.

For your group, that usually means two things:

  • It’s often more fun than it sounds once people start finding a rhythm.
  • You’ll get better results (and fewer tantrums) if you rotate turns and keep the vibe playful rather than performance-based.

If you’re traveling with adults who want more than a casual play session, persistence-based obstacle courses are a great match. They feel like a real challenge, but they still belong in a family day.

Hohe Luft: tackling the high ropes course at your own pace

Hohe Luft is the High Ropes Course highlight. That tells you exactly what kind of attraction this is: an activity that adds height and balance into the mix.

This is where you’ll want to think in terms of comfort levels. A high ropes course is not for everyone in every group. If you have children who are nervous around heights or parents who prefer their fun without that factor, plan around it. You might decide to do it in short bursts, or you might split the group for the rest of the day.

At the same time, the park’s overall format helps. Because the ticket includes both worlds, you’re not stuck. If the ropes course becomes too intense for someone, you can shift to the indoor virtual options without losing your entire plan.

Inside Tegernsee: the virtual aquarium experience

Inside Tegernsee is where the day gets calmer in a good way. The highlight is a virtual aquarium experience focused on Lake Tegernsee. This is a smart contrast to climbing and obstacle courses, because it gives your group a different kind of engagement.

If you’re traveling with mixed preferences, this is likely the easiest “everyone can do it” zone. Virtual aquarium-style attractions tend to be eye-catching, and they don’t require physical stamina in the same way as ropes or bouldering. For kids who get tired, it can act as a reset between active challenges.

It also fits the park’s stated theme of knowledge transfer through play. Even if you’re not there for facts, the idea is that the experience teaches through entertaining format—so it doesn’t feel like a random side attraction.

High Teg VR: the extraordinary VR attraction

The final highlight listed is High Teg, described as a unique adventure with an extraordinary VR attraction. With VR, the main value is choice and pacing. Some people love it instantly. Some people need a moment to get comfortable with the experience.

Plan for this: treat VR as a “center piece” you can return to, not something you have to knock out perfectly on a tight schedule. Since the ticket includes all attractions with unlimited use during opening hours, you can adjust without feeling like you made a mistake.

Also, VR can be a lifesaver when someone in the group is:

  • too tired for physical play,
  • taking a breather,
  • or just not feeling the next obstacle.

In other words, it helps the group stay together rather than splitting into separate days.

All-you-can-play rules and how to pace a 1-day visit

The ticket is built for flexibility. You get unlimited time to use the attractions on the day you buy your ticket, during Tegernsee Phantastisch opening hours. The booking info may show duration as 1 minute, but that’s about selecting and confirming your entry; your access is the real full-day use tied to opening hours.

There’s also an important practical rule: you can do up to 3 ticket check-in/check-out on your booked day. That’s genuinely useful. It gives you room for food, rest, and a reset if the group starts dragging. It also helps if you’re timing with family needs like bathroom breaks and snack stops.

Here’s a pacing approach that usually works well:

  • Start with something physical to burn off early energy (bouldering wall or obstacle-course style play).
  • Switch to a virtual or calmer attraction before everyone hits the wall.
  • Return to physical challenges later when you’ve had a break and people are more willing to try again.

With unlimited access, you’re not forced into a rigid itinerary. You can follow your group’s mood, which is what makes this kind of attraction actually feel enjoyable.

Price and value: when the Family & Friends ticket makes sense

This ticket is priced as a group up to 4. The base price is:

  • 105 EUR (Mon–Fri)
  • 135 EUR (Sat, Sun, public holidays + Mon–Fri Bavarian vacations)

And then there’s the kicker for budgeting: 20 EUR surcharge for each additional person. That means the deal is strongest when you keep the group within the up-to-4 count.

So is it good value? For me, the answer is yes when at least two of these are true:

  • You’re going on a day when the whole group will actually use the attractions you came for.
  • You want both worlds, not just one quick stop.
  • You can take advantage of the unlimited play window instead of treating it like a rushed checklist.

Also, access to both worlds is included, and it covers use of all attractions. If you’ll likely try multiple areas—physical challenges plus virtual aquarium plus VR—that inclusion matters.

Finally, the ticket is described as an exclusive group price for the Family & Friends Special. That’s usually a hint that the park is trying to make longer stays attractive rather than quick one-hour visits.

Using your GetYourGuide ticket at Tegernsee Phantastisch

This part is simple, but don’t skip it. You’re asked to present your GetYourGuide ticket at the reception of Tegernsee Phantastisch upon arrival. The team then provides your official admission ticket for entry.

If you show up expecting a direct scan, you could waste time. I’d plan to arrive with a little buffer so you can handle the reception exchange calmly, especially if your group includes kids.

You’ll also see staff are available as a host or greeter in English and German, so you can ask questions on-site if you need help finding the right world or figuring out how to switch between attractions.

Who this ticket is best for (and who should reconsider)

This experience fits families who want a single indoor destination that can handle different energy levels. It’s especially good if you’re traveling with:

  • kids who enjoy action and challenges,
  • teens who like obstacle-course energy,
  • adults who want more than a passive attraction day.

It also fits mixed groups because the attractions cover both physical and virtual experiences. You’re not locked into just one type of fun.

Who might reconsider? If your group strongly prefers quiet, low-activity outings, this might feel too energetic. And if you know your children aren’t comfortable with a high ropes course, you may need a plan for pacing or alternative activities—luckily, the other included options can help.

Should you book the TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends ticket?

Yes, I’d book it if your group wants an indoor day with variety and you’ll realistically use multiple attractions. The unlimited play during opening hours, the fact that both worlds are included, and the mix of climbing/obstacle challenges with virtual aquarium and VR are the reasons this works.

I’d think twice if your plans are built around a short visit, or if your group is mostly looking for low-activity entertainment. In that case, the value depends on whether you’ll actually take advantage of the all-day access.

FAQ

FAQ

What is the TEGERNSEE PHANTASTISCH Family & Friends ticket?

It’s a special group ticket for exploring Tegernsee Phantastisch together as a family or with friends, with an exclusive group price.

How long is the experience?

The booking duration is listed as 1 minute, and you can use the attractions for unlimited time during Tegernsee Phantastisch opening hours on your booked day.

What is included with the ticket?

Your ticket includes entry to both worlds (Tegernsee Magic and Tegernsee World) and use of all attractions.

Is the play unlimited?

Yes. On the day you buy your ticket, you can use the attractions for unlimited time during the opening hours.

How many people is the ticket for?

It’s for a group of 4 people, including children from 4 years, adults, and senior citizens.

What is the price?

The ticket price starts at 105 EUR on Mon–Fri, and 135 EUR on Sat, Sun, public holidays, and Mon–Fri Bavarian vacations.

Is there an extra cost for more than 4 people?

Yes. There is a 20 EUR surcharge for each additional person beyond the group of 4.

Can I enter and leave more than once on the same day?

Yes. The ticket allows up to 3 times ticket check-in/check-out on the booked day.

What languages are available on-site?

The host or greeter is available in English and German.

Where do I present my ticket?

You should present your GetYourGuide ticket at the reception of Tegernsee Phantastisch upon arrival, where staff will provide your official admission ticket for entry.

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