Skating Rinks in Arizona
10 rinks across 6 cities
Arizona has 10 skating rinks in our directory spread across 6 cities, offering both roller skating and ice skating despite the state's reputation for triple-digit summers. The rinks cluster around the Phoenix metro area and southern Arizona, with Glendale and Tucson each home to three facilities, and additional locations in Chandler, Mesa, Peoria, and Phoenix proper. The most-reviewed venue is Great Skate Glendale, which holds a 4.1-star rating across 2,243 reviews — a useful starting point if you want a well-established roller rink. Because Arizona's climate makes year-round outdoor skating impractical for much of the year, nearly every rink listed here operates indoors with climate control, which keeps ice surfaces stable and roller floors comfortable even when outside temperatures exceed 110°F in July and August.
Browse by City
Open
Skateland Chandler
Chandler, Arizona
Open
Arizona Sports Complex
Glendale, Arizona
Open
Great Skate Glendale
Glendale, Arizona
Open
USA Great Skate - Glendale
Glendale, Arizona
Open
USA Skateland
Mesa, Arizona
RollerPlex Entertainment
Peoria, Arizona
Rollero Family Roller
Phoenix, Arizona
Open
Outdoor Roller Rink
Tucson, Arizona
Open
Skate Country
Tucson, Arizona
Tucson Indoor Sports Center Roller
Tucson, Arizona
Planning a visit? Helpful guides
All guides →Adult Skate Night: What to Know Before You Go
Curious about adult skate night? Learn what to expect, when these sessions happen, who they're for, and how to make the most of your first adult skate session.
Are Skating Rinks Open Year-Round?
Are skating rinks open year round? It depends on the rink type and location. Learn which rinks stay open all year and how to find sessions near you any time.
Beginner's Guide to Ice Skating
Learn how to ice skate with this step-by-step beginner guide covering skate fit, balance, first strides, stopping, and staying safe on the ice.
Beginner's Guide to Roller Skating
Learn how to roller skate with this beginner-friendly guide covering gear, stance, basic moves, and safety tips to get you rolling with confidence.
Skating culture in Arizona is shaped almost entirely by the heat, which pushed the sport indoors decades ago and built a year-round scene around refrigerated rinks and climate-controlled roller floors. The Phoenix metro area, anchored by Phoenix, Glendale, Chandler, Mesa, and Peoria, supports the bulk of the state's skating activity, drawing on a large and growing population that has fueled steady demand for youth hockey, figure skating lessons, and recreational public skate sessions. Tucson, the state's second-largest city, supports its own skating community in the south. Seasonal outdoor ice setups appear each winter in downtown Phoenix and Scottsdale when temperatures finally drop, but permanent indoor rinks remain the backbone of skating in Arizona, operating consistently through the brutal summer months when they double as a welcome escape from the heat.
Most Arizona rinks open mid-afternoon on weekdays, typically between 3 and 4 p.m., with public skate sessions running into the evening. Weekends bring earlier start times — often 10 or 11 a.m. — and longer afternoon and evening sessions that can stretch past 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Admission for public skate generally runs $8 to $14 depending on the day and whether skate rental is included; ice rinks tend to charge slightly more than roller rinks. Family features are common: cushioned skating aids for young children, snack bars, arcade areas, and birthday party packages. Group lessons for figure skating, hockey, and basic roller skating are widely available, with most rinks running multi-week sessions through the cooler months when demand peaks.
Scroll down to browse the full list of skating rinks in Arizona, or use the search to filter by city if you already know whether you're heading to Glendale, Tucson, Chandler, Mesa, Peoria, or Phoenix. Click any rink card to see its address, current hours, contact details, and visitor reviews. Schedules in Arizona change seasonally — public skate hours often expand during summer break and winter holidays and contract during school sessions and league bookings — so checking the rink's website or calling ahead before driving out is a good idea, especially for weekday sessions or specialty events like adult night and themed skates.