The Compact
- Fits yards as small as 3m x 3m
- Small footprint, maximum adventure
- Packed with core accessories
Grow Stronger. Climb Higher. Play Longer.
Turn your backyard into an epic playground with Growplay Monkey Bars. Engineered in-house and independently certified to global safety standards, our freestanding, modular frames grow with your kids and are easy to install — no concrete or digging required. Built to withstand sun, rain, and wind, they’re made to last and backed by a 10-year frame warranty. With Growplay, you’ll enjoy worry-free outdoor fun for years to come.
Give the gift of outdoor play, instantly. Perfect for group gifting or splitting payment methods at checkout. Plus, every card unlocks Growplay VIP perks — including exclusive discounts, special offers, and members-only competitions.
Helpful answers about choosing, using and maintaining Growplay monkey bars.
There is no single age that suits every child. Some children may begin exploring climbing, hanging and swinging from a young age with close adult supervision, while others may need more time to build the strength, confidence and coordination needed for monkey bars.
The best approach is to start low and simple. Let children practise hanging, reaching, climbing and landing safely before encouraging them to move across the bars independently. Growplay Monkey Bars are height-adjustable, so you can set the bars lower for younger children and raise them as their confidence and ability grows.
Children should always be supervised while using monkey bars, especially when they are still learning.
Blisters can happen when children are building grip strength or using monkey bars for longer periods than their hands are used to. It does not usually mean there is an issue with the monkey bars, but it is a sign to slow things down, check the bar surface is clean and dry, and let their hands recover before more climbing.
Keep monkey bars exciting by changing the way your children use them. Add new accessories, create obstacle courses, set small challenges, or turn play into imaginative games like “floor is lava”, treasure hunts or adventure missions.
Growplay Monkey Bars are modular and customisable, so you can refresh the setup as your children grow and their confidence builds.
The right monkey bars depend on your children’s age, confidence, ability, backyard size and how you want the play space to grow over time. For younger or less confident climbers, look for a frame that can start lower and be adjusted as they improve. For growing families, a modular frame gives you more flexibility to add swings, climbing accessories, a cubby house or extensions later. For Australian backyards, also consider the available footprint, safe play area around the frame, ground surface, sun exposure and whether you want a freestanding setup that can be installed without concrete. Growplay frames are height-adjustable and modular, making it easier to choose a setup that suits your family now and can grow with your kids.
Yes. Growplay Monkey Bars are independently tested and certified to Australian/New Zealand and international play equipment safety standards, including AS/NZS safety standards AS 8124, EN 71, EN 1176 and ASTM F1148 standards referenced across Growplay’s product range.
Each frame is designed for safe backyard play, with a heavy-duty steel structure, reinforced bracing and secure anchoring. As with all children’s play equipment, safe installation, an appropriate ground surface and active adult supervision are still important.
Start low, slow and simple. Teach children to hang first, then practise one hand at a time before trying to move across the full monkey bars. Encourage them to keep their eyes forward, swing gently rather than wildly, and drop with bent knees when they need to come down. A good rule is “one child at a time on the monkey bars” and no sitting or standing on top of the frame. Stay close while children are learning, keep the area underneath clear, and build up gradually as their grip strength, confidence and coordination improve.
Positive play starts with clear, simple rules. Encourage children to take turns, wait until the person in front has finished, keep the landing area clear and use the frame in the way it was designed. Praise effort, confidence and safe choices rather than only celebrating who gets across the fastest. Monkey bars are also a great place to practise resilience. Children can set small goals, try again after a missed rung, cheer each other on and learn that improvement comes with practice. Keeping play fun and pressure-free helps kids build confidence while staying safer.
Yes. Children should be supervised while using monkey bars, especially younger children, new climbers or children trying a new accessory for the first time. Adult supervision helps children learn safe technique, take turns and avoid risky behaviour like climbing on top of the frame or pushing near the landing area. Supervision does not mean stopping every challenge. Monkey bars are meant to build confidence and skill. The aim is to stay close enough to guide safe play, keep the area clear and step in when children are using the equipment incorrectly.
Growplay Monkey Bars should be installed on a flat, level surface with enough clear space around the frame for safe play. For most Australian backyards, grass or fake grass are common options, but impact-absorbing surface underneath and around the play area to help cushion falls are also suitable options.
Soft-fall options such as playground mulch, rubber soft fall, sand or synthetic turf with appropriate underlay can help create a safer landing zone. Do not install monkey bars over hard surfaces such as concrete, paving or compacted ground.
Always follow the installation instructions for your specific Growplay frame and check that the surface, clearance area and anchoring method are suitable before children play.
Monkey bars work much more than just the arms. Children use their hands and forearms for grip, shoulders and upper back to hang and pull, core muscles to control swinging, and legs to land, balance and move between activities.
This mix of hanging, climbing and controlled movement helps build functional strength that children use in everyday play and sport. Because every child develops at a different pace, it is best to start with short hangs and simple movements before building up to longer crossings.
To keep outdoor monkey bars in good condition, regularly wipe down the frame, check that bolts and anchors are secure, and remove dirt, leaves, salt, sand or bird droppings from the surface. In coastal parts of Australia, a regular freshwater rinse is especially helpful because salty air can be harsh on outdoor equipment.
