There are dinner plans, and then there are stories. The kind you tell at every gathering for the next six months, the kind that make people put down their phones and actually listen. A session at iFLY Indoor Skydiving in Addison is firmly in the second category, and I can say that with complete confidence after floating — genuinely floating — inside a vertical wind tunnel at roughly 120 miles per hour.
iFLY is tucked into the bustling Addison corridor along Beltline Road, just minutes from the Dallas North Tollway. The building is hard to miss: it has the clean, modern lines of a facility that takes its fun seriously, and through the glass walls you can already see bodies rising and spinning in a column of roaring air before you even walk through the door. It sets the mood immediately.
Walking in, you are greeted by staff who are genuinely enthusiastic — not in a rehearsed, theme-park way, but in the way people are when they actually love what they do every day. The check-in process is smooth, and first-timers go through a brief but thorough training session led by a certified instructor. You learn the basic body positions, the hand signals your instructor will use inside the tunnel, and how to relax into the airflow rather than fight it. That last part, it turns out, is everything.
The tunnel itself is an engineering marvel: a vertical column of recirculating air generated by massive fans that can push wind speeds high enough to support a human body in freefall simulation. When you step into that column for the first time, every instinct tells you to tense up. And then something shifts. You level out, your instructor gives you a thumbs-up, and you are flying. Not pretending to fly. Actually, undeniably flying. It is one of those rare sensations that the brain simply does not have a ready-made category for.
Each standard session includes two flights, and more experienced flyers can purchase additional time or upgrade to the High Flight experience, where the instructor takes you soaring to the very top of the tunnel — a full 14 feet in the air — in a series of breathtaking spirals. Watch someone do it once and you will immediately be adding it to your next booking.
iFLY is also remarkably inclusive. The weight and age guidelines are generous enough that this is a legitimate family activity — kids as young as three can participate, and guests up to 300 pounds are welcome. Birthday parties, corporate team-building events, and date nights are all regulars here, which tells you something about how broadly the experience translates.
Addison has always punched above its weight as a dining and entertainment destination, but iFLY offers something genuinely different: a physical, visceral experience that no restaurant or bar can replicate. After your flights, you can watch your session on video (yes, they film it), relive the highlight reel with your group, and head out to one of the dozens of nearby restaurants along Beltline for a well-earned meal. The whole outing makes for a remarkably complete evening.
If your usual Addison itinerary runs along the lines of dinner and drinks — and there is nothing wrong with that — consider shaking things up with a stop at iFLY. You will walk out lighter, grinning, and already planning your next visit. Some experiences earn their hype. This one more than delivers.