Ice slides, skating, and an ice bar in Lapland.
Snowman World is the big snowy playground inside Santa Claus Village on the Arctic Circle in Rovaniemi, with a one-day entrance ticket that’s valid all day (start times depend on availability). It’s outdoor winter fun, so you’ll want layers, gloves, and the right attitude toward cold.
I really like that the ticket covers both action and atmosphere. You get an ice-skating rink experience (plus skate rental) and the classic snow tubing on an icy hill with tube rental, so you’re not just walking around for photos. And when you need a break, you can go into the Ice Bar and the Snow Restaurant areas included with your entry.
One thing to consider: this place can get crowded at peak times, especially around lunch, and queues can eat into your play time.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Where Snowman World fits inside Santa Claus Village
- The snow playground: slides, ice rink, and the snowy labyrinth
- Tube tubing on an icy hill: how to plan for speed and fun
- Ice skating and getting your bearings on real ice
- The Ice Bar and Snow Restaurant: a cold setting with warm vibe
- Ice art, sculptures, and photo moments at Arctic Circle speed
- Timing and how long you really need
- What to bring for cold weather you can’t ignore
- Price and value: what $49 gets you in Lapland
- Who this ticket suits best (and who may feel it’s too small)
- Should you book Snowman World Entrance Ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is Snowman World located?
- How much does the entrance ticket cost?
- Is Snowman World open year-round?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- What is included with the ticket?
- Are food and drinks included?
- What should I bring?
- Is Snowman World wheelchair accessible?
- What cancellation and payment options are available?
Key things to know before you go

- Tube slides and ice skating are included with rental gear, so you can start fast.
- You can return during the day with your wristband feel, which helps when you want a second go.
- Ice Bar and Snow Restaurant access are included, but food and drinks cost extra.
- It is outdoors and weather-dependent, so warm clothing matters more than anything.
- Plan around crowds and aim for earlier or later sessions to reduce waiting.
Where Snowman World fits inside Santa Claus Village

Snowman World sits in Santa Claus Village in Rovaniemi, Lapland. It’s a winter activity zone built around ice, snow, and those playful “how is this even real?” installations like icy hills, slide lanes, and a snowy labyrinth. The ticket is priced at about $49 per person and works as a full-day pass, not a short timed tour.
This is also a smart add-on if you’re already spending time in the village. The area is compact enough that you can see it without feeling like you’re trekking across the Arctic—yet there’s enough variety that families (and adults who don’t want to just stand in line) usually find something they like.
You’ll check in for entry (the ticket includes skip-the-line access), then get into the Snowman World zone. After that, you can spend your day bouncing between activities and breaks. It’s a good setup when you’re traveling with kids, or when you want to mix fast excitement with slower sightseeing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Rovaniemi
The snow playground: slides, ice rink, and the snowy labyrinth

The core of Snowman World is exactly what it sounds like: a snow-and-ice playground designed for all ages. The highlights are the thrilling snow and ice slides, plus a fun labyrinth that gives you something to do between the big adrenaline hits.
The ice rink is a real draw. It’s an ice-skating rink inside the complex, and you’ll get ice skate rental with your ticket. Even if you’re not a confident skater, the rink setup makes it more about play than competition—think steady, kid-friendly “wobble and learn” energy.
If you’re with kids, the labyrinth and slide areas tend to keep attention longer than you’d expect. If you’re an adult, it still works because you can swap between “try it once” and “okay, again” without feeling like you’re stuck watching from the sidelines.
Tube tubing on an icy hill: how to plan for speed and fun

Snow tubing is the star activity for many people, mainly because it’s easy to understand and hard to dislike. You’ll have sliding tube rental included, so you don’t need to bring gear or arrange anything complicated.
Here’s the practical part: it’s one of the activities most people want to hit back-to-back, which means it can build queues. If your goal is maximum slide time, I’d treat tubing as your first big mission when you arrive, or time it for a later slot once the early rush has passed.
You’ll also see tips about how the slope conditions can change during the day. One useful idea from people who’ve gone is that later sessions can feel faster because the rubber-ring slope gets extra icy. The catch is obvious: icy means you’ll still want to take it seriously. You’ll get the most fun by staying loose, gripping the tube normally, and letting the run do the work.
Ice skating and getting your bearings on real ice

Ice skating inside Snowman World is included, and skate rental is part of the ticket. That matters because in snowy destinations, renting gear on the fly can add cost and time. Here, you can commit to skating without doing extra planning.
The rink is small enough that you can realistically fit it into a half-day of activities. At the same time, it’s not so tiny that it feels pointless. If you’re traveling as a couple or a group of friends, you’ll likely rotate roles: one person skates while another watches, helps with gloves, or captures photos.
If you’re not great on ice, don’t wait for perfect conditions. Put on the skates, take a few careful laps (or shuffles), then decide if you want one more go. The best part of this kind of winter setup is that it’s playful. You’re there for the experience, not to train for a competition.
The Ice Bar and Snow Restaurant: a cold setting with warm vibe

This is where Snowman World turns from “playground” into a real destination. Your ticket includes entry to the Ice Bar and the Snow Restaurant, so you can treat them like built-in breaks instead of an optional add-on.
The Ice Bar is popular because it’s a novelty that actually feels physical. You get the chance to enjoy a drink in an ice setting and admire the snow/ice art around you. Many people focus on the experience of being inside, not just what’s in the glass. The bar area also tends to have a fun atmosphere, with music and party-like energy that makes the whole thing feel less like a tourist stop and more like an event.
The Snow Restaurant works the same way. It’s not about cheap meals; it’s about the setting. Food and drinks aren’t included, so budget for that reality. One useful mindset: treat meals and drinks as part of the day’s entertainment value, not as an economic bargain.
For a warm pause, people often mix Ice Bar time with warmer café stops nearby. That’s smart because you’ll feel cold faster on ice than you think. Short breaks keep you safer and help you keep enjoying the slides instead of getting grumpy in the cold.
Ice art, sculptures, and photo moments at Arctic Circle speed

