REVIEW · CHIANG MAI
ChiangMai Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park Optional StickyWaterfall
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Tripora Travel · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A good first word here is: wow. The Chiang Mai Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park turns elephant waste into usable paper, and you’ll get a guided English tour that explains the steps clearly. I like that it’s not just looking, it’s learning with a hands-on DIY souvenir you make yourself.
One thing to keep in mind: if you want to take home extra finished items, there’s an additional fee. In other words, the main activity is included, but the take-home options can cost extra.
In This Review
- Key Highlights at Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park
- Why Elephant POOPOOPAPER Works in Chiang Mai
- What the 45–330 Minute Visit Actually Feels Like
- The English-Guided Tour: From Waste to Colorful Sheets
- Hands-On Paper-Making: Make Your Own POOPOOPAPER Souvenir
- Take-Home Projects: Included Activity vs Extra Fees
- Optional Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall) for a Full Day
- Value Check: Is $4.82 Worth It?
- Who This Tour Suits Best
- Practical Tips Before You Go
- FAQ
- How long is the Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park tour?
- Is the tour guided in English?
- What do I do during the visit?
- Can I combine this with Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall)?
- What’s included in the price?
- Are there extra costs for take-home items?
- Is free cancellation available?
- Is there a way to book without paying immediately?
- Should You Book Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park in Chiang Mai?
Key Highlights at Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park

- English-led eco paper process: you’ll see how raw material is cleaned and boiled, then turned into colorful sheets
- Hands-on POOPOOPAPER souvenir making during the visit
- Outdoor museum feel focused on sustainability and creativity in Chiang Mai Province
- Flexible time slots with a range of total duration options
- Optional Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall) add-on for a fuller day
Why Elephant POOPOOPAPER Works in Chiang Mai

Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park sounds like a gimmick until you’re standing there and watching the process get broken down step by step. This is set up as a sustainability-focused outdoor museum, so you’re not just passing through a workshop. You’re learning how creativity and eco thinking can connect in a practical way.
The big win for me is how the activity is explained in plain terms by an English-speaking instructor. You get the context for what you’re making, not just the how-to. That matters because it turns a fun souvenir moment into an actual takeaway you can talk about later.
I also like that the experience stays hands-on. You don’t have to be artsy to enjoy it. You just follow along, get a feel for the process, and make a souvenir you can use or keep.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Chiang Mai.
What the 45–330 Minute Visit Actually Feels Like

The listed duration range is 45 to 330 minutes, which tells you the schedule is flexible. At the center of it, you’re getting a 40-minute guided tour of the paper-making process. That’s the core, and it’s the part that keeps the experience educational and not rushed.
If you choose the optional Sticky Waterfall add-on, expect your day to run longer. The exact time isn’t provided, but it’s safe to plan for an extended outing rather than a quick half-hour stop.
You’ll also find that multiple time slots are available. That’s genuinely useful in Chiang Mai, where mornings and afternoons can get booked fast. If you want to pair this with other sights, picking the right time slot can keep your plan from feeling like a mad dash.
The English-Guided Tour: From Waste to Colorful Sheets

Here’s what you should expect from the guided portion. The instructor takes you through each stage of turning elephant waste into paper products.
You’ll see the process starting with how raw materials are collected. Then the tour explains how they’re cleaned and boiled. After that, you’ll learn how the material gets transformed into colorful sheets of paper.
That sequence is the point. A lot of workshops skip the “why” and jump straight to crafting. Here, the value is that the tour makes the process understandable: collection, cleaning, boiling, and then the sheet-making stage.
Because this is an outdoor museum setting, it also tends to feel more like a living demonstration than a stuffy classroom. You can usually keep moving with the group and see the steps in a more visual, real-world way.
Hands-On Paper-Making: Make Your Own POOPOOPAPER Souvenir

The most satisfying part is that you get to join in. During the activity, you’ll make your own POOPOOPAPER souvenir, guided by the English instructor.
Even if you’re not confident with crafts, you’ll likely find this approachable. The setup is designed as a learning experience for all ages, so the pace and direction are meant to work for different comfort levels.
What you’re learning while you do it is as important as what you end up holding. You’re connecting the stages you watched during the tour to something tangible you create. That’s why it sticks with people: you’re not only seeing the transformation, you’re participating in it.
If you want to take photos, this is a good moment to do it. You’ll be close enough to the steps to capture what’s happening, and it’s also where the day turns from informative to personal.
Take-Home Projects: Included Activity vs Extra Fees

