Burleson doesn't have a dedicated city skate park yet, but you're sitting in a sweet spot between Fort Worth, Arlington, and Mansfield β and all three have free public skate spots worth knowing about. Most of the picks on this list are 12β18 miles out, which is a totally reasonable drive for a Sunday afternoon session. We've pulled together the six closest verified options so you're not guessing. Check the Burleson events page for more family-friendly things to do this week.
Top-Rated Skate Parks Near Burleson
1. Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot (Mansfield)
Leaving Burleson, you're looking at about 18 min without traffic, close enough that the kids won't gripe about the car ride.
Location: 1530 N Walnut Creek Drive, Mansfield, TX 76063
The closest skate option to Burleson and a genuinely nice one β a small but well-kept concrete plaza inside a 13-acre Mansfield park. Clayton W. Chandler Park's skate spot is street-skating-style with clean concrete, rails, and street obstacles suited for beginners and intermediate riders. What makes this one especially good for families is everything surrounding it: a splash pad, a fishing pond, and multiple playgrounds, so non-skating kids and younger siblings have plenty to do while the skater in your family gets their session in.
Good to know: street obstacles, clean concrete, smooth surface, rails, beginner-friendly, moderate riders.
Parent tip: Combine the skate session with the splash pad on a hot day β it's the same park and free. See Mansfield events for what else is happening nearby.
Want to check if the fountains are running today? See live maintenance updates on the official Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot portal.
2. Chisholm Trail Skate Park (Fort Worth)
For a family coming from Burleson, the drive clocks in at about 22 min without traffic, an easy add-on if you're already headed toward Fort Worth.
Location: 4301 McPherson Blvd, Fort Worth, TX 76103
If your kid is ready for serious terrain, Chisholm Trail is absolutely worth the 15-mile drive from Burleson. Fort Worth's largest public skate park at 28,100 square feet, it has a full range of pool depths β 6, 7, and 9 feet β alongside plaza terrain and multiple trick runs. The covered pavilion and benches give parents a comfortable spot to hang out. It's the kind of destination skate park where you stay for hours rather than ducking out after 30 minutes.
Good to know: pool coping, plaza terrain, multiple trick runs, covered pavilion, benches.
Parent tip: The parking lot fills up on weekend afternoons β arrive before noon or plan for a 10-minute walk from the community center lot next door.
Hours and amenities shift with the season β confirm today's on the Chisholm Trail Skate Park city page.
3. Webb Community Skate Park (Arlington)
For a family coming from Burleson, the drive clocks in at about 22 min without traffic, an easy add-on if you're already headed toward Arlington.
Location: 1100 Mansfield Webb Rd, Arlington, TX 76002
Full amenities, night lights, and no time-of-day restrictions. Webb's LED-lit plazas (manual pads, quarter pipes, ledges) run constantly. Restrooms and water fountain solve the comfort question. Fourteen miles from Burleson with 24/7 access means your family's skating schedule, not the Texas calendar, dictates sessions.
Good to know: plaza lanes, ledge focused, manual pad, quarter pipe, transition to bank, well lit.
Parent tip: The 24-hour access is a real advantage in summer β a 7pm session here after dinner beats fighting the midday heat.
Planning a specific day? Check the Webb Community Skate Park status page for closures first.
4. Oakland Lake Skate Park (Fort Worth)
A committed about 23 min drive from Burleson, so treat it as a half-day destination, not a quick stop.
Location: 1645 Lake Shore Drive, Fort Worth, TX 76103
Beginner-friendly skate spot inside a real park campus. Simple ramps and railings keep the pressure off new skaters. The lake, playground, and open green mean the whole family finds a reason to stay. East Fort Worth location is a comfortable distance from Burleson, but not a commitment like a destination park.
Good to know: ramps, railings, beginner-friendly.
Parent tip: null
5. Fire Station Skate Plaza (Fort Worth)
A committed about 24 min drive from Burleson, so treat it as a half-day destination, not a quick stop.
Location: 1000 S Riverside Dr, Fort Worth, TX 76104
Fort Worth's newest (April 2023) and most beginner-family-friendlyβ18,000 sq ft, open until 10 p.m. The Fire Station Skate Plaza centers on a fun pump track with a circular ribbon design, smooth concrete plaza, and skateable pathways. Bikes, scooters, and inline skates are explicitly welcomeβthe whole family rolls regardless of wheels. LED lighting runs until 10 p.m., extending summer sessions past the worst heat.
Good to know: pump track, plaza, smooth concrete, skateable pathways, bikes welcome, scooters welcome.
Parent tip: The pump track is the star attraction for younger kids β even a 5-year-old on a scooter can have a blast looping it. Check Fort Worth events for more to do if you're making the drive up.
6. Vandergriff Skate Park (Arlington)
A proper outing from Burleson at 16.3 miles, but the scale here is hard to match closer to Burleson.
