Best & Worst Times to Ride Guardians of Galaxy Cosmic Rewind

Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind has switched to a standby line and joined the Early Entry ride roster at EPCOT. The Marvel roller coaster has one of the highest wait times in all of Walt Disney World, which has a big impact on park strategy & itineraries. This post covers when to do & avoid Cosmic Rewind for the shortest waits, with recommendations for Early Entry, rope drop, midday, nighttime, ExEH, and more.

This best & worst times guide for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind is based on comprehensive on-the-ground field testing and “ride research.” That includes over a dozen turns on the attraction via the standby line, as well as a lot of time spent observing the inflow of guests through both the regular line and Lightning Lane Single Pass (which is obviously the best play for a short wait if you don’t mind spending the money).

It’s supplemented by wait times data and historical precedent, but it’s less reliant on that than normal. If posted wait times told the whole story, this article would basically be the following: do Cosmic Rewind at the beginning of the day or end of the evening, and avoid the middle of the day. However, posted wait times do not tell the whole story, and sometimes aren’t even directionally accurate. Hence this lengthier post providing Cosmic Rewind strategy, zig when they zag advice, etc.

For starters, we want to “warn” you. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind ended its virtual queue during Walt Disney World’s shoulder season. This resulted in below-average wait times for the first couple weeks that the ride had a standby line. That made early reports of standby trends unrepresentative of overall patterns.

As opposed to doing my field testing then, I waited until spring break. This included multiple days in EPCOT, spread over two different weeks. The first of these was disproportionately college students on their recess, whereas the second was seemingly out-of-state tourists. With another shoulder season right around the corner and summer also likely to be less busy than the crowds I encountered, my experiences might also be unrepresentative of overall patterns. But I’d rather overestimate than underestimate–better to be pleasantly surprised than disappointed.

Suffice to say, Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind’s standby line and demand dynamics will continue to evolve over the course of the year. Wait time trends and crowd patterns will continue to change in the coming weeks and months, especially once Test Track 3.0 debuts, and thereafter whenever the next EPCOT ride goes down for reimagining.

Regardless, there are clear conclusions we can draw about standby lines and wait times at the Marvel roller coaster. Here’s a rundown of the best & worst times to ride Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind…

Best: Early Entry (Front of Pack)

Before EPCOT officially opens for the day, there’s Early Entry, which is offers 30-minute access to guests staying in on-site hotels at Walt Disney World. (See our Guide to Early Entry at Walt Disney World for more info & strategy.)

EPCOT usually opens at 9 am, which puts Early Entry at 8:30 am. If you want to be at the front of the pack, you need to arrive almost an hour before that, by around 7:45 am. Complicating strategy is that EPCOT has two park entrances, one at the front and one in World Showcase (International Gateway) near the France pavilion. As a general matter, it’s easier to be at the front of the pack for Cosmic Rewind from the front entrance, whereas it’s easier to be at the front of the pack for Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure from International Gateway.

In my tests from the back entrance, I was able to make it close to the front of the pack from International Gateway…but not close enough. This front of the pack approach is also a tad stressful, as you stand in a mass of people waiting in the breezeway between Connections Cafe and Creations Shop. While covered and theoretically shaded, the morning sun will also be shining directly in your eyes.

The goal of being at the front of the pack for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind is to be on and off the ride in under 30 minutes, beating the rope drop crowd for your second ride of the day. If you don’t want to ride twice, you may want to consult the second strategy. See Beating EPCOT’s Early Entry Crowd to Guardians of Galaxy Cosmic Rewind from World Showcase for my attempt at this from International Gateway.

Best: Early Entry (Back of Pack)

Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind is now the most popular ride during Early Entry, but most guests show up at or before the 30 minutes starts, with a slower trickle of guests during that time. It’s also a rather efficient and high capacity roller coaster, which means that it’s processing more guests than there are new arrivals and the line is typically decreasing in length, if only slightly, over the course of Early Entry.

Some might also have the perspective that “waiting is waiting,” so arriving at 7:45 am for Early Entry adds another 45 minutes to whatever your eventual wait time is. Being at the front of the pack for Cosmic Rewind might result in a 15 minute wait in the physical line, for a total of a 60 minute all-in wait.

By contrast, being at the back of the pack might result in a 40 minute actual wait in the physical line, which is actually 20 minutes less total time spent waiting since you didn’t show up at the crack of dawn in order to “hurry up and wait.” Honestly, in all of the testing I’ve done, this is my preferred approach for Cosmic Rewind. It’s lower stress, less time spent standing in direct sunlight, and more time to sleep, which means staying out later.

In order to be at the “back of the pack,” you simply need to beat the rope drop rush to Cosmic Rewind. This means arriving for Early Entry “on-time” (or thereabouts) and making it over to the line by around 8:55 am. See Easy EPCOT Early Entry Plan for Low Waits at Guardians of Galaxy Cosmic Rewind.

Worst: Regular Rope Drop

Otherwise known as official park opening time, when a rope is dropped allowing regular guests to access all the areas of EPCOT, rope drop occurs after Early Entry. This means that on-site guests will already be in the park, and in line for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.

Rope drop has the exact same dynamic as Early Entry, but exaggerated since more guests come from off-site. Meaning that in order to be at the front of the pack, you’re going to need to arrive ~45 minutes before official park opening. But unlike Early Entry, this doesn’t put you at the front of the line for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind–you’re behind the Early Entry guests are already in that line!

