2024 Best & Worst Months to Visit Disney World
Choosing when to visit Walt Disney World in 2024 can be difficult, balancing crowd calendars, seasonal events, park hours, weather, and more. This guide does exactly that to rank the best & worst months, plus some of our favorite weeks.
If you’ve yet to narrow down when you want to visit to a specific month or season, our Walt Disney World Crowd Calendars will help you choose dates based on attendance and average wait times, but that’s it. Accordingly, we recommend many readers consult this resource for the “broad strokes” on when to visit Walt Disney World. Here we’ve re-ranked the best and worst months for 2024 based on a variety of mostly qualitative and some quantitative factors.
This considers a variety of variables in conjunction with our evolving expectations about Walt Disney World’s attendance for 2024. To that end, we regularly share big updates, discounts that are released by Walt Disney World, crowd levels change, etc., we send out email notifications. To receive these, subscribe to our free email newsletter. This will give you a good idea of what things are like ‘on the ground’ at Walt Disney World, as well as what to expect in the future.
Unfortunately, Walt Disney World crowd levels can vary, and can not be forecast with 100% accuracy. As such, you should choose when to visit based on other comfort and enjoyment factors in addition to Walt Disney World crowd projections. It’s more pragmatic to choose when you’ll visit based on a mix of attendance levels plus weather, seasonal entertainment, and special events!
As such, these rankings eschew the typical Walt Disney World crowd calendar in favor of a more holistic approach that takes into account more than just crowds when choosing when to visit Walt Disney World.
Low crowds during a time when temperatures are sweltering, humidity is off the charts and there are no special events should not trump moderate crowds during a temperate time of year with a special event. Few people evaluate their vacation’s success by some statistical ‘fun quotient’, so why not do likewise when planning, and perform a qualitative analysis when choosing travel dates?
To cut to the chase, the point of this post is to rank every month of the year for visiting Walt Disney World in light of all variables that (we feel) are important with adjustments made for the ongoing reopening of the parks & resorts, operations scaling back up, capacity increasing, and entertainment returning.
Even months with significant and obvious downsides might have tremendous upside. Take August, for example, which ranks #8. That’s obviously not great, but summer vacation demand usually fizzles out after the first week, making the two-thirds of the month much better than the first half. Even then, it’s hard to rank August higher due to the weather, and since September is such a superior alternative.
There are similar stories throughout the list. November and December have become busier, but these are such qualititatively pleasant and fun months that we’re hard pressed to rank them poorly even given the higher crowds. You’ll have to decide for yourself how you weigh those countervailing factors–we’re just giving you some insight into our thinking and methodology.
Anyway, here is our personal assessment of the best and worst months to visit Walt Disney World. We’d recommend reading the description of each month carefully to make an informed decision about which time frames are best and worst for you…
12. July 2024 – This month ranks dead last due to uncertainty and upside, or lack thereof. Last July was the busiest month of the year at Walt Disney World as the parks got hit by an onslaught of pent-up demand. That’s not normal–in recent years, summer had ceased to be peak season at Walt Disney World.
However, Americans made up for lost time during summer vacation in the last two years, and Florida was one of the top destinations. Last July wasn’t quite as busy, but that could be attributed to inflation and rising gas prices, etc. Obviously, a lot could change between now and July, but we’re expecting above-average crowds.
The big reason behind the low ranking is that July is not a good month to visit Florida because of heat and humidity. The near-certainty of poor weather plus the uncertainty of heavy crowds puts July in last place. With that said, once you plan for the realities of a summer trip, remember: “even a rainy, potentially crowded day at Walt Disney World is better than a perfect day at home.” Don’t get too down on trip–it’ll still be a great time so long as you go in with good strategy and realistic expectations.
10. June 2024 – In a typical year, June starts out slow and gets progressively worse as more schools get out and families begin taking their summer vacations. Crowds start in above-average territory and are high by the end of the month. The last few summers have been a bit atypical, but we’d expect that trend to return for June 2024.
Another normal downside to June is the weather. Obviously, it’s a hot month, and the average monthly rainfall in June at Walt Disney World is over 8+ inches, and the probability of rain on any given day is above 50%. The upside to June is that it’s typically the less busy of the summer months, with most summer vacations happening in July or early August.
