Day 1: Denver Aquarium, Children's Museum, Meow Wolf & 16 Street Mall
Denver may be landlocked, but it's still home to more than 500 species of ocean-dwellers, thanks to the Downtown Aquarium. Have close encounters with sharks, sea turtles, stingrays, rainbow fish and sea otters as they swim in more than a million gallons of water. Check the calendar for the Mystic Mermaids® show, where you can watch the finned performers dive and twirl to choreographed music from the aquarium restaurant (reservations required).
Nearby is the Children’s Museum of Denver at Marsico Campus, an imagination-stimulating journey for newborns through age 8. Kiddos and their grown-ups can race to the top of a 3½-story climber, step inside a 6-foot bubble, sculpt a masterpiece out of clay or zip through the air in Adventure Forest. The exhibits here will entertain, as well as give an opportunity for exploration and learning. The museum features more than a dozen "playscapes," including a hands-on fire department, an assembly plant for interactive building activities and a tot-sized veterinary clinic.
At Meow Wolf's Convergence Station, adults and kids alike will delight in colorful universes created by hundreds of artists. Marvel at colorful imaginary critters who look like something out of a child's dreamscape and learn more about the different worlds in the installation via interactive exhibits.
Older kids will want to check out a few of the city’s urban adventure parks for skateboarding, BMX, mountain biking, skiing/boarding and more right in town. Downtown Denver Skatepark and Ruby Hill Rail Yard are a couple to scope out.
End your first day exploring the 16th Street Mall, a mile-long, tree-lined pedestrian promenade — and one of Denver's most visited attractions. The mall is easy to traverse, thanks to free MallRide shuttles that stop frequently at every corner. It's a great spot for dinner, with plenty of kid-pleasing choices. Every block boasts a landmark or a piece of fun public art; treat it like a scavenger hunt as you make your way around. Check out the herd of colorfully painted buffalo between Larimer and Market streets, the iconic Daniels and Fisher Clocktower on the corner of 16th and Arapahoe, or William Burgess' abstract sculpture at 16th and Wazee.
Day 2: Denver Zoo, Museum of Nature and Science, Casa Bonita & More
Go to where the wild things are in Denver: the Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance. One of the nation's most popular zoos, this one-of-a-kind wildlife adventure in City Park takes visitors on a globetrotting adventure. You'll go nose to nose with penguins, trade funny faces with gorillas and orangutans, and stretch necks with giraffes. Younger kids will love taking a ride on the train, which chugs through the Carousel Meadow and past brilliantly plumed flamingos and other waterfowl. The Toyota Elephant Passage lets kids get up-close-and-personal with elephants, rhinos and more in one of the largest and most complex elephant habitats in North America. The Conservation Carousel offers a ride atop one of 48 hand-carved animals.
For lunch, pack a picnic and spread out in City Park, which surrounds the zoo with 320 acres of refreshing green space and an abundance of fresh-air activities. The area surrounding Ferril Lake is perfect for sprawling out and taking in one of the best views of the Denver skyline and the Front Range Mountains.
Another option is a visit to the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, also located in City Park. You'll see enormous dinosaur skeletons, including T-Rex, Triceratops and Stegosaurus in the Prehistoric Journey exhibit, where you can also get a glimpse of real paleontologists preparing fossils for display. The Infinity Theater provides giant-screen thrills, and the state-of-the-art Gates Planetarium sends you through the cosmos. Don't miss the interactive Expedition Health® exhibit, where you'll learn all about how your own body functions.
The Denver Art Museum is one of the nation’s best for its kids programs, including Family Central, the Creative Hub, a Sensory Garden and plenty of interactive studios and spots spread throughout that allow children to unleash their imaginations — and do some learnin' on the side. The museum is always free for kids 18 and under. Check their Family Programs page for the dates of sensory-friendly mornings that are customized to provide a safe and fun visit for kids with neurodiversity or sensory processing disorders.
Or head west to the city of Golden’s Colorado Railroad Museum, where numerous locomotives, passenger cars, cabooses and HO model railroad attractions make the state’s rail history seem larger than life. Train rides are available on select days January through October. Check the Colorado Railroad Museum schedule to learn more.
The Denver Center for the Performing Arts hosts many kid-friendly events, including the Colorado Symphony’s Family Series (Halloween Spooktacular and Drums of the Word are faves), as well as Movies at the Symphony (past events include scores performed during screenings of “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets™,” "Elf™" and Tim Burton's "The Nightmare Before Christmas).
Dinner calls for a trip to Casa Bonita, which is not your average Mexican restaurant. This longtime Denver favorite is a great place for kids, and a great place to end your Denver adventure. Owned by the creators of "South Park," Casa Bonita entertains little ones with cliff divers, mariachi bands, puppet shows, a pirate cave, magicians and much more. After this packed Denver weekend with the kids, you might consider treating yourself to one of Casa Bonita's famously large margaritas.
Other popular family spots include Steve’s Snappin’ Dogs, Sam’s No. 3, Punch Bowl Social (bowling, table games and an arcade), Ace Eat Serve (Southeast Asian food and pingpong hall), Cherry Cricket (three locations) and Little Man Ice Cream.