REVIEW · PARIS
Tree Top Adventure in Forest of Meudon
Book on Viator →Operated by AccroCamp · Bookable on Viator
Tree-level thrills in the Forest of Meudon.
This tree top adventure (AccroCamp) is set in a real green patch of the Paris area, where you move through multiple obstacle styles like zip lines, rope bridges, and climbing-wall sections. You get the basics first—safety instructions, equipment, and how the system works—then you’re sent onto the courses for that unplugged, outdoorsy adrenaline hit. I especially like that the park uses a continuous lifeline system, and that the courses are described as well organized and secure. One drawback to weigh: your actual start time can swing a bit, so show up early and be ready for a short wait.
For a couple of hours, you’re basically trading screens for tree work: harness on, lanyard managed, then jump, crawl, and swing your way through a route plan with steps that build from easier practice to more challenging elements. I also love the “right dose” of variety—there are multiple course styles and difficulty levels, not just one loop—so it feels like you can tailor the experience to your energy and comfort. The consideration here is simple: staff quality and tone can vary, and a few guests reported delays or rushed handling, so if you’re going on a tight schedule (or a birthday), plan extra buffer time.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go
- Forest of Meudon Tree Top Adventure: What You’re Really Signing Up For
- Getting There Near Paris (and Why Arrival Time Matters)
- The Two-Hour Flow: Training, Test Skills, Then Course Time
- Step 1: Basics and safety instructions
- Step 2: Equipment and harness fitting
- Step 3: Quick-start course elements
- Step 4: Full course runs
- Course Variety: Zip Lines, Rope Bridges, and the Stuff You’ll Actually Remember
- Staff, Safety, and the Human Side of the Experience
- Price and Value: Is It Worth $32.41 for Two Hours?
- Who This Fits Best (Kids, Teens, and Adults Who Like Heights)
- Practical Tips That Make the Day Smoother
- Should You Book AccroCamp in the Forest of Meudon?
- FAQ
- How long is the Tree Top Adventure in the Forest of Meudon?
- What’s included in the price?
- Where do I meet for the activity?
- Is it easy to reach without a car?
- Do I need good weather?
- Can I get a full refund if plans change?
Key Things I’d Watch Before You Go

- Continuous lifeline system: you’re secured with an always-on safety approach, not a one-time hookup.
- Lots of element types: expect flea jumps, stirrups, rope bridges, climbing walls, zip lines, Tarzan liana, and quick jumps.
- Two-hour experience flow: training + equipment time, then enough course action to feel like more than a quick “demo.”
- Multiple course levels via the right option: a pass for all courses is described as covering several colors, including a blue route with seven zip lines.
- Small groups (max 10): fewer people on the platform can mean less chaos during the briefing and equipment time.
- Bring your own water: at least one review called out a pricey small bottle, so packing a reusable bottle is smart.
Forest of Meudon Tree Top Adventure: What You’re Really Signing Up For

This is an accrobranche style park—tree climbing courses with harnesses and industrial-grade safety gear—run at AccroCamp in the Forêt de Meudon / Chaville area. The appeal is that you don’t just “look at” nature from a path. You’re in it. You’re moving above the forest floor on platforms, ropes, and cables, like a personal obstacle course in the canopy.
The experience is built around two needs: safety and fun. You’ll spend around two hours total, including fundamentals and safety instructions, then get onto the courses. The park highlights that routes are “totally secured” using a continuous lifeline system. Translation: you’re not relying on a single moment of connection. That matters because it reduces the mental load while you’re learning. You can focus on breathing, balance, and timing instead of constant fear-wrestling.
Two things are consistently appealing from the way people talk about it. First, the overall setup is described as pleasant and well organized, with an emphasis on security. Second, the courses include a spread of element types—so you’re not stuck doing the same action over and over.
Still, there are real-world caveats. A few reports describe impersonal or even harsh staff interactions, and some mention delays—equipment taking longer than expected or sessions starting later. That doesn’t automatically ruin the experience for everyone, but it’s worth planning around. This is a park activity, so keep your schedule flexible.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Paris.
Getting There Near Paris (and Why Arrival Time Matters)