10. March 2024 – Early March is one of our “sleeper picks” for low crowds–and will be once again come March 2024 with Mardi Gras moving forward to February. Consequently, there should be a brief respite before spring break, but not long enough for March as a whole to rank too highly.
Spring break is the major downside to the second half of March, as is Easter occurring at the end of the month (March 31, 2024). In particular, avoid Orange County’s spring break as that’ll be the worst week-plus of the entire season, since that local school district has the most outsized impact on crowds.
On the plus side, weather is typically temperate by March, as evidenced by the start of Epcot’s International Flower & Garden Festival at the beginning of the month. Regardless of the year, we are fans of March dates as a great time for cool weather, moderate crowds, and Epcot coming into bloom.
9. April 2024 – James Franco could make a sequel to Spring Breakers set at Walt Disney World, and it would make the events of the original film seem perfectly tame. Okay, maybe not, but that doesn’t change the fact that Spring Break at Walt Disney World is a time to be avoided if you can.
Given that Easter will be in April every year until 2024, it’s a month that we recommend avoiding if you don’t like long lines. The entire month will be above average, but the weeks abutting Easter will be DEFCON 1. You’d better have some fast fingers (and a fast internet connection!) when trying to book a Lightning Lane for Slinky Dog Dash!
Starting on Tax Day Eve, April should improve considerably. Whether crowds drop by enough to move it higher on this list is debatable–but the point is that the last week and a half of April is much better. If that were its own month, it’d rank on the top half of this list.
8. August 2024 – Feel like Mission: Space is insufficient at simulating a visit to outer space? Then you’ll love August in Walt Disney World, when every day feels like a veritable trip to Venus or Mercury! August sees the mercury rising in Central Florida, and that hot, humid, and rainy weather alone makes August among the worst months to visit.
August is qualitatively the worst month to visit Walt Disney World. Quantitatively, it’s harder to say. August marks the end of “Peak Season” ticket prices, meaning people who postponed their visits to save money will start heading to the parks. Annual Passholder blockouts lift in August, causing a slight spike in locals, but it’s usually not bad.
The big thing is that summer vacation demand starts to burn out by the second week of August as families prepare to head back to school schedules. This results in an overall drop-off in attendance and there’s typically a large lull in crowds from mid-August through the end of September. August is a tale of two months–still slightly busy as vacation season winds down to start, but significantly better during the second half. Overall, it’s one of the lowest crowd months of the entire year. It’s the weather that drags it down considerably.
7. October 2024 – For the last several years, October had been dropping. Thanks to a variety of holidays, school breaks, conventions, and other events, October had become one of the busiest months of the year at Walt Disney World in terms of average wait times before that. Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party also throws a monkey wrench into Magic Kingdom attendance (but the upside is that it makes heavy crowds easier to predict and outsmart!).
Our expectation is that October 2024 marks a return to normal, as was more or less the case this year. That means some spikes around Columbus Day for fall break, with conventions and youth events also resulting in larger crowds. Other than that, the month is only slightly above average–albeit much worse than September.
Nevertheless, October remains attractive for its seasonal events at Epcot and Magic Kingdom and improving weather. We can’t recommend this month from the perspective of crowds alone, but it’s not a bad subjective choice when Halloween, Food & Wine, and more are added to the equation.
6. February 2024 – For the last few years, February has seen high crowds at Walt Disney World–to the point that we no longer call them “atypically” high crowds. That was once again true last year, with Mardi Gras and Presidents’ Day coinciding to make the second half of the month incredibly busy. Several days were so bad that Genie+ sold out.
It’s not likely to be much different next year. Mardi Gras moves earlier in the month, meaning two busy weeks instead of one insanely busy weeks. We expect this month to be slightly worse than January 2024 on that basis. However, if you can avoid the dates around holidays, February is still a decent time to visit.
If you’re already looking forward to February 2024, the first and last weeks of the month are definitely the ones to choose. Those should see lower crowds, pleasant weather, along with two different EPCOT festivals.
