REVIEW · MISMALOYA
Edenva Ecotourist Park in Puerto Vallarta
Book on Viator →Operated by Edenva · Bookable on Viator
A mountain day packed with safe zip-lining. Edenva Ecotourist Park sits in the Sierra Madre above Puerto Vallarta, with a day-pass style admission that can include 13 zip-lines plus hiking circuits, hanging bridges, river time, and a natural slide.
What I like most is how the day is built for momentum: you get active options without feeling rushed, and the staff focus on keeping the experience fun and safe. In one standout moment, guides Ricky, Temu, and Becker were specifically praised for helping first-time zippers feel secure.
The one thing to plan around is effort and weather. This is outdoors, you should have moderate physical fitness, and the experience requires good weather, so a cloudy or rainy day can change the schedule.
In This Review
- Top things to know before you go
- Edenva Ecotourist Park in the Sierra Madre: what your day really feels like
- Price and value: is $69 for about 6 hours a good deal?
- How the 9:00 am start and private pickup play out
- Your main stop: Edenva El Eden de Vallarta Ecotourism Park
- Zip-lines and canopy: where safety and first-time confidence matter
- Hanging bridges and hiking circuits: the in-between adventure
- River cool-down and the natural slide: the part you’ll remember
- Restaurant time: what’s included and what you’ll want to budget
- Group size, comfort, and physical readiness
- Weather is not a side note here
- Who should book Edenva—and who should skip it?
- Should you book this Edenva Ecotourist Park tour?
- FAQ
- What’s the duration of the Edenva Ecotourist Park tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Do I get pickup from Puerto Vallarta?
- What time does the tour start?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- What is not included?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- What physical fitness level do I need?
- Is it weather dependent?
- Is there a cancellation policy?
Top things to know before you go

- A pass-style park experience: Access is tied to a pass that can cover multiple activities in the park.
- Zip-line focus in the mountains: With 13 zip-lines available, you can pick your comfort level.
- Guides matter: Named guides like Ricky, Temu, and Becker get kudos for safety with first-timers.
- Private transportation included: You’re not trying to figure out timing on your own.
- Lunch isn’t included: Budget extra if you want a full sit-down meal.
Edenva Ecotourist Park in the Sierra Madre: what your day really feels like

Edenva is an eco-focused park experience tucked up in the mountains of Jalisco, right in the Sierra Madre region. The vibe is more nature day than theme park. Yes, there are built attractions like bridges, slides, and zip-lines, but the day still centers on moving through the park’s natural features.
The big idea is choice. You’re not locked into one repeat activity. The park is designed so you can switch gears as you go—zip-line, hike, bridge walk, river cool-down, then back for another run.
What makes that valuable is how it fits different energy levels. One hour you might want adrenaline. The next hour you might want easier walking or a break to cool off. If your group has mixed “I want zip-lines” and “I want shade and views” energy, this format helps.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Mismaloya.
Price and value: is $69 for about 6 hours a good deal?

At $69 per person for about six hours, this sits in the middle of the “worth it if you use it” category. The value comes from two things you actually get here: a true park admission component and the included activities tied to zip-line/canopy, plus bottled water and private transportation.
If your goal is only a quick photo stop, it’s not the right purchase. But if you want a real chunk of mountain time with multiple activities—especially zip-lines—then the math improves fast. You’re paying for a guided, timed experience with transport, not just a ticket you handle yourself.
Also, you’ll save money and hassle by having water included. It’s a small line item, but it matters during a hot outdoor day of cables, walking, and river time.
How the 9:00 am start and private pickup play out

The tour begins at 9:00 am, and pickup happens from set points. You don’t need to arrive more than 5 minutes before the listed pickup time at each location, which helps if you’re already figuring out where you’re staying.
Private transportation is included, so you avoid the stress of piecing together local rides or trying to match bus schedules to a fixed park entry time. For a half-day style outing, timing is everything. Miss it and your whole day plan goes sideways.
The day also caps at 100 travelers, which is big enough to keep things organized but small enough that the park won’t feel like a never-ending crowd at every platform. In practice, you should expect a mix of families and active adults, since there’s something for different comfort levels.
Your main stop: Edenva El Eden de Vallarta Ecotourism Park

All the action centers on Edenva El Eden de Vallarta Ecotourism Park, described as a natural park “in the heart of the mountain.” That wording matters, because it signals you’re leaving the street behind and stepping into a hillside environment where you’ll be walking and moving between stations.
The park’s core pull is the pass-style access. With your entry, you can use the park’s hiking circuits, cross fun hanging bridges, cool off in a river area, slide down a natural slide, and then choose among multiple zip-lines.
So think of it like a menu, not a single rigid ride. Your day will feel smoother if you pace yourself. Hit one high-energy activity early, then sprinkle in breaks so you’re not wiped out before you’ve done your favorites.
Zip-lines and canopy: where safety and first-time confidence matter