You can take home something from the experience, but you should plan for the reality of added costs. The included part is the activity and admission, and the experience includes making a souvenir during the visit. However, if you want additional finished items beyond what’s included, there may be an extra fee.
One review highlights this clearly: there’s a variety of DIY projects you can choose from, and options mentioned include bookmarks and paper fans. Those projects can be a great way to turn your experience into a useful or giftable keepsake—just don’t assume everything is automatically included.
My practical advice: decide what you want before you get carried away. If you’re trying to stay on a tight budget, keep your focus on the souvenir you make during the activity, then consider extras only if they genuinely match what you’d like to carry home.
Optional Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall) for a Full Day

If you want to stretch the day beyond paper-making, the park experience offers an optional combo with Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall).
This is smart pairing for two reasons. First, it gives you a contrast: one side is sustainability through creative processing, the other side is a natural attraction. Second, Chiang Mai days can be much more enjoyable when you mix indoor-style activities with outdoor time.
A small planning note: the full itinerary time can change depending on what else you choose that day, so don’t schedule something tight right after your tour slot. Give yourself breathing room before and after the waterfall visit.
Value Check: Is $4.82 Worth It?

At $4.82 per person, this is priced in a way that makes it feel accessible for almost any Chiang Mai itinerary. The value is driven by three things:
- You get admission included with the activity
- You get an English-led guided explanation of the paper-making process
- You get hands-on time making your own POOPOOPAPER souvenir
Even with a “budget” price, the experience doesn’t feel like a quick stop where you only watch. The tour is structured, and the crafting component is the payoff. The optional extras (like additional take-home projects) are where the costs can rise, but they’re not the core promise of the visit.
So if you want a short, meaningful activity that’s good for families, couples, and solo travelers, the math tends to work out.
Who This Tour Suits Best
This experience is a good fit if you want something practical and creative, not just sightseeing.
You’ll likely enjoy it if:
- You like learning how everyday materials are turned into art
- You’re traveling with kids or multi-age groups
- You want a hands-on souvenir that feels connected to what you saw
It may not be the best match if you hate any activity involving animal byproducts, even when the framing is sustainability. In that case, you might consider reading the vibe of the park first and deciding whether the concept works for your personal comfort.
Also, if you’re the type who only wants finished products and hates extra costs for upgrades, set your expectations early. Focus on the souvenir included in the activity, then treat optional add-ons as a bonus.
Practical Tips Before You Go

A few small things can make the day smoother.
- Wear clothes you don’t mind getting a little messy. The activity is hands-on and paper-making can get hands-on fast.
- Bring a little patience. This is a guided process, and you’ll move through steps rather than running at full speed.
- If you’re pairing it with Sticky Waterfall, think about timing so you don’t end up rushing between the two.
If you’re planning to shop for extra take-home projects like bookmarks or paper fans, keep a budget in mind ahead of time. That way, you’ll feel in control instead of reacting to costs on the spot.
FAQ
How long is the Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park tour?
The duration is listed as 45 to 330 minutes. The guided tour itself is described as about 40 minutes.
Is the tour guided in English?
Yes. The instructor is English-speaking, and the experience is listed as available in English.
What do I do during the visit?
You join a guided tour through the eco-friendly process of turning elephant waste into paper, then you make your own POOPOOPAPER souvenir as a hands-on activity.
Can I combine this with Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall)?
Yes. The experience offers an optional combination with a visit to Sticky Waterfall (Bua Tong Waterfall).
What’s included in the price?
The admission ticket to Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park is included.
Are there extra costs for take-home items?
The activity involves making a souvenir, but you may need to pay an additional fee if you want extra take-home projects beyond what’s included.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Is there a way to book without paying immediately?
Yes. You can reserve now and pay later, with booking listed as pay nothing today.
Should You Book Elephant POOPOOPAPER Park in Chiang Mai?
I’d book it if you want a short, hands-on Chiang Mai experience with an English-guided explanation of a genuinely unusual sustainability idea. The price is low enough that the risk feels small, and the craft-making is the main payoff.
Book it especially if you like learning and making your own souvenir, not just taking photos. If you’re budget-minded, plan around the chance of optional extra fees for additional finished projects, and you’ll leave feeling like you got your money’s worth.
























