Carowinds is a amusement park primarily located in Charlotte, North Carolina. The park is owned and operated by Six Flags. Carowinds straddles the state line between North and South Carolina, adjacent to Interstate 77, with a portion of the park located in Fort Mill, South Carolina. The park has a sign telling guests where the state line lies.
The park was constructed at a cost of $70 million following a four-year planning period led by Charlotte businessman Earl Patterson Hall. Carowinds first opened to the public on March 31, 1973. The park features Carolina Harbor, a water park that is included with park admission. Annual events include the Halloween-themed SCarowinds and the Christmas-themed WinterFest.
In 1986, County Fair is renovated and Frenzoid, a 360-degree looping Viking ship, is added to the area. In 1987, Carowinds purchases Ocean Island. Vintage Jalopies is removed and the Panorama Vision theater is converted to an arcade. The following year, White Lightnin' is removed due to continuous maintenance downtime. The Balloon Race flat ride and WhiteWater Falls, a 45 foot tall water attraction is added. In 1989, Ocean Island is renamed to RipTide Reef and expanded to over 6 acres on the land previously occupied by White Lightnin'. Black Widow is removed the same year.
In 1995, Animation Station introduces an interactive experience for kids featuring The Power Station, a three-story climbing structure, and Kids' Studio, an outdoor amphitheater for children's shows. On June 30 of the same year, a skycoaster ride called Skycoaster opened in the Wayne's World section. was also added in 1996 in the same area. The park hosted 1.8 million visitors, making it one of the largest tourist attractions in the Carolinas. In 1997, to celebrate the park's 25th anniversary, RipTide Reef is expanded into WaterWorks, doubling its size to include 12 acres at a cost of $7.5 million. In 1998, ZOOM ZONE opens in Animation Station. The expansion adds three new attractions: Taxi Jam, Chopper Chase and Road Rally and increases the size of the area by 3.5 acres. The addition of in 1999 became the single-largest investment in the park's history at a cost of $10.5 million.
Although Cedar Fair continued to use the Paramount's Carowinds name through the remainder of the 2006 season, and had a ten-year option to continue using the Paramount pre-fix, it began to phase out the Paramount name in press releases, the park website, and signage within the park. All references to Paramount-owned movies were removed immediately, with the exception of Nickelodeon Central, as Cedar Fair did not own the rights to use Paramount property. Several rides were renamed and rethemed, including BORG Assimilator (now known as Nighthawk), Drop Zone: Stunt Tower (now known as Drop Tower), and Top Gun: The Jet Coaster (now known as Afterburn). WaterWorks was expanded by four additional acres and the name was changed to Boomerang Bay in 2006. The addition of a heated lagoon and a children's water slide were among the changes made to the existing water park.
In January 2007, a new logo was unveiled featuring the trademark Cedar Fair flag on the letter I in the Carowinds name, removing Paramount altogether. The Carolina Skytower was repainted to feature the colors of the American flag. In 2008, a second, larger wave pool was added to Boomerang Bay due to increased popularity. Yo-Yo, a flat ride from Carowinds' former sister park Geauga Lake, was also added to the park. The Nickelodeon Flying Super Saturator is closed and removed. The following year, Carolina Cobra was also relocated from Geauga Lake in the spot formerly home to the Flying Super Saturator and includes new trains. Multiple pathways were repaved and the landscaping around the park was also improved. Nighthawk is repainted from black and green to yellow and blue. It is announced that the Powder Keg Log Flume located near the front of the park would be removed for future development.
In 2015, Fury 325, the fifth-tallest roller coaster in the world, opened as another component of the park's previously announced "top-to-bottom" expansion program. A new front entrance replaced the original North Gate entrance of the park, the parking toll booths were replaced and expanded, and the parking lot was re-configured to accommodate the new entry plaza. Thunder Road is closed and demolished to make way for future development. In 2016, Boomerang Bay was re-themed and expanded into Carolina Harbor, removing the Australian theme. The expansion included a new six-slide complex, a new wave pool located on land formerly home to Thunder Road, and several new splash areas for kids. The original wave pool is demolished. For the 2017 season, the expansion of the County Fair area saw the addition of four new rides: Electro-Spin (a Mondial top scan), Zephyr (Zierer Wave Swinger), Rock N Roller (Mack Rides Music Express), and Do-Si-Do (HUSS Troika). Carolina Cobra was re-themed and renamed "The Flying Cobras", with a new blue and white color scheme. The park also announced that the Wings restaurant would be expanded. WinterFest, a Christmas event in November and December that previously operated in 2005, was also reintroduced.