5. January 2024 – This is the “holiday hangover” at Walt Disney World. It’s sort of like Walt Disney World ate too many Christmas cookies and is too lazy to get off the couch and take down the decorations, with this mentality continuing long after the tree is dead to the point where its wife is embarrassed when it finally throws out the tree. (Not that I know from experience or anything.) On the plus side, January offers mild weather and the Epcot Festival of the Arts is fantastic.
When it comes to crowds, expect January 2024 to be a repeat of this year and the year before that. Which is to say, that January is a “Tale of Two Seasons.” This year, the month as a whole ended up being 7/10 on the crowd calendar, but that doesn’t even begin to tell the whole story. The first 7 days of the month were on par with the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve. Crowd levels were 10/10 every day during that stretch…and would’ve been even higher than that if the scale went higher. Attendance spiked again over the MLK Day holiday weekend, too.
However, most of the rest of January was much less busy, with lots of 2/10 and 3/10 days. If you can go after Orange County’s winter break and the Walt Disney World Marathon, January 2024 should be a great time to visit. Basically, aim for the second week or thereafter, and skip the mid-month MLK Day holiday weekend. Outside of those red flag dates, January 2024 should see fairly low crowds, pleasant weather, and EPCOT Festival of the Arts fun.
4. December 2024 – If Disney Vacation Club is the “Best Kept Secret,” the beginning of December being the best time to visit is “Disney’s Second Best Kept Secret.” Unfortunately, there’s just a pinch of sarcasm here. It’s as if the both ‘secrets’ were entrusted to the cast of Encanto, and they wrote a whole song about how they don’t talk about December crowds.
Suffice to say, the secret has gotten out about December. That coupled with Disney’s more strategic use of blockout dates and dynamic ticket pricing has shifted attendance somewhat. Crowds are still not as bad as other peak seasons, but it’s no longer the ghost town that it once was. We still view the first two weeks of the month as desirable times to visit, even despite being about as “secret” as the In-N-Out Secret Menu.
Pleasant weather plus Christmas decorations & entertainment are the big highlights here. It also helps that Pop Warner has moved to Universal, so that won’t contribute to crowds. If you can’t do mid-November, we think early to mid-December is still well worth it from a subjective perspective. And in fact, it might be worth it from an objective perspective, too. Last year, crowds didn’t get truly bad until December 19. Almost every day before that had a crowd level of 5/10 or lower. After that…well…like Bruno, we don’t talk about the chaotic crowds of Christmas and New Year’s Eve!
3. September 2024 – Every single month that was once the off-season has seen soaring crowds at Walt Disney World in recent years, with one exception: September. Nothing has moved the needle on fall off-season crowds–not the opening of Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, not the anticipated pre-50th Anniversary lull, and not perpetual picks by crowd calendars that September would be the slowest month of the year.
When judged solely on the basis of crowds, September is always the best month of the year. Aside from Labor Day weekend, September is relatively slow, especially earlier in the month. While Walt Disney World has been able to manipulate crowd levels in other off-season months, that has not happened with September. After Labor Day, the entire month is off-season, with the lowest crowd levels of the year.
September remains resilient and “crowd-proof” because most people simply cannot visit during the month due to school going back into session, or don’t want to do so because of the weather. On that basis, September had been our #1 month of the year at Walt Disney World for ages.
But these are qualitative rankings, and I just can’t give September the nod anymore. Not after last year. Even with seasonal events and low crowds–the likelihood of brutal weather is just too much. Heat and humidity make being outdoors unpleasant during September, and it’s a high point in the storm season. (We highly recommend reading Is It Still Worth Visiting During the Fall Off-Season at Walt Disney World? before booking August or September.)
Despite that, it might be worth bearing with the weather to take advantage of those low crowds. That’s doubly true when you consider the fact that prices are cheaper in September and events are held at EPCOT (Food & Wine Festival) and Magic Kingdom (Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party.) Even in the current era of unpredictable crowds, September 2024 should be relatively reliable.
2. May 2024 – The entirety of May 2024 will fall before summer tourist season and our expectation is that–after several months of consistently high crowds for one reason or another–May will be another return to normal as the calm between Spring Break and Summer 2024.
