Best Early Entry at EPCOT Plan: Beating the Rope Drop Rush to Two Rides

During an efficient Early Entry at EPCOT, you can ride two E-Ticket attractions in World Showcase or the front of the park before the rope drop rush, opening the door for a day without Lightning Lanes. This Early Entry report enters via International Gateway and covers the ideal strategy when coming from the back entrance.

To test this itinerary, we did EPCOT on two different busy days (7/10 and 8/10 crowd levels). It covers the wait times and what we accomplished during the Extra Magic Hours replacement, plus how this on-site perk compares to using Lightning Lanes to skip lines. The park opened at 9 am to the general public and Early Entry began at 8:30 am, which is normal for EPCOT regardless of crowd levels.

As noted above, this Early Entry report starts from International Gateway, as I was staying at Disney’s BoardWalk Inn. Skyliner and Crescent Lake Resorts arrive via this back entrance, which is superior to the front entrance for Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Frozen Ever After, the headliners in World Showcase. If you’d prefer to start with Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, it’s also possible from International Gateway if you don’t mind a bit more walking.

For the first of these mornings, I arrived at EPCOT’s International Gateway at approximately 7:45 am on this particular morning. The Skyliner was already dropping off guests at International Gateway when I arrived, and security and the turnstiles were already open.

I chose to arrive at this time, recognizing that I wouldn’t be at the front of the pack, because in my observations from prior testing for Cosmic Rewind, 7:50 am was about the sweet spot of not arriving too early or too late. This was also around the time that the in-park checkpoint opened to determine Early Entry eligibility.

Upon entering International Gateway, there’s a row of Cast Members scanning MagicBands, resort room keys, or whatever appropriate identification you might have if staying at one of the participating third party hotels. You get held back by the gift shop and can’t access the rest of the park without scanning here, after which time you can proceed.

When I got here at 7:52 am, this area was already clear. Cast Members must’ve started scanning at around 7:45 am, as I could still see the flow of guests heading towards Canada and France. Now that Cosmic Rewind is open during Early Entry, it’s been our observation that the guest mix is about 75/25 in favor of Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure. This makes sense–it’s a long walk to the front of the park from here!

The only reason to head towards France is Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure. Well, you could also line up super early to rope drop Impressions de France followed by Les Halles Boulangerie Patisserie, which is a real power move.

If you’re doing Frozen Ever After first, you’ll need to go towards Canada, as there’s another hold point before the Morocco pavilion (pictured above). That also opens at random sometime around 8:30 or 8:40 am, but the bottom line is that if you’re doing Frozen Ever After first, you shouldn’t even bother with it. Head towards Canada; that route is only slightly longer, anyway.

Also, you shouldn’t bother with doing Frozen Ever After first unless you want to loop it. Getting there this early for one ride on Frozen Ever After is a waste. The only worthwhile starting points during Early Entry at EPCOT are Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure or Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. If you’re prioritizing anything else, you don’t need to be in the park this early–you can show up around 8:45 am and be fine.

Another relatively recent change that we’ve covered elsewhere is that there’s no longer a secondary checkpoint between the United Kingdom and Canada. This started back when Cosmic Rewind joined the Early Entry ride roster and is a hugely positive change. Without this change, Cosmic Rewind wouldn’t be feasible from International Gateway.

It means that once you’re past the initial holding area by the front of International Gateway, you can proceed all the way to the front of the park. This didn’t used to be the case, which was why guests who wanted to do Test Track during Early Entry were at a distinct disadvantage if arriving via International Gateway.

Once past the Early Entry checkpoint, the crowd at the France bridge was held until 8:16 am.

The actual time this line starts moving is all over the place and likely depends upon a variety of factors. During peak season, the new arrivals would necessitate the line move forward. In the last year, I’ve started moving as early as 8:05 am and as late as 8:27 am.

In any case, we started moving in a loosely formed line at 8:16 am, heading towards the Streets of Paris.

This is normal, as is the inevitable party or two that decides they’re going to bolt ahead of the group, ignoring the fact that everyone else is shuffling forward in a line (more or less).

There was no secondary hold on this particular morning, as is sometimes the case.

That can occur at the entrance to the Streets of Paris area that leads to the attraction or at the front entrance of the Rat Ride itself. Sometimes it also seems like there’s a hold, but it’s really just a pinch-point as guests funnel into the queue, which slows down movement. None of that happened this particular morning.

Nevertheless, it took until 8:24 am until I was in the actual front entrance of the building. From there, it was smooth sailing and the line never stopped moving. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure has pretty healthy throughput, so as long as it’s operating at full capacity, it should move quickly.