Zip-lines are the headline here, and the park’s setup includes 13 zip-lines. That means you’re not just doing one short run. You can also make choices based on how comfortable you are with heights and speed.
One helpful detail from the named guide praise: Ricky, Temu, and Becker were called out for making first-time riders feel safe and still having fun. That’s the kind of combination you want in a zip-line setting—clear handling and a relaxed tone, not just a checklist.
If you’re a first-timer, the biggest tip is to treat the first platform as a warm-up. Don’t mentally jump straight to your hardest line. Get used to the harnessing, timing, and how the station works, then progress if you feel good.
Also note what’s included: you’ll get zipline or canopy as part of the package. Since the park has multiple aerial options, your best bet is to pay attention at the start to what your included activity covers versus what requires extra decisions on-site.
Hanging bridges and hiking circuits: the in-between adventure

Not every moment has to be adrenaline. The park includes hiking circuits and hanging bridges, which give you a slower, more scenic way to experience the mountain setting between zip-lines.
This part is valuable because it breaks up the day physically. If you’re doing several zip-lines back-to-back, your body can get tense in the shoulders and legs. Bridges and circuit walking resets your pace and lets you look around.
It’s also where you’ll probably notice how the park is designed for families. Hanging bridges still feel like an event, but they’re usually easier to handle than a full cable drop. If you’re bringing mixed-age people, bridges and circuits are often the activities that keep everyone engaged without exhausting them too quickly.
River cool-down and the natural slide: the part you’ll remember

The park includes time to cool off in a river area and a natural slide feature. This is the “take a breath” section of the day—especially if you’re visiting in warm weather—because it turns the heat-down part into something active.
Even if you don’t do every water-related moment, the slide is the kind of attraction that tends to create instant memories. It’s also a good option after zip-line fatigue, because it’s usually a different kind of movement than harness work and long waits between platforms.
What to plan: this is outdoor fun tied to water and surfaces. Wear something that can handle getting wet, and bring a quick change if you’re the type who hates staying in damp clothes. If you like comfort more than spontaneity, pack a small bag for the switch.
Restaurant time: what’s included and what you’ll want to budget

There’s a restaurant on-site, described as offering a unique culinary experience for families, with drinks and dishes. The catch: lunch is not included in the tour price.
So you’ve got two realistic choices. Either you plan to buy lunch at the park, or you keep your expectations flexible and snack along the way depending on what the park offers that day.
This matters for value. A tour can feel like a bargain until you add the big missing cost. Here, the missing cost is straightforward: you’ll likely spend on lunch if you want a full meal rather than just water and snacks.
Also, alcoholic beverages aren’t included, so keep that in mind when you’re budgeting if you’re traveling with adults who like a drink with meals.
Group size, comfort, and physical readiness
This experience asks for moderate physical fitness. That doesn’t mean you need to be an athlete, but you should expect walking between stations and handling steps and platforms at the attractions.
It also has a sensible cap of 100 travelers, which helps with flow. Big crowds can slow everything down. With a limit like this, the park can keep the line movement steadier, especially around zip-line boarding and bridge stations.
Service animals are allowed, which is a helpful note if anyone in your group needs that support. And the tour is offered in English, so you won’t be left guessing what the safety steps mean.
Weather is not a side note here
This tour requires good weather. That’s not just a technical detail—it affects whether your day is as active as you planned.
If rain or storms hit, you may be offered a different date or a full refund. Either way, you should watch the weather forecast the day before and the morning of if you can. Mountain parks can get hit faster than the beach areas.
If you’re scheduling this during a tight vacation window, plan a buffer day. You’ll thank yourself if the park needs to reschedule.
Who should book Edenva—and who should skip it?
Book it if you want a full morning-to-afternoon block of mountain activities in one place: zip-lines, bridges, river cool-down, and a natural slide. The included private transport and bottled water make it easier to pull off without extra planning.
It’s also a strong fit for groups with mixed preferences, because the park offers both high-energy and lower-energy options. If someone in your group is a first-time zip-liner, the safety-focused guide reputation from Ricky, Temu, and Becker is exactly the kind of reassurance you want.
Skip or rethink if your group hates heights, doesn’t want outdoors walking, or you’re traveling in weather that’s likely to be bad. Since the experience is weather-dependent, you don’t want to commit your only day on a whim.
Should you book this Edenva Ecotourist Park tour?
Yes, if your idea of a great day in Puerto Vallarta is a mountain adventure with real activities and not just a quick stop. At $69 with private pickup, admission, bottled water, and multiple park options, the value is solid—especially if you’re planning to actually use the zip-lines and the rest of the pass activities.
Before you book, do one simple check: confirm you’re comfortable with moderate physical activity and that you have flexibility if weather forces a reschedule. If those boxes are checked, Edenva is the kind of outing that turns into a highlight story fast.
FAQ
What’s the duration of the Edenva Ecotourist Park tour?
It’s approximately 6 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $69.00 per person.
Do I get pickup from Puerto Vallarta?
Yes. Private transportation is included, with pickup from set points.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 9:00 am.
What’s included in the tour price?
Included: zipline or canopy, private transportation, bottled water, and admission ticket.
What is not included?
Lunch, alcoholic beverages, and photos are not included.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
What physical fitness level do I need?
The tour notes a moderate physical fitness level.
Is it weather dependent?
Yes. It requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Is there a cancellation policy?
You can cancel for free up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.