That’s doubly true with nothing opening during the month of May 2024, or being new. Last year, TRON Lightcycle Run debuted in the prior month. The year before that, Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind opened at the end of May, and had previews prior to then. There’s almost no chance that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will be done by May 2024, and no one cares about CommuniCore Hall. There’s nothing else (major) that could debut during the month.
That’s huge from the perspective of crowds, and means the entirety of May 2024 should be slower. Even with the Memorial Day holiday weekend factored into the mix, crowds are typically below average in May. Most schools aren’t out of session this early, and there’s a lag between when kids get out of school and families take their big summer trips, anyway.
The main downside to May is that heat and humidity can really start intensifying in May, but still not as bad as the summer months that follow. However, May is the first month of the year during which it’s not uncommon to see the temperatures broach 90-degrees and the humidity reach high levels.
1. November 2024 – Save for Thanksgiving and Veterans Day weeks, neither of which are as bad as the Christmas and New Year’s holiday weeks in terms of crowds, November is similar to December. Early and mid-November are usually good times to visit Walt Disney World, and the week after Thanksgiving is exceptional.
The upside to November are that the weather is generally more temperate. The downside is that not all Christmas entertainment starts until after Thanksgiving (specifically at Epcot), and some resort hotel decorations are not up during the first half of the month. If that is make or break for you, visit in the last week of November 2024 (which technically also includes a couple days of December).
With the first half of December seeing lower crowds in the last couple of years, the gap between the two months is closing, but November 2024 should still retain its #1 ranking as an overall superior pick. Again, so long as you about the aforementioned holiday weeks. Only the week of Thanksgiving is truly bad in November, whereas only the first two weeks or so of December 2024 are truly good.
The culmination of all of this? That our favorite week to visit Walt Disney World is the Sunday after Thanksgiving through the first Saturday of December. That means arriving on December 1, 2024. (You might actually consider arriving Saturday to make your first park day Sunday–last year that day was dead.)
That’s the sweet spot for the best prospects of good weather, moderate crowds, and experiencing all of the Christmas festivities. For the last couple of years, that week has seen truly low crowd levels–not just moderate. We wouldn’t be surprised if the numbers rebound a little and crowds are in the 4/10 range. If lower crowds are of paramount importance, you can also target mid-November after Veterans Day–just go before the week of Thanksgiving. That week should be slightly less crowded and offer most Christmas entertainment, outside of Epcot.
Beyond this recommendation for our favorite week of the year, we’d refer you to our 10 Best & Worst Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World in 2024 and 2025. Those lists were actually inspired by this, and offering a range of recommendations beyond just the months here. That contains recommendations of dates to visit (and avoid!) in virtually every single month of 2024 and 2025. It should be helpful for picking dates, regardless of whether you have maximum flexibility or are locked into weeks when school is out of session.
Ultimately, that’s a rundown of the good & bad of crowds at Walt Disney World. As you might’ve gathered by reading the entries, the various months don’t really demarcate attendance levels. To the contrary, it’s really more about school breaks and holidays, and the stretches before and after those.
Consequently, mid-January to mid-February is more of a distinct window than either January or February, late April has more in common with May than with early April, mid-August is more like September than early August, and the last few months of the year are all about holiday breaks (or the lack thereof).
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
Do you agree or disagree with our 2024 Walt Disney World month by month rankings? Are there any months you think are better or worse than we have them ranked? Any specific ideal weeks that you’d recommend people visit Walt Disney World? Any questions? 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!
This is so encouraging! We are booked for late February, early March. We went last year during that time (thanks to your advice, Tom) and it was awesome! I’m SO hoping Disney will be back. Unfortunately, I can’t tolerate wearing a mask for long periods so if that mandate stands we will cancel our 9 day trip. I’m REALLY hoping things are normal by March.
We already knew you were a dope writer, but now it is confirmed that you’re a dope human because you have hyperlinked Moldy Cheese Day for us. TYVM
Hey Tom!
Any insight on what you feel Oct 2021 might be like? I’m trying to plan a honeymoon and was thinking then or Feb 2022?