This is also precisely why I wasn’t as worried about showing up at 7:15 am versus 7:45 am. The extra 15-30 minutes will shave off maybe a few minutes of wait time for the actual attraction when all is said and done. It’s a delicate balance, and a matter of diminishing returns for ever-earlier arrivals. The only way that actually matters or is worth it is when you game things out and think about stops 2-3 of the day, and beating the regular rope drop crowd.

That only works up to a point, though, as so many factors are out of your control. That proved to be true on this particular day, as I was off Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure by 8:40 am, giving me more than enough time to beat the rush to Frozen Ever After. There was only one problem: the dreaded delayed opening. 

With Frozen Ever After down, I quickly pivoted and raced towards the front of the park for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.

I could have headed towards Norway, hoping for the best with Frozen Ever After not having too long of a delay. My personal rule, though, is to never do this. Since the app doesn’t indicate downtime until the park opens, a lot of people are walking this way ‘blind’ and are probably going to linger as opposed to pivoting since that means a lot more walking and being behind the pack.

There’s also the reality that I do not mind more walking and can make the trek from France to Cosmic Rewind in under 10 minutes. That’s a pretty brisk pace and one you may not be able to match, especially with kids or larger multi-generation parties.

It also just adds a lot of steps to a day that’ll already have a ton of steps. Given how much food “research” I do in a day at EPCOT, I actually favor this extra walking. I also favor doing Cosmic Rewind for fun. (Not much “fun” in getting my own row in Frozen Ever After as a fortysomething solo adult male!)

For those who do want to push the limit on an aggressive Early Entry at EPCOT, heading to Cosmic Rewind worked incredibly well for me. My total wait from entering the queue to the first pre-show was just under 30 minutes, or about one-third of the average wait time that day.

Again, I want to underscore that I do not necessarily endorse this approach for the average guest. With that said, it should work well for the crazy, commando tourists capable of walking briskly!

Wanting to complete the World Showcase Early Entry plan for the average EPCOT guest, I returned on a subsequent morning to piece together a ‘complete’ Early Entry from International Gateway. This time, I had no sense of urgency and arrived at 8:20 am.

I was out late the prior night for Extended Evening Hours, so I figured this would be a good option for knocking out golden hour photography followed by Frozen Ever After in the second half of Early Entry. The weather had other ideas.

It was an overcast, drizzly morning. So I ended up just wandering around, running time off the clock until a normal pace would’ve gotten me from France to Norway starting at 8:40 am. Even for an average walker, this should be plenty of time to beat the rope drop rush to Frozen Ever After, as that wave of guests doesn’t typically arrive until 9:05 am or later.

I arrived at around 8:50 am. On the plus side, Frozen Ever After was open on this particular day. On the downside, this had to have been one of the biggest Early Entry crowds I’d ever seen for Frozen Ever After.

This is a longer line than I’ve seen during the average Early Entry at EPCOT, but not by that much. The days of Frozen Ever After being a walk-on during the tail end of Early Entry ended a while ago–pretty much when the park moved to a 9 am opening time.

I was still on Frozen Ever After by roughly 9:05 am, making for an actual wait time of ~15 minutes. The discrepancy between the photos and my wait time largely comes down to two things: 1) confusion about Akershus ADRs, and; 2) no Lightning Lane return times resulting in a smooth standby line flow.

All in all, that’s not too shabby. Especially when you consider that my combined ‘seamless’ morning would’ve involved knocking out Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure by 9:40 am and then Frozen Ever After by 9:05 am. Were another attraction, say a track for testing, open towards the front of the park to dilute crowds heading towards Frozen Ever After, I might’ve been able to knock out both rides before 9 am. In fact, I used to be able to accomplish this with Test Track back in the day–and that was pre-Cosmic Rewind!

Some Walt Disney World fans might scoff at the notion that this is the best approach to Early Entry at EPCOT, especially with Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind having far and away the highest average wait time. Over the last month, its average has been 90 minutes, whereas Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure is 57 minutes and Frozen Ever After is 54 minutes.

If you pair Cosmic Rewind with Soarin, the two-ride posted wait time is higher (124 minutes vs. 111 minutes). That’s a fair enough perspective, but my response would be that both Cosmic Rewind and Soarin’ have long pre-shows and load cycles. So even at their shortest, the total time commitments for both of those attractions will exceed those for the Frozen and Rat Rides.

Then there’s the subjective element. As I’ve mentioned countless times, I love that morning stroll from France to Norway. That is my favorite part of Early Entry, not either of the rides themselves. No need to belabor that point yet again, but another I’ll make is that the queue for Soarin’ is entirely indoors and the one for Cosmic Rewind is largely indoors. That makes those better options for the middle of the day when the heat is higher. I’ve also found that, when crowds are moderate or lower, the actual wait time for Soarin’ is purely a matter of luck no matter when you do the attraction.

