Iguazú Falls — the Garganta del Diablo (Devil's Throat) pouring 80m into the gorge between Argentina and Brazil. UNESCO 1984.

Stand ten metres from the Devil's Throat

Iguazú Falls skip-the-line — entry to the Argentinian side of Iguazú National Park with Upper + Lower Circuit boardwalks and the train to Garganta del Diablo, booked in English.

See ticket options
  • UNESCO Iguazú National Park, 1984
  • 275 individual falls across the horseshoe
  • 80 m height of the Devil's Throat
  • 1.6 M / yr visitors (Argentine side)

Choose your ticket

Adult

Ages 16+

€42

  • Iguazú National Park (Argentine side)
  • Upper + Lower Circuit boardwalks
  • Train to Garganta del Diablo + Devil's Throat boardwalk
  • Skip-the-line priority queue
Reserve my adult ticket

Child

Ages 6–15

€22

  • Same park access as adult ticket
  • Under-6s free at the gate
  • Skip-the-line included
Reserve my child ticket

Family

2 adults + up to 3 children

€130 €115 Save €15

  • Full park for the whole family
  • Under-6s free at the gate — we handle the paperwork
  • Skip-the-line for all
Reserve the family bundle
4.9 from 46 verified travellers
Carlos M.
Mexico City, Mexico
“The Devil's Throat is the moment. You walk half a kilometre across a boardwalk over what is mostly spray, and then you're at the edge. The noise is huge. You stand there for fifteen minutes and don't say anything.”
February 2026
Emma W.
Auckland, New Zealand
“Did the speedboat. Getting driven directly under a waterfall is an experience I did not know I needed. You come out soaked and laughing.”
January 2026
Paul H.
London, United Kingdom
“Tried the APN website. It kept showing me dates a month out as unavailable. These guys got me the exact date I wanted within the hour. Ticket was in my inbox before I'd landed in BA.”
December 2025
  • Refund if we can't deliver Full money back if your park entry can't be secured
  • Real humans, not bots English-speaking concierge, not AI
  • Pay in your local currency Same price at checkout · no FX surprise
  • No hidden fees Total shown upfront · what you see is what you pay

About Iguazú National Park

Iguazú Falls sit on the border between Argentina and Brazil. 275 individual cascades spread across a 2.7-kilometre horseshoe, dropping between 60 and 82 metres into the Iguazú River gorge below. Eleanor Roosevelt reportedly said "poor Niagara" when she first saw them. Taller than Niagara, wider than Victoria, less famous than either — which is part of the appeal.

The Argentinian side has ~80% of the falls and the boardwalk infrastructure to walk among them. Three circuits do the work: the Upper Circuit (panorama across the top of the falls), the Lower Circuit (boardwalks descending to pools and plunge points), and the Jungle Train which runs 6 km to the Devil's Throat — the 80-metre-high pour-off where half the river's volume disappears in a cloud of permanent mist. You end up walking on a steel boardwalk over the gorge until you're ten metres from the edge.

The Brazilian side (a separate park, separate country, separate ticket) gives you the panoramic view looking back at the Argentinian cascades — beautiful for photos, but a much shorter visit (2–3 hours vs a full day on the Argentine side). This site covers the Argentine park only. Booking via the APN's Spanish-only system, with dynamic peak-season capacity caps, is the reason travellers fall back on Civitatis or GetYourGuide. We do the Spanish, you get the tickets, in English.