Thanks for your qualitative thoughts. I certainly agree that the Sunday after Thanksgiving and the week following is THE most wonderful time to visit Disney theme parks and resorts! As far as ranking August The Worst time to visit Disney, I have to disagree IF there are evening park hours. We celebrated our daughter’s Sweet 16 during the last week of August in 2019. We had a blast! We purchased park tickets for the Halloween Party and Disney After Hours; both of our visits to theme parks were at night which is the perfect time to go in August! We spent one day lounging around the pool at GF. Another day, we rented a cabana at GF which was a total blast (a fan, a fridge, a table for games, couches, 2 lounge chairs, a fruit basket, a snack basket, a CM dedicated to taking care of 4 cabanas); it was awesome. Another day we had a mom/daughter spa day at Senses Spa. Nothing could be more relaxing. During the 3 evenings when we did not visit a theme park, we made night plans: 1) celebrated with a birthday dinner at Narcoosee’s and watched the electrical parade and fireworks from GF; 2) checked out Trader Sams at the Poly & caught the electrical parade and the fireworks there; and 3) took a bus to Beaches and Cream and enjoyed that area. It was one of our best trips ever!
I don’t have a trip planned as of yet but I would be there tomorrow if I could! What are your thoughts on the big celebration that is “supposed” to take place next year for WDW’s 50th Anniversary? I wonder if that will be an all year celebration and if the new rides Ratatouille and Tron will be up and going. I really enjoy reading your tips! Thank you!
What are your thoughts on Park hopper tickets coming back? I see they are being offered in Jan 2021. Do you think they will remove this option?
I trust your opinion!
Just curious where you saw this? I JUST booked a trip for Jan 2021 a week ago and no park hopper as of then.
Are they offering bounce back offers for Disney guests? We have plans to go towards the end of this year and would love to take advantage of a bounce back offer for next year.
We were delighted to see this updated “best & worst months to go” as we are currently scheduled to go to Disney the last week of September and the 2nd week of December. Based on everything we have been able to review and know regarding the best times to attend, we too, had decided that these should be some of the best times to go; but it’s beyond reassuring to know that you recommend these times as well. We were last there February (23rd-28th) and it was beyond packed; prior to that we were there the week before Thanksgiving which was wonderful; both crowd wise and weather wise. So we agree with your analysis regarding those times as well; for what it’s worth to anyone else who may be planning to attend during those times.
Thanks for always keeping everyone up-to-date with the happenings at Disney. We appreciate it more than you will ever know! Your recent post, with it’s accompanying newsletter push notification, regarding the release of new AP hotel rates saved us well over a thousand dollars on our December trip alone! Additionally, we were able to re-book at one of our favorite hotels; saving us a huge hassle; specially after our original hotel is one of those that will not be opening this year.
Hi Tom,
I can’t find any info on this and I’m hoping you know the answer. Our favorite thing about visiting Epcot is World Showcase, but I heard that the international cast members were not present when the park opened in July. Do you know if (or when) they are back yet? We can’t imagine visiting World Showcase without the full cultural experience. Thanks! -Chris
Hi Chris,
We are here now and we have seen many international cast members present BUT not all of the shops are opened in the world showcase so it definitely feels like more of a ghost town than usual. The good trade off is low crowds, minimal wait times!
Hi Kelly,
Thanks for the info! Any idea what percentage of shops are closed? Is this affecting your World Showcase experience?
Thanks!
-Chris
We are scheduled to go with the grandkids the 3rd week of March so I hope you’re right about parades, etc being back. Love your posts!
Since I’m already booked for April next year, I was interested to see your take, and I’m a little disappointed that you have it so low on your list. We originally had booked May this year, but obviously that didn’t happen. My reasoning for moving it a few weeks earlier next year was a) it’s two weeks after Easter, so I figured the crowd rush would be lower b) the weather will hopefully still be pleasant and c) I’d like to avoid love bugs if possible!