Ultimately, the “best” EPCOT Early Entry plan probably comes down to whether you’re arriving via the main entrance or International Gateway. Beyond that, how much you want to save steps or don’t mind a bit of extra walking.

If you want to take the path of least resistance, start with the major headliner closer to your entrance. This will always be the right call, whether that means beginning at Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure or Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. From each of those starting points, you have a few second-step options.

If you want to really get aggressive, beginning at International Gateway and doing Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure followed by Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind is the optimal approach, but it isn’t for the faint of heart (or slow walkers). The most balanced approach, at least from the back entrance, is the Rat Ride followed by Frozen Ever After. And starting soon, perhaps Test Track. Now that would be quite the 1-2-3 punch!

Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!

YOUR THOUGHTS

Thoughts on Early Entry at EPCOT? Have you experienced this 30 minute jumpstart to the day since Cosmic Rewind joined the lineup? What’s your preferred approach to mornings at EPCOT? How would you have done things differently? What will you do once Test Track rejoins the lineup and there are 4 bona fide headliners open during Early Entry at EPCOT for the first time ever?! Any other feedback on arriving early to the Walt Disney World theme parks? Agree or disagree with our advice or approach? 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!

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20 Comments

  1. Can’t say how helpful this info is. Sitting in our room with the family at the Boardwalk Hotel making plans for EPCOT early entry tommorow and it’s like this article was written for just us! You’re the best. Thanks!

  2. I have no comment related to the text of the post; I just wanted to say that I love that photo of the US/Japan at the top of the article.

  3. Our family (group of 10 with grandma, cousins etc., including kids down to age 6) went a couple months ago. We entered from IG, went straight to Remy’s, got off Remy’s by 8:40ish, and were all able to easily get into line at Cosmic Rewind by 8:55am. And we even stopped for a quick photo with Alice in the UK and with StarLord right outside Cosmic Rewind! It was a great early entry day!
    Thanks for all your helpful testing and informative posts! It has been such a help for planning our family trips!

  4. Nothing in the world will ever convince me Cosmic Rewind is worth rope dropping from the IG in a world where LLSP exists. And I’m a crazy commando rope dropper who NYC power walks, mind. I only ever access the IG as a Crescent Lake resort guest and always get to security before the Skyliner starts running. I’ve managed the France to Norway walk in 5 minutes before. And I’m still buying the SP every time.

    Like you consider diminishing returns getting there too early, but I consider it power walking across the entire park, trying to time things perfectly and stressing about missing the initial rush of people, praying both sides are running, etc. When I could just pay the $20 or whatever and call it a day. I get that it becomes expensive for larger groups but time is money to me on vacatio and I see the value in a relatively stress free rope drop. Before TT went down I managed to knock out Remy, Frozen and walk out of TT just after official park opening and that’s what I’ll aim for when I’m back at Swan next month. I’m only attempting Cosmic Rewind at the beginning of the trip when I’m at the Contemporary.

  5. remy fills up way too fast with the hold point. and I will not wait more than 40 minutes for any ride, unless I’m close-dropping. our early entry plan w multipass –
    ee frozen, get breakfast at the bakery in Norway, primary ll test track, buy lll gotg, secondary ll Pixar film fest and soaring, scan in film fes at 9amt, grab LL for remy. – more commonly available than frozen btw. grab LL for frozen for second time through, hit other tier b rides, spend rest of day eating and drinking

    1. Interesting approach–thanks for sharing! I would caution any first-timer or infrequent visitor attempting to replicate that hoping for same-day Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure LLs can be a gamble. It’s one that often pays off, but not always.

      I’d also do Cosmic Rewind via standby after Frozen Ever After in this scenario, but that’s just me. Good run-through, regardless!

  6. What’s your adjustments for Test Track re-opening day next week July 22 if entering from International Gateway? We are at Boardwalk but have a car so not sure if it is best to enter from back and walk longer or front where there might be more crowds for WE. We weren’t able to get a LL bec/they were already sold out at our 7-day mark.:(

    1. On the actual reopening day? Honestly, I think it’s going to come down to luck and whichever side is released first.

      I’ll be coming from the front that day for Early Entry and am worried the main entrance is going to be packed and that Int’l Gateway could have an advantage. But maybe it’ll be so packed that they’ll open it earlier, giving the front an edge? Truly impossible to say.