Do a quick visual check before play, then a more thorough check each month. Look for loose fittings, worn ropes, damaged accessories, movement in the anchors or any sharp edges. Always follow Growplay’s installation and care instructions for your specific frame and accessories.
Monkey bars help kids build strength, coordination, balance, confidence and resilience through active outdoor play. They encourage children to hang, climb, swing, problem-solve and practise movements that challenge both the body and brain.
For Australian families, backyard monkey bars can also make active play easier to fit into everyday life. Instead of needing to drive to a park, kids have a fun reason to get outside, burn energy and build skills at home.
Monkey bars support children’s development by combining movement, problem-solving and play. As children hang, swing, climb and move from rung to rung, they practise strength, balance, coordination, spatial awareness and body control.
They also support emotional development. Kids learn to set goals, manage fear, try again after a missed rung and celebrate progress. When used with siblings or friends, monkey bars can also encourage turn-taking, communication and cooperative play.
Monkey bars are a strong gross motor activity because children use large muscle groups to hang, swing, reach, climb and land. These movements help build upper-body strength, grip strength, core stability, balance and coordination.
They also support hand-eye coordination. Children need to judge distance, time their reach, shift their weight and plan the next movement. With practice, they become more confident controlling their body in space, which can support other physical activities like running, climbing, ball sports and playground play.
Yes. Monkey bars can support social development when children play together. They naturally create opportunities to take turns, wait, encourage each other, make up games, negotiate rules and learn how to share a play space safely.
Backyard play also gives siblings, neighbours and friends a place to build confidence together. Some children will lead a challenge, others will cheer, copy or create new rules. These small moments help children practise communication, cooperation and empathy through play.
Monkey bars can support the strength and body awareness that contribute to better posture. Hanging and climbing use the shoulders, back, core and grip muscles, while children also practise balance and control as they move across the frame.
They are not a medical treatment for posture issues, but they can be a helpful part of regular active play. If you are concerned about your child’s posture, pain or movement patterns, speak with a health professional such as a physiotherapist or occupational therapist.
Monkey bars can become much more than a climbing challenge. Kids can turn the frame into an obstacle course, a ninja challenge, a rescue mission, a pirate ship, a zoo, a shop, a lookout tower or a backyard adventure base.
Try timed challenges, colour-based routes, “floor is lava”, follow-the-leader, animal movements, treasure hunts or team missions. Adding accessories like swings, ropes, nets, rings or a cubby house gives children more ways to move, imagine and create new games as they grow.
Fantasy play is when children use imagination to create stories, characters and pretend worlds. A backyard monkey bar frame can become a castle, spaceship, jungle, pirate ship, obstacle course or secret clubhouse in a matter of minutes.
This kind of play helps children explore ideas, practise language, solve problems and express emotions. With a Growplay frame, accessories such as swings, ropes, nets and cubby houses can add new “story settings” so the same backyard play space keeps feeling fresh.
Monkey bars are a type of play equipment designed for climbing, hanging, swinging and moving hand-over-hand. Traditionally, the term refers to the row of overhead bars children swing across, but in Australia “monkey bars” is also commonly used to describe a full backyard climbing frame.
Growplay Monkey Bars are complete modular play systems that can include climbing frames, swings, ropes, ladders, cubby houses and other accessories, giving children more ways to build strength, coordination, confidence and creative outdoor play.
They are closely related, but not always exactly the same. Traditional monkey bars are the overhead bars children use to swing hand-over-hand, while a climbing frame usually refers to the larger structure children climb, hang, swing and play on.
In Australia, many families use “monkey bars” to describe the whole backyard climbing frame. Growplay Monkey Bars combine both ideas, offering a complete climbing frame with monkey bars, swing options, climbing accessories and modular add-ons.
In Australia, “monkey bars” is often used to describe the whole backyard climbing frame, not just the overhead bars children swing across. A jungle gym is a broader term that usually refers to a play structure with climbing, hanging, swinging and imaginative play features.
So while traditional monkey bars are the horizontal bars used for swinging hand-over-hand, Growplay Monkey Bars are a complete modular backyard play system. They can include climbing frames, swings, ropes, ladders, cubby houses and other accessories, giving children more ways to climb, swing, hang, balance and play creatively.
A jungle gym is a play structure designed for climbing, swinging, hanging and imaginative play. It may include bars, ladders, ropes, platforms, slides, swings or other play features, depending on the design.
In Australia, the terms “jungle gym”, “climbing frame” and “monkey bars” are sometimes used in similar ways. Growplay Monkey Bars are best described as a modular backyard climbing frame, giving children the benefits of a jungle gym with the flexibility to customise the setup as they grow.
Growplay monkey bars can be customised with a wide range of accessories and add-ons, including swings, rings, ropes, climbing nets, ladders, trapezes, ninja-style accessories, cubby houses, slides, sports nets and spare parts.
The right accessories depend on your frame, your children’s age and how they like to play. Some families choose active climbing challenges, while others add swings or a cubby house for more variety. Always check compatibility with your specific Growplay frame before ordering.