In 2018, Planet Snoopy was expanded and converted into Camp Snoopy with the addition of six new children's attractions. The following year, Copperhead Strike, a double-launched roller coaster manufactured by Mack Rides, was opened in the all-new seven-acre Blue Ridge Junction area of the park and became the park's 14th roller coaster. Blue Ridge Junction was constructed in the area formerly occupied by WhiteWater Falls, Sand Dune Lagoon and Thunder Road's former station. A 130-room SpringHill Suites by Marriott, Carowinds' first on-site hotel, opened near the park's toll booths. Blue Ridge Country Kitchen opens in Blue Ridge Junction.
In July 2022, Carowinds announced the closures of Plants vs. Zombies 3Z Arena, Yo-Yo, and Southern Star attractions. As part of the new Aeronautica Landing area of the park, Air Racers, The Airwalker, Gear Spin, Gyro Force, Hover and Dodge, and Wind Star were announced as their replacements for the 2023 season. Carowinds began year-round operation in 2023, including limited park operation on weekends in January and February and Flights & Bites, a seasonal offering in Harmony Hall. The park also celebrated their 50th anniversary with limited time entertainment offerings, unique food and beverage, and vintage merchandise. In accordance with their 50th anniversary milestone, Carowinds announced its new Aeronautica Landing area would open in April 2023. Aeronautica Landing, the centerpiece of Carowinds' 50th anniversary celebration, pays tribute to the Carolinas' spirit of invention and the history of flight. The new area opened on April 7. Year-round operations were discontinued at the end of the season.
On July 1, 2024, a merger of equals between Cedar Fair and Six Flags was completed, creating Six Flags Entertainment Corporation. As part of the merger, a new corporate headquarters was established in Charlotte, North Carolina, relocating Cedar Fair operations from Sandusky, Ohio, and legacy Six Flags operations from Arlington, Texas. Charlotte previously served as the headquarters of Paramount Parks, prior to its acquisition by Cedar Fair.
Air Racers | 2023 | Zamperla | A plane-themed air racer ride with six arms that invert while the ride spins around an axis. |
Gear Spin | 2023 | Zamperla | A NebulaZ ride that consists of four pendulums attached to the sides of a central rotating tower. The pendulums intertwine as they rotate, creating regular near-misses. At either end of each pendulum are gondolas that seat four riders in two rows back-to-back. The gondolas always remain upright. |
Gyro Force | 2023 | Chance Rides | A trabant ride consisting of a giant wheel which tilts at a steep angle that fluctuates in a wavelike manner and spins at various speeds. Opened on June 16, 2023. |
Hover and Dodge | 1979/2023 | Majestic Rides | A classic bumper cars attraction. Formerly known as Autodrome (1979–1981), PT Bumper's Dodgem (1982–?), Dodg'ems (?-2022). New ride vehicles and LED lighting installed in 2023. |
Airwalker | 2023 | Zamperla | A Disk'O ride that spins around a central axis while traveling back and forth on a half-pipe track. |
Wind Star | 2023 | Zamperla | A WindstarZ ride that spins around a central axis, similar to Mountain Gliders (see below). Seats are fitted with glider wings, which riders can position to control the height at which they travel. Opened on June 16, 2023. |
Copperhead Strike | 2019 | Mack Rides | The first double-launch coaster in the Carolinas, with five inversions. It was built in a themed 7-acre area as part of the park's largest investment in its history. |
Mountain Gliders | 2005 | Bisch-Rocco | A Flying Scooters ride where the suspended passenger tubs would spin around a vertical axis. It previously was located in Planet Snoopy as Woodstock Gliders, and Danny Phantom's Phantom Flyers when the area was known as Nickelodeon Central. It was in storage during 2018 for Camp Snoopy expansion; in late 2018, the park announced the return of these as Mountain Gliders. They were originally built in 1940 for the Coney Island Amusement Park in Cincinnati, before being moved to Kings Island (as Flying Scooters and Flying Eagles) where they operated from 1972 to 2004. |