Your start point is AccroCamp Forêt de Meudon | Accrobranche 92, at Parc Forestier de la Mare Adam, Rte des Huit Bouteilles, 92370 Chaville, France. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
The park is described as near public transportation, which is great if you’re staying in Paris without a car. It’s also close enough that people mention it being “easy to access near the station.” That’s the good news: you can make it a half-day plan without spending your whole day in transit.
The practical move: plan to arrive earlier than you think you need. Even when your time slot is scheduled, you may wait for the group cycle to finish—one review said they arrived early, waited for a long stretch, and didn’t start courses until close to the next hour. Another mentioned a 30-minute wait to get equipped after arriving with a later group. None of this is rare in parks like this; it’s scheduling reality. If you’re going with kids, or you’re trying to fit this around dinner plans, arriving early is the easiest way to protect your mood.
Also note: your ticket is mobile, so you’ll want your phone charged and ready to show the confirmation.
The Two-Hour Flow: Training, Test Skills, Then Course Time
This isn’t a “walk in and climb” situation. The park builds you toward the courses in a logical order.
Step 1: Basics and safety instructions
You’ll get the fundamentals and safety instructions first. Expect to learn how the system works, how to move between elements, and what staff expect from you while you’re on the platform.
The key safety detail the park promotes is the continuous lifeline system. That should influence how you approach the day: listen carefully during the briefing, because the system only feels effortless when you understand the little rules.
Step 2: Equipment and harness fitting
You’re included with a harness. The team fits you before you start the courses. This is usually quick, but in some situations people reported waiting for the equipment process when they arrived after another group. If you’re with kids, the harness part can set the tone for the entire visit—so stay calm and give yourself margin.
Step 3: Quick-start course elements
The experience is designed to move from training to action fast. Several course elements are listed as part of the adventure, including zip lines, rope bridges, Tarzan liana, quick jump, and others like stirrups and flea jumps.
Some reviews also mention a mini test course that helps you understand how the safety elements operate before jumping into the bigger sections. Even if you’re not a beginner, this kind of “practice first” moment can boost confidence.
Step 4: Full course runs
Then comes the fun part: you work through obstacle sections on elevated routes. People mention that the courses are secure and that the layout feels organized enough that you can keep moving without feeling lost. If you choose a package that covers multiple routes, you get more variety in one session.
Course Variety: Zip Lines, Rope Bridges, and the Stuff You’ll Actually Remember
The park’s course list reads like a highlights reel, and the way it’s described suggests the obstacles aren’t just for show. Here are the element types you should expect:
- Zip lines: fast motion across a gap. Great for adrenaline, and often a favorite.
- Rope bridges: a balance challenge rather than a speed challenge.
- Climbing walls: more controlled “effort climbing” segments.
- Tarzan liana and jumps: swinging elements that feel wild because you’re high up.
- Quick jump, flea jumps, stirrups: short, rhythmic obstacles that keep you moving.
One review specifically points out that taking a pass for all courses includes routes like three blues and two reds, and that one blue course includes seven zip lines. That matters because “tree top adventure” can sometimes feel repetitive if it’s only one loop. If you’re paying for multiple routes in a single go, you’re buying time to try different styles—less boredom, more real variety.
You may also notice the park has an orientation or “course of orientation” element mentioned as genuinely fun. Even if it isn’t the main draw, it’s an extra layer beyond pure obstacle hopping.
Staff, Safety, and the Human Side of the Experience
This is the biggest “read the room” part. The safety systems and course design can be excellent, but how a staff team communicates affects how enjoyable the day feels.
The positive theme: staff are described as listening, smiling, patient, and pedagogical, especially with children. People also praise seriousness about safety and professionalism. That’s what you want at a harness-and-rope park. When instructors explain clearly, you move confidently.
The negative theme: some guests describe unpleasant team behavior, harsh tone, and complaints that didn’t seem to get a helpful response. A couple reviews mention situations where the group waited longer than expected before starting, or where the site situation didn’t match expectations on timing.
So what should you do with that info? Two practical tips:
- Be early and be ready to wait. If you’re calm, you’ll handle any delay better.
- Ask one clear question during the briefing if anything feels unclear. If a staff member rushes, your best friend is respectful repetition: tell them you want to understand the steps before you start.
Safety-wise, the park’s promoted lifeline setup is the core. Communication quality can vary, but your biggest control lever is your own preparation and timing.
Price and Value: Is It Worth $32.41 for Two Hours?