      I feel like I always “lose” in these situations, so you should be good from IG since I’m coming from the front! 😉

  7. I second your approach. This is pretty much how we do it too, but only in the summer. When it’s cooler out, we take a much more leisurely path through the park. One attraction that I’m always surprised more visitors don’t do during the summer is the Mickey Shorts Theatre next to the Journey of Imagination with Figment. The place is almost always empty, yet it’s a nice break from the heat, the films are cute, and the 4D elements are wonderful. It’s not as grand as the Tree of Life and Muppets 3D, but it’s very similar. My entire family enjoys it, and the beach scent during “Piper” is a nice touch.

    1. @Sean I somewhat disagree. What EPCOT needs it to bring back things like Innoventions and the Play Pavilion and expand the aquarium so people young and old can explore. The exploration and learning piece of EPCOT along with going to the “countries” was my entire family’s favorite part of EPCOT before they went more ride focused. When my daughter was 5 in 2001 her favorite park was EPCOT. It remained the favorite park of both daughters and myself for years. My sons liked it best until they got rid of Innoventions.
      I also think AK needs more animal exhibits (why aren’t they adding them to Tropical Americas?!? or maybe they are?)
      Leave the rides to Hollywood Studios and Universal. At Disney we want to learn and explore at some of the parks!

    2. That’s true. I think Test Track being down creates a big gap in the ride roster. But when Spaceship Earth goes down for maintenance, the gap will return.

      As I think about it, there are actually a lot of rides/attractions that have lengthy durations but low wait times (Imagination, Land, Seas, Mission:Space, etc.) but maybe Epcot just needs more top-tier rides. Cosmic Rewind and Ratatouille are really the only two “modern” rides, with Test Track and Soarin’ being fairly modern but no longer feeling new or “cutting edge”. I don’t even count Mission: Space as a ride…the kinetic version is just not enjoyable for the average person.

      We’re at least 3 countries short of the original vision for Epcot, and missing rides envisioned for Germany and other pavilions. The Wonders of Life pavilion is mothballed (RIP Body Wars). The Imagination Pavilion was such a draw in the 1980s and is in sad shape (both as a ride and as a place to play/explore).

      All of the following being addressed would give Epcot a really strong attraction roster, and they’re all things that at one point were planned:
      1. Fully refurbished Spaceship Earth with updated modern and compelling final act
      2. Something in Wonders of Life** (Play Pavilion, or whatever)
      3. One or more new rides in existing countries (Mary Poppins, Germany boat ride….Rapunzel?, Coco, etc.)
      4. New Journey into Imagination that brings new delights while embracing the OG version.
      5. As part of above, put something awesome into the Magic Eye theater. Maybe Muppets, but even better something that connects with Imagination (4D “Inside Out” show or something?)
      6. Bonus — retire Mission: Space in favor of something that honors Horizons (even if just in spirit).

      **It’s weird that a lot that’s troubled Epcot since the mid-90s has been sponsors pulling out of pavilions/attractions (and countries pulling their funding). And yet, Disney operates attractions across the rest of its parks that don’t require sponsors. Like would the Tron ride shut down if Enterprise rent-a-car went bankrupt?

  8. We were there the Monday after Easter staying at the Swan. We were relatively near the front of the line for Ratatouille and were off by about 8:45am. Made it over Guardians by about 8:55 and beat the park opening crowd. Waited about 30 minutes and accomplished both headliners within the first hour of park opening. Then Soarin’ later on in the afternoon. Definitely a good approach for us.

  9. Will need to update this for Test Track very soon….
    Though I’m thinking the ideal will be — if willing to buy Lightning Lane —
    Rope drop Remy and Frozen, get a Test Track LL for 9-10, which will let you quickly book a 4th attraction.

    1. I think that’s a good approach.

      My hope is that between lower crowds and more operational Early Entry attractions, it’s able to sneak in a third ride–potentially even Cosmic Rewind–after FEA. Having the TT LLMP and hoping for the best with Cosmic Rewind strikes me as workable.

  10. How do you know if Frozen has a delayed opening if it that info isn’t reflected in the app until official park open?

  11. The question is — can you enter from Int’l Gateway and do Cosmic Rewind twice before the regular (non-EE) guests hit the queue? (I made this comment on another post, but we didn’t want to risk being too far back in the pack, so Uber’ed from Pop Century to the front entrance and rode twice).

    The other thing we did was experience Ratatouille via single rider. It’s a true game changer if you don’t mind being split from your party for a few minutes (and sometimes get placed with members of your party anyway). We rode twice with a total combined wait time of 10 minutes. Thinking about other scenarios where we rode both Ratatouille and Cosmic Rewind twice, without any form of LL, I would imagine single rider saved us as at least 90 minutes or more.

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