Wild Waves Theme Park accidents can lead to personal injury claims when unsafe rides, water attractions, poor supervision, defective equipment, inadequate warnings, or dangerous property conditions cause someone to get hurt. These cases may involve Washington premises liability law, negligence, product liability, or a combination of multiple legal issues.
Wild Waves Theme & Water Park is located in Federal Way, Washington, and includes thrill rides, water slides, pools, zip line attractions, bungee-style activities, and family areas. When an injury happens at a park like this, the key legal questions are what caused the accident, whether the park or another party failed to act safely, and what evidence can prove the claim.
Although amusement park injuries are less common than everyday traffic accidents, they can be serious when they occur. In 2016, a 32-year-old man drowned at Wild Waves Theme Park after reportedly being injured from a jump in the activity pool. Most incidents are not that severe, but even less catastrophic injuries may still raise questions about liability, safety procedures, insurance coverage, and compensation.
Updated for 2026: This guide explains how Washington injury claims may work after an accident at Wild Waves Theme & Water Park or another amusement park, including what evidence matters, who may be liable, and when an injured guest may have a claim.
Amusement park injuries can happen on rides, in water attractions, on walkways, near pools, in parking areas, or anywhere unsafe conditions exist on the property. While amusement park accidents are less common than everyday traffic accidents, they can still cause serious injuries when safety rules, maintenance, supervision, or warnings break down.
Some amusement park injuries are reported immediately, especially when emergency medical care is needed. Others may be harder to track because minor incidents are not always formally documented. Examples of amusement park accidents and injuries may include:
This list is only a sample. The important legal question is not just how the injury happened, but whether the amusement park, ride operator, property owner, maintenance company, manufacturer, or another party failed to act reasonably under the circumstances.
First, it is important to point out that you can injure yourself at an amusement park both on and off a ride. The amusement park management and owners have a duty to you as a visitor to keep the park safe, which applies to rides and the park grounds themselves. For example, imagine that you injure yourself because you slipped and fell while walking to a ride. In that situation, you may still have legal options to recoup damages for your injuries through a premises liability lawsuit. You do not have to be injured on a ride or attraction to start a lawsuit against an amusement park.
Amusement park rides, even the water attractions you will see at Wild Waves Theme Park, all have internal operations that must function properly, so that the ride operates as intended. If there is a mechanical failure, the ride can become unsafe and cause injuries. Examples of Wild Waves Theme Park accidents caused by mechanical failure might include:
In any of these situations, the failure could be the result of a manufacturing problem (such as a design or manufacturing defect), or it may be caused by a failure to properly maintain the ride.
Most rides have amusement park employees checking to be sure that seat belts are fastened and lap bars come down properly. They might even strap you in themselves instead of having you fasten your own seat belt. When the operator does not check these safety features or does not use them properly, it can cause serious, life-threatening accidents. Ride operators often just have to push a button to get a ride started. They may not have many options to slow or stop a ride unless there is a true emergency. However, if a ride stops suddenly because of an error, that abrupt stop can lead to severe injuries in many cases as well.
Not every amusement park accident will be entirely the park’s fault. Instead, some park visitors will ignore safety rules and regulations, such as taking off their seatbelt during a ride or jumping into the water where it is dangerous to do so. In most situations, if the main cause of your accident at an amusement park was because you were being reckless or failing to follow the rules, you may not be able to bring a lawsuit. For example, a Wild Waves accident lawsuit for injuries on a roller coaster because you jumped out likely will not be very successful. However, if Wild Waves did not tell you to buckle up or did not give you a safety belt, the result could be very different.
Some amusement park rides are just more dangerous than others. They might be working properly, with everyone doing everything they were supposed to do, but there still could be an injury. For example, thrill rides have been known to cause headaches, dizziness, and nausea. In severe cases, it can lead to retinal hemorrhage, subdural hematoma, or loss of consciousness.
Yes—you can sue any amusement park if you were injured at the theme park and your situation meets specific qualifications.
In most situations, you will have to prove that the amusement park was negligent in some way to be successful in a Wild Waves injury lawsuit. The term “negligence” generally means that someone was careless or inattentive. To have a good outcome in a lawsuit, you must show that the amusement park’s negligence caused your injuries. Wild Waves Theme Park’s employees are generally considered representatives of Wild Waves. That means that if an employee is careless, that action will be imputed to Wild Waves as if the theme park had taken that action itself. There are a few exceptions to this general rule, but this rule will apply in most cases. Common examples of negligence at a theme park that might lead to injuries include:
There are a lot of situations where someone can be hurt at Wild Waves Theme Park or any other amusement park. This list is not exhaustive.
Premises liability arises when a property owner fails to maintain a property in a reasonably safe manner. General premises liability rules apply to theme parks just as they would a grocery store, department store, or other commercial property. Maintaining the rides often falls into a premises liability claim at a theme park, but there is a great deal of overlap with negligence claims as well. Examples of premises liability situations might include:
In general, the amusement park, including Wild Waves Theme Park, has a duty to ensure that all of its activities, rides, and other areas are safe for visitors. That means they should keep up with maintenance, test rides from time to time, and stop visitors from going to a particular location or riding a specific ride if there is a chance that it is not safe.
The ride itself may have been designed improperly or put together incorrectly, making it unsafe or unreasonably dangerous in some situations. In those situations, your lawsuit might not be against the amusement park itself, but might involve the company or individual who created the ride on which you were injured. In some cases, the park designs the rides themselves, but in many situations, there is a third party involved in the design and manufacture of the amusement park ride.
Evidence can be difficult to recover after an amusement park injury because rides continue operating, employees change shifts, and surveillance footage may be overwritten. If you were injured at Wild Waves or another Washington amusement park, the most important evidence may include:
This evidence can be especially important in a premises liability claim, a negligent supervision case, or a claim involving defective equipment. A lawyer can help determine whether preservation letters, records requests, or other legal steps are needed to protect evidence before it disappears.
Amusement park injuries may include broken bones, head injuries, neck and back injuries, drowning or near-drowning injuries, cuts, bruises, sprains, spinal injuries, and traumatic brain injuries. Serious cases may require emergency care, follow-up treatment, and long-term documentation.
Report the incident, get medical attention, take photos if possible, collect witness information, save tickets or receipts, and avoid giving a detailed recorded statement to an insurer before understanding your legal options.
Potentially liable parties may include the amusement park operator, property owner, ride manufacturer, maintenance contractor, security provider, security company, or another visitor depending on how the accident happened.
Save photos, videos, medical records, witness information, tickets, receipts, written communications, and any documents from the park or its insurer. Evidence such as surveillance footage, incident reports, ride logs, and maintenance records may also become important.
If you were injured at Wild Waves Theme & Water Park or another amusement park in Washington, you may have legal options. Strong Law Accident & Injury Attorneys can review what happened, explain whether unsafe property conditions, negligent supervision, defective equipment, or inadequate warnings may have played a role, and help you understand the next steps in your Washington personal injury claim.
Our Tacoma personal injury lawyers handle serious injury cases involving amusement parks, unsafe premises, falls, water-related incidents, and preventable accidents throughout Washington. Call our Tacoma office at (206) 737-1421 or contact us online for a free consultation.