Beyond the big attractions, Snowman World leans hard into the details—snow art, icy sculptures, and the “stand here because it looks unreal” corners. When you’re in the Ice Bar and the surrounding areas, you can spend time admiring the carvings and wall art without paying extra.
One of the underrated advantages of a place like this is that it’s easy to photograph even if your group has different energy levels. You can take a breather while someone else lines up for the next tube run. Then you swap roles without anyone feeling like they’re wasting the day.
And because the setting is outdoors, the lighting and snow texture can change the mood from moment to moment. If you’re trying to catch nice winter photos, aim for a steady walk around between activity rounds. It’s a small zone, so don’t overthink it—just enjoy the “Lapland made of ice” feel.
Timing and how long you really need

Your ticket is valid for one day, and the schedule depends on availability and starting times. Opening hours are weather-permit and run in two main seasonal blocks:
- Dec 6, 2025 – Jan 6, 2026: 10:00–20:00
- Jan 7, 2026 – Mar 17, 2026: 11:00–19:00
The biggest timing tip is how people experience the day in real time. Many visitors treat Snowman World as a 2–3 hour activity if you hit the big slides and add a rink session. But because the entry works like an all-day pass with wristband-style re-entry, you can stretch it out—go once, warm up, come back, and repeat.
Queue timing matters. Lunch hours tend to bring bigger lines, especially for the tube slide. If you want the easiest flow, plan your busiest activity early or later. If you’re flexible, you’ll get a smoother day and more actual sliding time.
What to bring for cold weather you can’t ignore

Snowman World is outdoors, so you need to dress for real winter conditions. The ticket info is simple: bring warm clothing.
In practice, you’ll want:
- Insulated layers (you’ll be outside standing in lines and moving on ice)
- Warm gloves
- A hat or head covering
- Waterproof outerwear if you have it
Also plan for the fact that ice fun can make you sweat—then you cool down fast. That’s why good layering matters more than trying to “bundle up and hope.” If you’re comfortable, you’ll enjoy the Ice Bar drink more and you’ll keep wanting to play.
Price and value: what $49 gets you in Lapland

At $49 per person, this ticket sits in the “not cheap, but fair if you use it” category. Here’s why.
Your entrance includes several components that add up:
- Entry to Snowman World itself
- Ice Bar and Snow Restaurant access
- Ice skate rental
- Sliding tube rental
What you pay extra for is also clear: food and drinks (plus no hotel pickup/drop-off). So the value improves if you actually use multiple activities rather than just doing one slide and calling it a day.
If you’re a family, you may love it because kids usually repeat the slides and the rink, which stretches the value over time. If you’re an adult who wants a single adrenaline hit, it can feel pricey—unless you’re also planning on the ice bar visit and at least one extra round in the tubing or labyrinth.
My best advice for deciding value: treat it like a day of included gear and experiences, not a buffet of activities. If you’ll skate, tube, and take the included ice-bar break, $49 can feel like a practical winter outing rather than a splurge.
Who this ticket suits best (and who may feel it’s too small)
Snowman World is built for everyone in the family, but it shines most for kids and groups with mixed ages. The variety keeps younger visitors engaged, while adults still get plenty of fun through skating, tubing, and the Ice Bar.
It can feel smaller than some big theme parks, and the most time-consuming part is often waiting for popular activities. If your group is very focused on one thing (like only tubing, or only photos), you might feel like you moved too quickly. On the other hand, if you enjoy variety—slides, skating, labyrinth, and ice art—this is a smooth fit.
If you’re traveling solo, it still works. You can jump between activities and still make the Ice Bar portion feel like a full experience rather than a sidebar. Just go in with a plan: choose your slide order to cut waiting.
Should you book Snowman World Entrance Ticket?
Book it if you want a high-energy winter day in Rovaniemi that combines ice skating, snow tubing, and an actually memorable indoor-in-ice moment at the Ice Bar. It’s especially worth it when you’re with kids, or when you’ll realistically use the included rentals and multiple rounds.
Skip or reconsider if you’re expecting a huge attraction or if you only want one quick activity. The area is compact, and queues can affect how much sliding you get, particularly around lunch. Also be prepared for the “cold weather outdoor day” requirement. If you hate winter standing-in-line time, you’ll feel that more here than in warmer attractions.
If you do go, go with the right pace. Hit your top activity first, use the Ice Bar as a planned break, and don’t try to cram every single corner in one burst. Snowman World is at its best when you let it feel like play.
FAQ
Where is Snowman World located?
Snowman World is inside Santa Claus Village in Rovaniemi, Lapland, on the Arctic Circle.
How much does the entrance ticket cost?
The price is listed as $49 per person.
Is Snowman World open year-round?
No. The opening dates shown are weather-permit hours from Dec 6, 2025 to Jan 6, 2026 (10:00–20:00) and Jan 7, 2026 to Mar 17, 2026 (11:00–19:00).
How long is the ticket valid?
Your ticket is valid for one day. You can check availability to see starting times.
What is included with the ticket?
Included are entrance to Snowman World, entrance to the Ice Bar and the Snow Restaurant, ice skate rental, and sliding tube rental.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
What should I bring?
Bring warm clothing, since Snowman World is an outdoor destination.
Is Snowman World wheelchair accessible?
Yes, it is listed as wheelchair accessible.
What cancellation and payment options are available?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund, and there is a reserve now & pay later option.


