At $32.41 per person, this isn’t an expensive Paris-area activity—especially for a full-on adrenaline format. The value comes down to how much course time you actually get and what you’re included with.
You’re guaranteed at least a harness and the two-hour structure: safety briefing, equipment, then course time. That alone can make it feel like good value compared with shorter attractions. The experience is also built for families and groups, so you get a shared “we did it” memory, not just a photo stop.
Where price becomes a question is how courses are managed and what you buy with your session. One review calls out that a pass for all courses can unlock multiple route colors and a route with seven zip lines. If your plan is to maximize variety, the way you select or pay for course access likely affects your “value per minute.”
There’s also the reality cost multiplier: if you forget water, one review noted that a small bottle was priced highly. Bring your own and you keep the budget intact.
Bottom line: at this price point, it’s usually good value, as long as you show up with timing flexibility and you’re prepared to enjoy more than just one quick course.
Who This Fits Best (Kids, Teens, and Adults Who Like Heights)
You’ll enjoy this most if you want active outdoor time and don’t need everything to be perfectly chill.
This works well for:
- Families with kids: multiple reviews mention children enjoying different course colors, including a violet route suited for younger kids (around ages 3–4 mentioned).
- Teens and adrenaline-seekers: the element list is heavy on action—zip lines, rope bridges, and jumps.
- Adults who want a “tree-based gym class” experience: you’ll get movement, balance, and a serious confidence boost from completing sections while harnessed.
If you’re someone who hates uncertainty, this might test you slightly at first because ropes, height, and course navigation come with a learning curve. But that’s exactly why the initial safety instruction and any mini test matter.
Practical Tips That Make the Day Smoother

A few small moves can improve your experience a lot:
- Arrive early. Equipment and start times can slip when another group is ahead of you.
- Bring your own water bottle. One review criticized the price of a small bottle, and carrying water is an easy fix.
- Listen carefully at the safety briefing. The continuous lifeline setup works best when you follow the rules the first time.
- Plan for a real outdoors break from the city. You’re in a forest setting where the goal is movement, not sightseeing.
Should You Book AccroCamp in the Forest of Meudon?
I’d book it if you want an outdoors adrenaline activity close to Paris, with proper safety systems and enough course variety to make the two hours feel worthwhile. The biggest positives for me are the secure setup (continuous lifeline system) and the blend of obstacles that includes big ticket items like zip lines and rope bridges.
I wouldn’t book it if your schedule is tight to the minute, or if you’re going specifically for a calm, perfectly managed experience with zero waiting. The park runs on group cycles, and the reports about start delays and inconsistent staff tone mean you should add a buffer.
If you’re traveling with kids, go in with the right mindset: you’re there for a challenge. With that, it can turn into one of those memorable “we did something different” half-days.
FAQ
How long is the Tree Top Adventure in the Forest of Meudon?
The activity lasts about 2 hours.
What’s included in the price?
You get a harness included.
Where do I meet for the activity?
You start at AccroCamp Forêt de Meudon | Accrobranche 92 in Parc Forestier de la Mare Adam, Rte des Huit Bouteilles, 92370 Chaville, France. The experience ends back at the same meeting point.
Is it easy to reach without a car?
The meeting point is described as near public transportation.
Do I need good weather?
Yes. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Can I get a full refund if plans change?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid isn’t refunded.
