My only concern with them potentially loosening safety measures circa March (which I would overwhelmingly welcome!) would be that there will be a sudden influx of visitors when I’m traveling, and Disney wouldn’t have had the time or the ability to implement new crowd control procedures (ie, FP+, or whatever will replace it) and we’ll be standing in long lines for everything. Hoping for the best though
I think you’re probably good for late April for the reasons you point out. (Easter is what drags the month down.)
Additionally, I would not be worried about Disney loosening safety measures in March. If that happens in March, it’ll result in a wave of bookings in Summer 2021 and beyond–not in April 2021. Most people don’t have the ability to book a trip on one month’s notice, so that’s not really an issue.
The wildcard will be how many guests who booked this April have already rescheduled for April 2021. I doubt it’s a significant enough number to impact crowds, but I don’t know.
Good point as usual, Tom. I know there will be a lag between people feeling safe and actually booking a trip, so I’m hoping for that sweet spot where things are better (in the world at large) but before it really starts picking up again.
We are booked for April 13-20 for the same reasoning. After Easter, during Flower and Garden, mild weather, hopefully low crowds. Pre Covid calendars showed it trending towards lower crowd levels that week. We also hoped by spring maybe meet and greets would be back.
I’m hoping it stays low, we wanted to avoid fall, due to the actual anniversary falling first week of October and the heat. We’ve been many times during September and early December. Wanted to try a different time of year.
Ok, so I’m on point. I picked those Sept (as always) and March. we had to cancel this years. That was by choice do to the virus and issues between what state is safe. Granted, NJ (home state) took the safe road (happy about) and we rescheduled. Since we didnt get to go twice (last year and this year) I was planning to book 2 trips in 2021. Thanks Tom for the update.
Hey Sir! Thank you so much for such an amazingly honest informative blog! We have been 5 times in the last 10 yrs or so. Our last visit was July. So hot!!! We are hoping to take our grandson (4) in late Feb early March 2021. With all the limits on activities and shortened hrs. due to Covid do you think it would still be a good time for him and us?
My family had originally planned to go to Disney World May 25-31, 2020. Obviously, that didn’t happen, and we have rescheduled for January 9-15, 2021. However, Covid-19 statistics have me rethinking going to Florida anytime soon. My first question is should any of the 50th anniversary celebratory events have started yet? How is this time of year in general? And, should it be safe to travel to Florida yet?
We are planning a trip, hopefully for 2021. We’re considering going last week of September or last week of November. It’s so challenging to plan anything at this point. Should we make reservations now, or wait?
Hi there,
We had planned to go to WDW from Nov 14-22 of 2020 but with covid and all of the new restrictions we will likely be cancelling/rebooking. I am wondering what dates you would recommend for that 3rd week of November timeframe or the sunday after thanks giving timeframe that you have previously recommended?….Also wondering if you think a spring 2021 timeframe could be a good alternative (like the first week of March or end of April).
Thank you 🙂
Kirstyn
End of February/first week of March have been awesome for us! That’s when we plan to go back.
We were planning to go to WDW the end of August this year now due to the covid-19 I’m changing my mind until 2021 or 2022 when I feel safe . So I think I will go the end of September now .but my question is will they still be offering any discounts on the Resorts, hotels and discount tickets and packages in those 2 year’s that I’ve mentioned ?
There’s no way of knowing what discounts Disney will offer that far in advance. Discounts are offered based on need and usually only a few months in advance. If attendance is slow, they typically offer resort or dining deals (though you can’t combine the two). If things are going well, they don’t offer as much. I get a military discount, for example, but we have to wait until the 25-28th of September to hear the military discounts for the following year. That’s because they have their budget & corporate meetings right before that. So if people stay away, they’ll be offering a lot to entice them back. If people canceling this year are rebooking for next year, they won’t need to offer much.
We made the mistake of visiting Disney World the first week of December. It’s a mistake we will never make again. We had gone to Disney the year before at the end of October and got spoiled. The crowds weren’t bad. Probably a 4-5 out of 10. But the first week of December was CROWDED! We had FastPasses for The Haunted Mansion ride and still had a 25 minute wait (which was way better than the 1-1/2 hour wait for those w/o the FastPass). We had to wait for the 4th bus to get to the park one morning because of everyone in line for the bus.
