Disney World’s Beak & Barrel Bar ADRrrr Day Debacle (Relaunch Update)

Advance Dining Reservations were supposed to roll out today for Beak & Barrel Bar, the new Pirates of the Caribbean tavern coming to Magic Kingdom this Halloween season. Instead, Walt Disney World vacation planners were treated (or tricked?) into another WDW website meltdown. This post recaps how things went and offers commentary on another resounding success for Disney IT! (Updated August 16, 2025.)
None of this should come as a colossal surprise to anyone who has been a Disney fan for more than a few years. If you’ve never been battle-hardened by a Disney Drop Day, I invite you to read the our Oogie Boogie Bash Party Problems or “We’re in Orbit!” post (or its comments) or “A Touch of Disney” or Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge reservations now live posts or or or…
Those cover some of Disney’s past “slow-motion train wrecks” with drop days. If you’ve been around the block, many of you have probably become intimately acquainted with the details of Disney’s virtual waiting rooms or error message pages (how many of you hate the beloved Big Thunder goat or Stitch?!) while spending multiple hours in a queue only or refreshing a page only to have the system crash. Repeatedly.
This is how it goes from time to time on Disney Drop Days. Some people spend the better part of a day waiting only to come up empty handed. Anyone who has tried to book something on a Disney Drop Day probably has their own horror story. These woes are much less common than they used to be a few years ago, as Disney IT seems to have upgraded from the ‘ole Gateway 2000 they use to run the Go.com servers.
Nevertheless, problems still occur from time to time. Just earlier this week, Walt Disney World reportedly had issues with the Parisian Breakfast Buffet at Chefs de France and had to delay the ADR drop day for that by a day. (I say “reportedly” because we weren’t trying for that, but did hear from several readers who were.) So perhaps the company upgraded from Gateway 2000 to regular ole Gateways, circa 2001. Or perhaps it actually is Hei-Hei’s fault, as he’s the new head of Disney IT. That would check out.
I didn’t plan on writing a post about this as I haven’t personally experienced problems with Disney IT in a while, so I didn’t meticulously document times, but I started checking for ADRs at around 5:55 am. I’ve heard from others who tried even earlier. That doesn’t really matter, though. No matter when you started looking, the end result was the same.

The entire Walt Disney World ADR system crashed right around that time. Guests were greeted by a rotating assortment of error messages, like the one above, on both the Walt Disney World website and My Disney Experience app. Then they pulled the plug completely, putting the system into maintenance mode.
The good news, if you’re looking for a silver lining, is that the selection of characters used this go-round was wider-ranging than in the past. So now you can hate Hei-Hei, Dante, that three-eyed alien from Monsters Inc, and more. I could swear at one point that donkey from Shrek was in there, silently taunting me. Or maybe that was a sleep-deprived hallucination? Probably not.
After a while of this and when it became patently obvious that the ADR system wasn’t working and would be down for the count, I’ll be honest with you: I went back to bed. Yes, I’m guilty of dereliction of duty, but the one thing you must keep in mind is that the Disney Blogger’s Code is really more guidelines than what you’d call actual rules.

By this point, I had already received messages that the phone lines were also slammed. As excited as I am to experience the Beak & Barrel, I’m absolutely not “wait 2 hours on the phone for potentially nothing” levels of excited. (Plus, there’s a very high chance of disconnection and/or getting through but being told the backend is having the same problem. I’m not one to tilt at windmills any more than absolutely necessary.)
It didn’t matter, anyway. When I woke back up after 8 am, the entire Advance Dining Reservation system was still down. It’s now started to slowly come back online, and as I’m writing this, I could now make different ADRs if I so desired. (At least, I assume. I can get entirely through the booking flow–before confirmation–without incident.)
However, it appears that the Beak and Barrel is not one of those Advance Dining Reservations. When I go directly to the lounge’s website, the blue “Check Available Days” button has vanished. I assume this means that we’re getting a redux of the reservation launch day, perhaps tomorrow. Oh joy.

Beak & Barrel ADR Relaunch Update
Walt Disney World has added the following bulletin to the Beak & Barrel Bar page: “Arrgh! Too many pirates tried to pillage at The Beak and Barrel. Thank you for yer patience. Come back for the treasure ye seek when reservations set sail the week of August 18, 2025.”
If you just skim the above bulletin to spot the date, you might conclude that ADRs will go live on Monday, August 18, 2025. But that is not what it says. It’s the week of August 18, 2025. Meaning sometime between August 18 and August 22, 2025. It’s very rare for new product launches to occur on Mondays, because that would mean having teams prep things over the weekend. It also seems like Walt Disney World would’ve updated that to a firm date on Friday if a Monday launch were the plan, but they did not.
Nevertheless, we can’t definitively rule out Monday because Walt Disney World has technically left the door open. The lack of an update about this on Friday is the most surprising part, and lends a bit of credence to the rumors (which I didn’t put much stock in) that the dining system was swarmed by a bot army trying to scoop up all available ADRs. This still doesn’t even come close to passing the smell test for me, but there’s certainly some reason why Walt Disney World is not yet ready to set a new ADR launch date. Something that hasn’t been fully fixed or addressed that gives them confidence in a new date.
The bottom line here is that Walt Disney World has NOT confirmed August 18, 2025 as the reservation relaunch date for Beak & Barrel. To the contrary, it is probably not that day. Nevertheless, if scoring Beak & Barrel ADRs is of paramount importance, you might want to be up early on Monday. Without direct confirmation one way or the other from Disney, the door is open for a quiet launch any weekday next week.

