Urban Air Trampoline Park operates on Gunbarrel Road and functions as a membership-based facility aimed at families seeking structured indoor recreation during months when outdoor play is limited. This guide covers what Urban Air delivers, how its pricing and programming compare to other enclosed jump facilities in the Chattanooga area, and whether membership or drop-in rates make sense for different user patterns.
Urban Air Chattanooga occupies roughly 15,000 square feet and centers on a grid of interconnected trampolines, foam pits, dodgeball courts, and climbing walls. The facility enforces age-and-weight segregation during certain hours: dedicated toddler times typically run mornings on weekdays, while older kids and teens use the main floor during afternoon and evening slots. A separate ninja warrior course adds a secondary draw beyond basic jumping.
Admission pricing follows the standard model for these venues. Drop-in rates run approximately $15 to $18 per child for one hour of jump time, depending on day and time of day. Peak hours (weekends and after school) cost more than midday weekday sessions. A single month of unlimited access runs around $80 to $100 per child, though Urban Air periodically reduces this for new members. Annual memberships exist but are rarely cheaper than committing monthly for nine months of the year.
The facility requires socks, which most locations sell on-site for $3 to $5 if you forget. Children under age 6 typically need an adult to supervise, and that adult usually enters for free, though some facilities charge. Verify this detail when booking, as policies vary.
The decision between membership and per-visit pricing depends on your actual usage, not abstract value. If your child attends twice per month or fewer, drop-in rates favor you. At four or more visits monthly, membership becomes cheaper. Most families in Chattanooga with young children who discover they enjoy trampolines land at the 2.5-visit-per-month sweet spot, making the membership breakeven real but not inevitable.
Chattanooga's climate affects this math differently than other regions. The city experiences roughly 120 days of rain annually, concentrated in winter and spring. That concentration makes enclosed jump facilities seasonally valuable: January through April, when outdoor sports are disrupted, drives membership uptake. By June, when outdoor camps and pools dominate children's schedules, Urban Air membership usage typically drops. Consider this seasonal pattern before committing to a year-long plan.
Three primary alternatives exist within Chattanooga's Brainerd and East Brainerd corridors.
Urban Air (Gunbarrel Road) remains the largest single facility and the only one specifically branded as a trampoline-focused park. Its ninja warrior course and age-segregated jump times appeal to families managing multiple-age siblings. Membership rates and per-visit pricing align with national chains.
Altitude Trampoline Park (formerly operated in the North Shore area but verify current status, as this location has changed hands) historically offered similar pricing but emphasized freestyle jumping over structured programming. If still operating, it differs mainly in atmosphere: less corporate theming, smaller footprint, and a reputation for attracting older kids and teenagers rather than toddlers and young elementary students. Pricing, when available, undercuts Urban Air slightly, though hours and membership terms may be more restrictive.
Skyzone, the national franchise, opened a location in the Ooltewah area (outside Chattanooga proper but within a 20-minute drive) and competes directly with Urban Air on price and amenities. Skyzone emphasizes dodgeball leagues and competitive events alongside open jump time, making it more appealing to kids seeking structured sports rather than casual jumping. Membership pricing mirrors Urban Air's range.
Drop-in comparisons: Skyzone in Ooltewah charges roughly $16 to $22 per hour, slightly higher than Urban Air, but runs periodic unlimited-week promotions that Urban Air does not. If you visit sporadically, Skyzone's promotional windows occasionally offer better value for single visits.
Urban Air hosts birthday parties, which is where many venues in this category generate revenue. Party packages start around $200 and include jump time, a party room, and basic food service. This is a commodity offering with minimal differentiation; shop across the three parks if throwing a party, as room size and food quality vary.
Open jump sessions dominate the schedule. Weekday mornings typically run 9 a.m. to noon, targeting parents with young children and preschools. After-school hours (3 to 6 p.m.) serve elementary-school kids. Evenings and weekends accommodate older children and family sessions. Urban Air publishes these on its website, but actual availability changes seasonally; confirm before visiting.
Chattanooga's broader arts and entertainment ecosystem does not heavily integrate trampoline parks into the city's cultural identity. Unlike Nashville, which has positioned jump facilities as part of its active-lifestyle brand, or Knoxville, where multiple parks anchor family entertainment districts, Chattanooga treats them as convenient bad-weather alternatives rather than destinations. This means less foot traffic from tourists and fewer special events designed to attract non-member visitors.
Reserve Urban Air for regular use only if your child visits at least three to four times monthly during winter months (November through April). Single visits and sporadic weekend trips cost less as drop-ins. If you have children spanning ages 2 to 12, the age-segregated toddler times make Urban Air more manageable than smaller competitors; if your child is school-age exclusively, Skyzone's Ooltewah location may offer comparable value with less crowding. Verify current hours and pricing before booking, as these facilities adjust seasonally, and request information on whether supervising adults enter free.