Beagle Scout Acres | 2018 | Miracle Recreation Equipment Company | A children's play area featuring multiple interactive elements spanning . It opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Camp Bus | 2018 | Zamperla | A bus-themed Crazy Bus mini flying carpet ride featuring Peanuts characters. It opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Charlie Brown’s River Raft Blast | 2025 | Mack Rides | A River Battle interactive boat ride. |
Charlie Brown's Wind Up | 1973 | Zamperla | A miniature swing ride formerly known as Top Cat's Swing Time & Backyardigans Swing-Along. |
Flying Ace Balloon Race | 1987 | Zamperla | A Balloon Race ride. Formerly known as Boo Boo's Balloon Race, Boots' Balloon Race & Peter Potamus' Magic Flying Balloons. |
Kite Eating Tree | 2018 | Zamperla | A Jumpin' Star mini drop tower for kids that gently drops riders . It opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Peanuts Pirates | 2005 | Mack Rides | A Seesturmbahn (Sea Storm Ride) with rotating pirate ships themed to Peanuts. It was relocated from sister park Canada's Wonderland where it was once known as The Great Whale of China. It was formerly known as Flying Dutchman's Revenge. |
Peanuts Trailblazers | 2018 | Zamperla | A mini whip ride that opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Pig Pen's Mud Buggies | 2018 | Zamperla | A jump around ride that opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Snoopy vs. Red Baron | 1973 | Chance Rides | A small plane ride themed to Snoopy. It was formerly known as Dastardly and Muttley In Their Flying Machines & Tommy's Take-Off. |
Snoopy's Racing Railway | 2025 | Art Engineering | A family multi-launch coaster. |
Wilderness Run | 1998 | E&F Miler Industries | A junior-sized roller coaster ride. It was formerly known as Taxi Jam (1998–2004), Hey Arnold Taxi Chase (2005–2009) & Lucy's Crabbie Cabbie (2009–2017). |
Woodstock Express | 1975 | Philadelphia Toboggan Company | A junior wooden roller coaster. Formerly known as Scooby Doo, Scooby Doo's Ghoster Coaster & Fairly Odd Coaster (2005–2009). |
Woodstock Whirlybirds | 2018 | Zamperla | A Woodstock-themed mini teacup ride that opened in 2018 as one of six new Camp Snoopy attractions. |
Carolina Cyclone | 1980 | Arrow Dynamics | A steel roller coaster featuring two vertical loops and two corkscrews. It was the first roller coaster to feature four inversions. |
Carolina Goldrusher | 1973 | Arrow Dynamics | A steel mine train roller coaster. It was the first roller coaster at Carowinds and is only one of three original rides still operating. It is also the first roller coaster to cross state lines (North Carolina & South Carolina). |
Ricochet | 2002 | Mack Rides | A wild mouse roller coaster with intense turns and drops. |
SlingShot | 2015 | Funtime | A reverse bungee ride that catapults riders nearly into the air at speeds up to . SlingShot is an additional charge attraction. |
The Grand Carousel | 1979 | Philadelphia Toboggan Company | An antique carousel. Originally located in Planet Snoopy (now known as Camp Snoopy) as Character Carousel (2010–2017). The Grand Carousel was first built at the Mesker Park Zoo and Botanic Garden in Evansville, Indiana and relocated to Carowinds in 1979. |
Vortex | 1992 | Bolliger & Mabillard | The Carolinas' first stand-up roller coaster. |
Do-Si-Do | 2017 | HUSS | A Troika ride which sends guests flying through the air and gliding up, down and around as three giant arms rotate riders in different directions – all while speed and elevation increase. It opened as part of the new County Fair area in 2017. |
Electro Spin | 2017 | Mondial | A Top Scan ride which sends riders through a freely rotating orbit through the air on its floorless gondolas. It opened as part of the new County Fair area in 2017. |
Rock 'N' Roller | 2017 | Mack Rides | A Musik Express ride that plays rock and roll as guests spin around and around. It opened as part of the new County Fair area in 2017. |
The Flying Cobras | 2009 | Vekoma | A Boomerang roller coaster. The train is pulled up the lift hill backward and then released down the hill forward into a cobra roll and vertical loop before repeating the journey in reverse. It was relocated from Geauga Lake where it was known as Mind Eraser (1996–2003) & Head Spin (2003–2007). Formerly known as Carolina Cobra (2009–2016). |
Zephyr | 2017 | Zierer | A Swing ride ride that suspends guests as the ride rotates in a circular, wavelike motion. It opened as part of the new County Fair area in 2017. |