Based on our conversations and multiple reader reports confirming the same, Cast Members are indicating that Beak & Barrel ADRs never fully loaded into the system. That there was no bookable availability, and even if guests saw reservations, they would not be able to confirm them. The above seems to corroborate that by saying that reservations will not launch today, which implies that they have not already launched.
However, we’ve also heard from a couple of readers who were able to make reservations and countless others who saw them for a split second. I tend to believe this, as opposed to the official statement. The system displaying reservations suggests that they were, in fact, loaded into it at some point, however briefly. And if they were loaded, someone (or a few someones) probably got through and booked something.
What remains to be seen is just how many ADRs got booked versus how many are still available. Beak and Barrel Bar is extremely low-supply and high-demand, so it is one of those things that could book up for 60+ days in a manner of minutes. It could be–and will be, when ADRs do go live (again)–a blink and you miss it kinda thing.
We were not among the prosperous plunderers, so we’ll see you all sometime next week (our guess is August 19, 2025) for a second shot at the bounty. But ye be warned, there be fierce competition ahead. And who knows when that evil curse will strike the greedy beholders of these bewitched Beak & Barrel ADRs. Ye’ve seen the cursed treasure. You know where it be hidden. Now, proceed at your own risk.

We previously warned that demand for Beak and Barrel ADRs would be sky-high on opening day, August 29, 2025. That is Destination D23 weekend, a time when diehard dorks like me are descending upon Walt Disney World, and there will be thousands of us–along with the usual suspects–who all want to experience the new PotC bar on opening day or opening weekend.
You know how GEO-82 was highly competitive for opening day and is still almost impossible to book unless you’re 60+ days out? Beak and Barrel will be like that on steroids for Labor Day weekend, with demand eventually leveling off a bit (by comparison) thanks to the (presumably) higher capacity and more stringent rules and time limits. But that first weekend, they might as well call it Bleak and Barrel, because that’s what it’ll be like trying to score ADRs.
Even after the initial rush over Labor Day, this is going to be one of the most competitive ADRs in all of Walt Disney World for years to come. All of this assumes that the ADR system actually works, which I guess was a bold assumption given the history of Disney IT.

In any case, I can’t wait to hear from Bob Iger or Hugh Johnston on the next earnings call or CNBC interview boasting about “robust consumer demand” and “brand affinity” for Walt Disney World, spinning this as another rousing success as opposed to another colossal Disney IT meltdown. I wish that were a joke.
We do have to admit that even we did not anticipate the extent of Disney’s IT woes. It’s been a while since we’ve experienced a problem quite like this. Oogie Boogie Bash and all other party ticket sales have been smooth sailing for the last couple of years, as have all discount drop days. Disney does seem to use virtual queues more than I would expect to manage demand–perhaps that should’ve been the case here, too? I guess we’ll find out if the launch day for Beak & Barrel Bar reservations (take two) begins with the “We’re Almost in Orbit!” message. Stay tuned.
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Your Thoughts
Did you experience problems trying to make Advance Dining Reservations for the Beak & Barrel bar? Excited to experience the new Pirates of the Caribbean tavern? Will you be trying to score ADRs for opening day or sometime over the holiday weekend? What do you think about Magic Kingdom getting a Pirates of the Caribbean-themed lounge? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback—even when you disagree with us—is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

It feels like every “Drop Day” repeats history, making loyal fans endure the same chaos
It’s the same with all themed Disney lounges ashore and at sea; Hyper Demand+Extremely Limited Availability+Crowded+Noisy+Hit or Miss Service+Mediocre Drinks+High Prices+Getting the Bum’s Rush by Staff=NO FUN!
I much prefer finding a quiet, out of the way lounge at WDW for good service, a good drink and a good time.
This is 100% hearsay but I’m an IT architect and have been told by people with no reason to lie that Disney’s parks infrastructure is still monolithic while D+ is cloud based. As such they dont have a mechanism to scale resources for major events without prohibitively expensive buys for gear that would be idle the majority of the time. D+ can more or less dial in their needs by the day.
I was in the fray yesterday all day. Luckily it was a slow workday. As others have mentioned, I think rolling it out slowly is a good idea. What about at first just allowing people with Magic Kingdom park reservations already in place have a shot at it first? Then any park reservation as a second wave. That may limit booking activity quite nicely until the thrill of a bar in the Magic Kingdom wears off (which for some of us will never happen!)
Doing it in waves is a good thought, but it would probably be on-site vs. off-site guests (exactly what they’re doing for MVMCP). That alone would stagger demand pretty significantly.
I’m not sure if the ADR system has the ability to validate park reservations (or exceptions to them).
What do you think the new date will be? “Arrgh! Too many pirates tried to pillage at The Beak and Barrel. Thank you for yer patience. Come back for the treasure ye seek when reservations set sail the week of August 18, 2025.”