Overview
A thermal park in a real spa village setting
Termály Losiny (Therme Losiny) is a thermal park in Velké Losiny, a long-established Moravian spa area in the Jeseníky foothills. It’s a managed complex with multiple pools and a family-friendly layout, but it still feels tied to its spa-town surroundings rather than being a standalone waterpark on a highway exit.
Why people choose Losiny
The appeal is the mix: a day-visit thermal park paired with the calm, forested spa environment around it. You can make it an easy half-day soak, or stay nearby and treat it as your main warm-water anchor between hikes, castle visits, and short mountain drives.
How to make it feel more relaxing
If you want a calmer soak, arrive earlier and do your warm-water rounds before the busiest afternoon wave. The park has attractions, but you do not have to chase them. A slower circuit usually feels better and leaves you less wrung out.
Location & Access
Where it is
Termály Losiny is in Velké Losiny at Komenského 235, 788 15 Velké Losiny, Czechia, in the wider spa resort area under the Jeseníky mountains.
Getting there
Drive-up access, no hike. Velké Losiny is commonly reached via Šumperk and regional roads, and the last stretch feels like a small resort town approach. In winter, shaded sections can hold ice longer. In shoulder seasons, wet leaves can make parking areas and paths slick.
What to bring
Swimsuit, towel, and sandals with grip. Add a cover-up for moving between areas, plus a dry pouch for your phone. If you are coming from hikes or sightseeing, pack a dry change of clothes so you are not leaving in damp swimwear.
Seasonality
The thermal park is built for year-round use, but the mood changes. Cold days make outdoor-to-indoor transitions feel dramatic, while summer shifts attention to outdoor decks and longer breaks. Check the official site before you go for current operating details and any maintenance notes.
Accessibility note
The park’s published visitor rules mention wheelchair access by lift from the pool hall. If you need assisted water entry, it is still worth confirming what support is available for your visit.
Suitability & Accessibility
This is best for travelers who want a thermal day with a spa-town backdrop, plus options for kids without committing to a full theme-park scale. It works well for families and mixed-age groups, and it’s also a good base for couples who want warm water after time outdoors.
Families
Good family choice because you can mix warm pools with breaks and light play. The key is avoiding overheating and meltdowns: shorter warm-water sessions, snacks, and towel time. Kids also slip easily on wet surfaces, so keep footwear on outside the water.
Couples and solo travelers
Very workable if you time it right. Early hours tend to feel calmer. If you want a quieter visit, focus on the slower pools and keep a steady pace instead of bouncing between every feature.
Mobility and wheelchair access
The published visitor rules note wheelchair access by lift from the pool hall, and the area is set up as a developed facility rather than a natural site. Practical access still depends on pool-edge entry points and wet-floor transitions. Plan extra time, use grippy footwear, and ask staff on arrival which entries are easiest for your needs.
Expectation check
It is a thermal park, not a backcountry spring. Comfort and logistics are the main point, and that is often exactly what you want.
Safety & Etiquette
Heat pacing
Thermal parks make it easy to soak longer than you should. Do shorter rounds with breaks, drink water, and cool down before you feel overheated. If you feel dizzy or unusually tired, step out and reset.
Slips are the common problem
Wet tile, wet steps, and outdoor paths in cold weather are where people get hurt. Wear sandals with grip, move slowly, and keep one hand free when carrying towels or a child.
Outdoor air changes the risk
In cold or windy weather, wet hair and a wet swimsuit can chill you fast between pools. Dry off well, use a cover-up, and keep your towel close so you are not standing around wet.
Shared-space etiquette
It goes best when everyone shares space and keeps things moving. Don’t sit on entry steps, give others room at ladders, and keep bags off narrow walkways. If you are in a quieter area, keep voices low so others can actually relax.
Kind health cautions
If you’re pregnant, heat-sensitive, or managing cardiovascular concerns, keep sessions conservative and skip dramatic hot-to-cold contrasts. A gentle pace usually feels better anyway.
FAQs
Where is Termály Losiny?
It’s in Velké Losiny at Komenského 235, 788 15 Velké Losiny, Czechia, in the Jeseníky foothills spa area.
Do you need to hike to reach the pools?
No. It’s a developed thermal park with drive-up access.
Is it wheelchair accessible?
The park’s published visitor rules mention wheelchair access by lift from the pool hall. Contact the operator if you need details on pool entry support for your visit day.
What should I pack?
Swimsuit, towel, and grippy sandals, plus a cover-up for moving between areas. If you are combining it with hikes or sightseeing, bring a dry change of clothes.
What is the best way to avoid crowds?
Go earlier in the day or choose a weekday if you can. On busy days, use calmer pools as your base and do attractions in short bursts.