Afterburn | 1999 | Bolliger & Mabillard | An inverted roller coaster featuring six inversions. Formerly known as Top Gun: The Jet Coaster (1999–2007). |
Boo Blasters on Boo Hill | 2010 | Sally Corporation | An interactive dark ride where guests shoot at targets to collect points. The building was originally the Harmony Hall theater, which housed a variety of shows. It was previously known as Scooby-Doo's Haunted Mansion (2001–2009). Received a repainted exterior and was refurbished by Sally (including repaired laser guns and a modern target system utilizing Weigl technology) for the 2023 season. |
WindSeeker | 2012 | Mondial | A tower swinger ride that spins to music and a light show. It was the tallest ride ever built at Carowinds until the opening of Fury 325 in 2015. It is turned into a Christmas tree of lights during the holidays. |
Kaleidoscope | 1973 | Eli Bridge | A scrambler ride. Formerly known as Scrambler. Formerly located in Carousel Park across from The Grand Carousel (1973-2024). In 2025, it moved to Scream Weaver’s old plot. |
Fury 325 | 2015 | Bolliger & Mabillard | A giga coaster that is the tallest in the world to use a traditional chain lift hill. It reaches a maximum speed of up to , making it tied for the sixth fastest in the world alongside Steel Dragon 2000. In July 2023 the coaster was closed after patrons discovered a crack in a support pillar, and another crack was discovered during repairs. The repaired coaster re-opened later in the season. |
Hurler | 1994 | International Coasters, Inc | A wooden triple out and back roller coaster. Originally themed to Wayne's World when the park was owned by Paramount. In 2014, Great Coasters International refurbished Hurler's 180-degree turn, located immediately after the ride's first descent. In late 2023 the coaster was closed so Carowinds' in-house maintenance team could rebuild Hurler's back curve to enhance the ride experience. The ride opened back up in 2024. |
Carolina Skytower | 1973 | Intamin | A tall Gyro tower that gives guests a view of Carowinds and Charlotte. It was originally sponsored by and branded as the Eastern Airlines Skytower. Known as the North Pole during Winterfest. |
Kiddy Hawk | 2003 | Vekoma | A , suspended family coaster. It opened as Rugrats Runaway Reptar (2003–2009) with yellow track and green supports, then operated as Flying Ace Aerial Chase (2010–2017) with yellow track and orange supports. For its 15th anniversary in 2018, the coaster was renamed, painted blue track with beige supports, and themed to the Wright brothers' first flight trials at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. |
Xtreme SkyFlyer | 1995 | Skycoaster, Inc. | A skycoaster ride. Formerly known as Skycoaster and Xtreme SkyFlyer. This is an upcharge attraction, where guests pay an additional fee to ride. It was originally located on the site where Fury 325 is now, but was later relocated to an area near the Kiddy Hawk roller coaster. |
Thunder Striker | 2010 | Bolliger & Mabillard | A steel hypercoaster. The roller coaster travels up to . Formerly known as Intimidator (2010–2023). |
Styx performed there in 1975, NC's Charlie Daniels Band played there in '76, Jimmy Buffett performed there in '76, and B.B. King played there in '76. Johnny Cash played there in '78, The Beach Boys played in '78, and The Allman Brothers Band played there in '79. In 1980, the Paladium hosted Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers. Eddie Money played there in '84, INXS played there in '84, John Denver played there in '86, Robert Palmer in '88, Richard Marx in 1989, and The Glenn Frey Band with Joe Walsh played there in '93. Tears for Fears played there in 1990, and C + C Music Factory performed there in '91. In '91, Chapel Hill native James Taylor played there. Bon Jovi played to a sold-out crowd at the Paladium in 1993 during a stop on their I'll Sleep When I'm Dead Tour. Screaming Trees played there with Soul Asylum in '93. It had Virginia's Dave Matthews Band in '93, UK's Depeche Mode with Stabbing Westward in '94, Athens GA's B-52's in '94, Billy Ray Cyrus in '95, Blues Traveler in '96, Coolio in '96, UK's Duran Duran in 2000, Weird Al Yankovic in '00, Smash Mouth in '00, Sugar Ray in '00, and 311 in '04. Atlanta Christian rapper Lecrae performed there in 2014 (for Rock the Park), and Skillet played in 2015.