Practical information

Opening hours
Daily 08:00–18:00 summer, 08:00–17:00 winter. Last park entry 16:30. Garganta del Diablo train stops running 1 hour before park close.
Address
Parque Nacional Iguazú, Ruta 101, Misiones, Argentina
Getting there from Puerto Iguazú
17 km south of Puerto Iguazú town. Public bus (Rio Uruguay line) every 20 min, 30 min journey. Taxi 25 min, ~€18. Most hotels offer shuttle.
Getting there from Buenos Aires
Fly BA → Puerto Iguazú (1h45m direct, multiple daily). Or an 18-hour overnight bus if you're on budget.
Getting there from Brazil side (Foz do Iguaçu)
30 min by international bus or taxi across the Tancredo Neves bridge. Passports required. Many travellers do one country per day — Argentine side (full day), Brazilian side (half day next morning).
Time needed
Minimum full day for the Argentine side (9:00 arrival, 17:00 departure). Doing both sides needs 2 days minimum.
Best time to visit
May–September (mild, less humid). Oct–March is hot + humid but falls are at their fullest. February is peak. Avoid Jul–Aug long weekends (domestic Argentine tourism).
Order of circuits
Our recommended sequence: (1) Devil's Throat train first thing (beats the crowds at the top destination), (2) Upper Circuit mid-morning, (3) lunch at the park food court, (4) Lower Circuit + speedboat in afternoon. Reverse this if you're doing the speedboat without the train.
What to wear
Waterproof shell on days forecast to rain. Full-body spray near the Devil's Throat is near-guaranteed. Quick-dry clothes help. Closed-toe shoes mandatory (no flip-flops on wet boardwalks).
Accessibility
Upper Circuit is fully accessible by paved path. Lower Circuit has stairs (some sections); limited accessible routes via the Green Trail. The Jungle Train is accessible. Contact us before booking if mobility is a concern.
Photography
Permitted throughout. Drones prohibited (enforced by park rangers). Tripods allowed on boardwalks. Waterproof phone pouch recommended near the Devil's Throat.

About our service

Iguazu Tickets acts as a facilitator to assist international visitors in purchasing skip-the-line park entries directly from the Administración de Parques Nacionales (APN), the official operator of Iguazú National Park. We do not resell tickets — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service. Our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. For those who prefer to purchase directly, the official site is argentina.gob.ar/parquesnacionales.

Frequently asked

What's included in the ticket?

Iguazú National Park entry, all three walking circuits (Upper, Lower, Green Trail), and the Jungle Train to Garganta del Diablo with its Devil's Throat boardwalk. The speedboat-tier adds the Gran Aventura 4x4 + boat run under the falls (you will get soaked).

Argentine side or Brazilian side?

Different experiences. Argentine side: full day, walking through and among the falls, 275 cascades up close. Brazilian side: half day, panoramic viewing platforms looking back at the Argentine cascades. Most visitors who do one side do the Argentine for the depth. Visitors with 2+ days do both. This site covers the Argentine side only.

Do I need the speedboat?

Not necessary — the walking circuits and train cover the key views. The speedboat is a different category of experience: getting driven directly under waterfall curtains by a qualified driver, at high speed, in a specifically designed boat. Soaking is the point. If that sounds fun, yes; if it doesn't, skip it.

How much walking?

Upper Circuit: ~1.75 km on paved paths. Lower Circuit: ~1.7 km with stairs. Devil's Throat boardwalk: ~2.2 km total (train + boardwalk). Total day can be 6–8 km of walking, mostly flat. Bring good shoes.

What about coatimundis?

They're everywhere. Small ring-tailed mammals that WILL try to steal your food. Do not feed them (bite risk) and don't leave bags unzipped. They're genuinely aggressive around food.

Is it suitable for children?

Yes — under-6s free at the gate. Kids usually love the speedboat (age 10+), the train, and the sheer visual scale of the falls. The Devil's Throat boardwalk is safe but loud — toddlers may find the noise overwhelming. Strollers work on Upper but not Lower Circuit.

What's your refund policy?

Two situations trigger a full refund: (a) we cannot secure your park entry, or (b) the park closes (rare — happens during extreme flooding or wildfires). Outside those, tickets are non-transferable. Reply to your confirmation email 48h+ ahead and we'll try to move the date.

Is it safe?

Yes — the boardwalks are safe, the speedboat is run by qualified operators, the train is slow. Dangers are environmental (wet boardwalks, coatis around food, sunburn, dehydration in summer). Bring water and sunscreen. Watch for pickpockets on crowded boardwalks at peak times.