Location: 2800 S Center St, Arlington, TX 76014
Vandergriff Skate Park is a solid mid-sized option inside one of South Arlington's larger park complexes. The park has features for different skill levels, so it's useful whether your kid is just starting out or has been skating for a couple of years. The broader Vandergriff Park has plenty of additional amenities for the rest of the family. At 16 miles from Burleson it's one of the farther options on this list, but if you're heading into the Arlington area for other reasons it's worth combining into the trip.
Parent tip: null
How we picked these
Since there's no skate park in Burleson proper, we focused on the closest free public options within about 20 miles β verified open, maintained, and welcoming to all skill levels. We noted key features and amenities so you can match the right park to where your kid is in their skating journey. Distance is measured from central Burleson.Planning your visit
Plan around the drive β a 15-mile trip on a summer afternoon can mean arriving at a park baking in direct sun. Early morning or evening sessions are much more comfortable, especially at parks without shade. Pack extra water and snacks since not every park has fountains nearby. Helmets and pads are a must for any kid trying new terrain. For more kids' events near Burleson this week, see the Burleson events page.For more kids' events near Burleson this week, see the Burleson events page.
Burleson Skate Park Checklist
- Helmet and wrist guards every time: wrists take the worst of a first-year fall. Knee and elbow pads matter too, but wrist guards are the one piece new riders skip and regret.
- Closed-toe shoes with flat soles: flip-flops and running shoes slide off the board. Skate shoes or any flat sneaker grip the deck far better.
- Water and sunscreen: Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot and most Burleson-area skate parks are unshaded concrete that radiates heat by late morning. There's rarely a fountain on site, so bring your own bottle.
- Check the board before you go: snug trucks and fresh grip tape make a nervous beginner far steadier than a hand-me-down with worn bearings.
Beginner, Bowl & Street Skate Spots Near Burleson
- Beginner-friendly: Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot, Chisholm Trail Skate Park, Webb Community Skate Park and Oakland Lake Skate Park have a pump track, flat skate plaza, or mellow flow section where a first-timer can roll without dropping into anything steep.
- Bowls & transition: Chisholm Trail Skate Park and Webb Community Skate Park have bowls, pools, or vert for riders ready to carry speed through transition.
- Street course: Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot, Chisholm Trail Skate Park, Webb Community Skate Park and Oakland Lake Skate Park have ledges, rails, stairs, and manual pads for street-style skating.
- Lights for evening sessions: Webb Community Skate Park and Fire Station Skate Plaza have lights, so summer sessions can run past sunset once the concrete finally cools.
- Scooters & bikes OK: Fire Station Skate Plaza allow scooters and bikes too, not just skateboards. Confirm the posted rules before you go.
Skate Park Etiquette for New Riders
- Go at off-peak times to start: Chisholm Trail Skate Park and the other Burleson parks are quietest on weekday mornings. Fewer older riders means a beginner can take the ramps at their own pace without feeling in the way.
- Don't sit or stand in the bowl or on the ramps: that's where riders land and where collisions happen. Watch from the edge and step in only when it's your turn.
- Learn the flow before dropping in: riders take turns on a loose right-of-way. A minute of watching shows the pattern and saves a pile-up.
- Start small and low: flat ground and the smallest bank first. Confidence on the easy features comes faster than kids expect, and it's how every rider here started.
Burleson Skate Parks, Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best skate parks for kids near Burleson, TX?
Our 2026 guide picks 6 standout skate parks within about 20 miles of Burleson. The top picks include Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot, Chisholm Trail Skate Park and Webb Community Skate Park, each chosen for kid-friendly layout, parent reviews, and how well it holds up on a weekend visit.
Are skate parks near Burleson free?
Yes, every skate park in this guide is free to visit, with no admission fee or ticket required for Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot, Chisholm Trail Skate Park, Webb Community Skate Park or any of the other picks.
What is the closest skate park to Burleson?
Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot in Mansfield is the closest pick at about 11.8 miles from Burleson. It's the easiest one to fit into a weekday afternoon, short drive, low commitment, easy to leave early if the kids melt down.
Are skate parks near Burleson free, and do kids need helmets?
Almost every public skate park in the Burleson area is free to use, no membership or day pass. Helmets aren't always staff-enforced, but most cities post them as required for under-18 riders, and pads are smart for beginners. Lights and hours vary by park, so check the official page linked on each card before an evening session.
Which skate parks near Burleson are best for beginners?
Clayton W. Chandler Park Skate Spot, Chisholm Trail Skate Park, Webb Community Skate Park are the easiest starts, look for a pump track, a flat skate plaza, or a mellow flow bowl where a new rider can build confidence before dropping into anything steep. A helmet and pads make the first few visits far less scary. Check each card above for what each park has.