+ !Attraction !Year Opened !Year Closed !Manufacturer !Description | ||||
The Wild Thornberrys' River Adventure | 1973 | 2009 | Arrow Dynamics | Initially opening as the Powder Keg Log Flume, it was a log flume with double-barrel log vehicles and included a spillway drop. The size was around 1,636 feet (498.65 m) long and was located near the park entrance in Celebration Plaza. For the 2003 phase of the Nickelodeon Central area, the Powder Keg was rethemed to The Wild Thornberrys, an animated series. After its demolition, the hypercoaster, Thunder Striker, was built in the flume's place for the 2010 season. |
Thunder Road | 1976 | 2015 | Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters | A dual-tracked wooden roller coaster originally located in the current Aeronautica Landing section (former County Fair). Shares a similar track layout to The Racer at Kings Island and Racer 75 at Kings Dominion. It was demolished in favor of a water park expansion and rebranding of Boomerang Bay into Carolina Harbor for the 2016 season. Some of the coaster's track pieces and trains were donated by Cedar Fair to both The Racer and Racer 75 after Thunder Road's closure. Replaced by Copperhead Strike in 2019. |
White Lightnin' | 1977 | 1988 | Anton Schwarzkopf | A weight drop-launched shuttle roller coaster that was located in Country Crossroads (current County Fair). Notable for being the only Schwarzkopf roller coaster ever installed in Carowinds, as well as being one of four shuttle loopers with a weight drop launch. It has been relocated to Gold Reef City in South Africa around 1988, currently operating as Golden Loop. |
Scream Weaver | 1979 | 2024 | Anton Schwarzkopf | An Enterprise ride. It was originally located in the original County Fair area (now known as Aeronautica Landing), where it was known as Meteorite. The ride was renamed after the song Dream Weaver, a song featured in the film Wayne's World in 1994. Replaced by a relocated Scrambler in 2025. |
Whirling Dervish | 1979 | 2000 | Zierer | A Swing ride, circular, wavelike-motioned swing ride that operated in the current Aeronautica Landing section (former County Fair). Was relocated to California's Great America and renamed "Celebration Swings" in 2001. |
The Wild Bull | 1979 | 1998 | Anton Schwarzkopf | A Bayern Kurve, circular, roller coaster-like amusement ride themed to a Bullfighting. Originally located in the former County Fair section of the park (currently Aeronautica Landing), the ride closed in 1998 to make way for Afterburn in 1999. |
The Honey Bear Bunch Family Reunion | 1980 | 1981 | Aaron Fechter | Electronically controlled, animated animatronic stage show featuring a cast of singing and joke-telling bears, similar to the Country Bear Jamboree. Sponsored by General Mills, this was a custom-modified version of the commonly found "Hard Luck Bears" animatronic show, which itself is a predecessor of the popular Rock-afire Explosion animatronic band. Formerly located within the Harmony Hall theater (the building now occupied by Boo Blasters on Boo Hill), the animated figures were later repurposed for a live stage production of Phantom of the Opry in 1982. The current whereabouts and fate of the show are unknown. |
Rip Roarin' Rapids | 1982 | 2018 | Intamin | A river rapids ride that simulated Rafting, 6-seater circular rafts traversed through a long river channel containing turbulent turns and sporadic opportunities for passengers to get soaked. Formerly located within Celebration Plaza, the ride was quietly closed after the 2018 season and demolished in 2025. |
WhiteWater Falls | 1988 | 2017 | Hopkins Rides | Replacing the Hillbilly Jalopies in Country Crossroads (currently Blue Ridge Junction), this flume-styled Shoot the Chute ride had a simple, rounded layout and a height of around 50 feet. The Copperhead Strike double-launch coaster has been built upon and currently resides in the space formerly occupied by WhiteWater Falls. |
Snoopy's GR8 SK8 | 1990 | 2012 | Chance Rides | A prototype Falling Star flat-ride model that opened as Gauntlet in 1990. It was later rethemed to Rocket Power Airtime in 2005 as part of the Nickelodeon Central expansion. The ride was finally rethemed to Snoopy's GR8 SK8 in 2010 when the area was transformed into Planet Snoopy. The location space has been occupied by the Harmony Hall food court since its 2013 inception. |
Drop Tower | 1996 | 2024 | Intamin | A drop tower ride with a height of and a drop of . It was originally named Drop Zone: Stunt Tower (1996–2007). |
Nickelodeon Flying Super Saturator | 2000 | 2008 | Setpoint USA | Formerly located adjacent to Carolina Harbor and County Fair, this suspended family roller coaster-water ride hybrid was themed after the Nickelodeon television channel and its "Nicktoons" brand of animated programs. Riders were able to dump 4-gallon payloads of water on park guests who walked underneath the coaster's track. The ride also featured water curtains, geysers and numerous water cannons that could be aimed by park guests at passing riders on the coaster. The Flying Cobras has occupied the former ride's location since 2009. |
Nighthawk | 2004 | 2024 | Vekoma | A flying Dutchman roller coaster. The coaster operated as Stealth at California's Great America before being installed at Carowinds. When moved to Carowinds, it was known as Borg Assimilator (2004–2007) and was themed after the Borg from the television show . The theming was removed when Cedar Fair acquired the park, and the ride was renamed Nighthawk. |
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