The first week of December if Pop Warner week. That’s when all the cheerleaders and football players of every age descend on Disney to compete at the Wide World of Sports complex. All of those kids and their chaperones are staying at Disney resorts and visiting the parks. When we went to T-Rex for their breakfast with Santa, they couldn’t keep the buffet stocked because of all the cheerleaders. Manager told us the day before had been even worse with 150 cheerleaders all trying to eat there at the same time.
If you want to avoid crowds, DO NOT go to Disney in December. Period. The first week isn’t free of crowds at all!
We are thinking of taking our 2 grandchildren aged 5 & 4 to disney world for Christmas but are worried if this is a good idea due to everything we’ve read about the crowds etc. Have you experienced disney at this time? Steven
When you say 1st week of December you mean Dec 1-5?
We were thinking of going the following week. I get what Tom was saying about the week starting the Sunday after Thanksgiving but we have to travel so I don’t want to travel Thanksgiving weekend which means we were thinking of Dec 5-13.
For those of you who are teachers, when do you typically visit Disney? My husband will start teaching this year so we can no longer go at the beginning of May like we’re used to. We aren’t really willing to go during spring break or at Christmas/New Years because of the crowds. That mainly just leaves the summer but we’re worried that it will be so miserable that we won’t enjoy ourselves. Any suggestions or advice? Thanks!
I’m a teacher too and love Disney! The first time we took our family I was on maternity leave so we went in mid November and It was obviously amazing. We did spring break one year. Never again. Our last trip was August 17-24, 2019. It was hot, but our family likes hot weather. We would get to the parks at rope drop and leave around 4:00-7:00 pm depending if we had dinner reservations at the park. We would head back to the hotel and spend the evening in the pool. We walked back to MK from the contemporary one night for fireworks, but the kids did not enjoy it (ages 4-12). They were just too tired. So if you value the evening shows this wouldn’t work for you. So many ride lines are air conditioned. We drank a ton of water and used cooling towels and fans. We had an amazing time! The crowds were sooo low! We value low crowds over heat and humidity and are limited on travel dates. We will go back in the summer. If we are ever in super hot and humid weather, my daughter sighs with a smile and says “It feels like Disney.”
Hi,
I am a teacher too, so I had to laugh when Tom wrote August is the worst time to go! That’s the only time I can take a week or two and go to Florida. My husband and I have gone twice in August and are planning a trip for August 2021 too. We don’t mind August weather–you just have to expect the heat and humidity. The cooling towels really help! Take a break in the middle of the day (pool or somewhere air conditioned) and make sure you drink a lot of water. We were lucky the times we went and didn’t have much rain. Enjoy your trip!
This is a fantastic guide! Thank you for all your insight.
I’m stuck wondering if we should reschedule our vacation to WDW planned for April 7-12 of this year. With the current Coronavirus uproar, I am trying to decide if we should just go and brave it (if they even re-open by then) or if we should plan to go later in the year instead.
What do you think this closure will do to the crowds in, say, September or even November?
We just returned from 5 days at WDW March 2 – March 6, and while this was supposed to be one of the best weeks of the year to visit, it was more crowded than I have ever experienced. We are Fla residents and annual passholders, and maybe it was others like us trying to hit WDW before Spring Break gets in high gear, but based on the crowd demographics it sure didn’t feel that way. It was just an accident that we happened to be there the week (and actually in HS the morning) that the new Runaway Railroad ride opened, and I’m sure that this added to the crowds levels, but we spoke with many families from Michigan who seemed to be overly-represented and who told us that this week was Spring Break. Maybe the Spring Break calendars are unusual this year because Easter is so late. Hopefully this was just an anomaly and the rest of the year plays out as the crowd calendar predicts (subject, of course, to the COVID-19 wildcard).
Regardless of the crowds, we had a great time, got to ride the new Runaway Railroad ride on our third attempt (it broke down twice while we were in 90+ minute lines), and got boarding group #40 (called at 10:04AM) for Rise of the Resistance following your recommendations. It’s kind of eerie how the entire park goes silent at about 7:59AM, and then pockets of cheering (and some groaning) breakout just after 8:00.