So there’s one of two scenarios here. You arrive ~45 minutes early to be at the front of the pack and wait for regular rope drop, then encounter another ~45 minute line (perhaps more) for Cosmic Rewind, making your total wait ~90 minutes. Or you arrive right on time for regular rope drop and are at the back of the pack, having a total wait time of also around 90 minutes. Perhaps a bit less, maybe more.

One reason why this herd of guests is all doing Cosmic Rewind is because they’ve consulted resources indicating that this is one of the best times to ride. Another is looking at posted wait times, which still reflect a relatively reasonable wait. Both are wrong.

Rope drop is theoretically a good time, if you’re at the front of the pack and don’t account for the early time you arrived. The posted wait time also isn’t bad, but the problem is that it’s rising. If you’re at the back of the pack, by the time you make it over to Cosmic Rewind, the line will be longer, even if it’s not yet reflected in the app.

This is where the importance of field testing comes into play. If you look at wait times data in a vacuum, as other resources do, they’ll tell you one thing. But that doesn’t account for the practical realities of visiting. Again, I actually went to EPCOT and did this testing. Unless you can teleport to the front of the Cosmic Rewind line at 9:00 am, this is not a good option.

On top of everything else, there’s also the opportunity cost of rope dropping Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. Which is to say that even if you can hit it at rope drop with a 90 minute posted wait time as opposed to a 120 minute wait later in the day, you’re sacrificing Soarin’ Around the World as a walk-on or Frozen Ever After with a shorter wait (ditto Test Track when it reopens). Meaning that you will instead be doing those later in the day when their posted wait times are much higher.

Suffice to say, off-site guests should target less popular rides rather than being tempted by the siren’s song of Cosmic Rewind. It isn’t worth it when considering the bigger picture. Zig when they zag.

Best: Mid-Morning

Yes, really. Conventional wisdom is that the middle of the day is the worst time to ride any popular ride, and that’s partially true. Before that, there’s a lull for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind during the middle of the morning. There always is for these headliners. For the most part, the lull occurs sometime between the second hour the park is open and lunch. It occurs as a bit of an accordion effect, as people start seeing the posted wait time imbalance and avoiding the attraction in question.

And then suddenly, it drops dramatically. For example, Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind might have a 120 minute wait at 9:30 am while almost every other attraction at the front of EPCOT is at 30 minutes or less. Soarin, in particular, becomes a big draw at this point because it’s another popular ride that’ll have longer waits later. The logical guest thus avoids Cosmic Rewind and does something else. That happens en masse, producing the aforementioned dynamic.

This is also why guides covering the best & worst times to ride that are based solely on wait times data get this wrong. If looking at the numbers, it’s a terrible time to do Cosmic Rewind! But in actuality, there’s a window of opportunity that opens once enough people have balked at the 2-hour wait (or whatever it is), preferring to ride something else with a shorter wait or not wanting to conflict with lunch.

It’s really difficult to time this, but the sweet spot with Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind appears to be occurring right around 10:30 to 11 am most days. Even when the posted wait time hasn’t dropped, we’ve noticed a lower in-flow of guests to Cosmic Rewind around this time. You’re not going to have a low wait time now by any means, but the opportunity cost is also lower–Cosmic Rewind’s actual wait time will be falling, whereas Soarin’s actual wait time will be rising, regardless of what the posted wait times reflect.

Worst: Midday

Not much explanation is needed here. After grabbing lunch, more guests will be willing to wait in a longer line for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. From a mix of observation and data, the peak time waits resume from around noon to 6 pm.

Honestly, I’m not sure this is truly the worst time to do Cosmic Rewind. The middle of the day is busy everywhere in EPCOT, and there’s something to be said for a shaded wait while everything else is busy, too. Consider the qualitative, not just the quantitative side of things.

Best: Pre-Dinner (Maybe?)

Another thing to consider is the possibility of another pre-dinner lull. I wasn’t able to do sufficient testing to confirm this, but it’s typically the case with most other attractions. EPCOT especially has a dynamic where more guests head to World Showcase in the afternoon, decreasing crowds at the front of the park.

As such, 5 pm might be a great time to line up–especially if it’s still sunny out and you’d like a reprieve from the heat and don’t want to sacrifice nighttime hours to ride Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.

Worst: Early Evening

As noted above, most guests head to World Showcase in the afternoon and early evening, which results in the front of EPCOT hollowing out and wait times falling. This dynamic happens to an extent, albeit less pronounced, at Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.

The “problem” is that early evening is also when locals arrive after work and school, and many of them love Cosmic Rewind. (Pretty much everyone loves Cosmic Rewind. It’s why you’re reading this, as opposed to “Best & Worst Times to Ride the Seas with Nemo & Friends.”) Along with this, there are regular ole tourists who want to do Cosmic Rewind before getting their fireworks spot. Both result in an uptick in inflow.

On top of that, an interesting observed dynamic is an influx of guests to the Lightning Lane from around 7-7:30 pm nightly. The exact time seemed to vary slightly, but there was frequently a backup at the Lightning Lane touchpoints around then. I don’t know how to explain this.

Perhaps Disney sells more slots for this timeframe than the rest of the day, recognizing that standby is usually less popular in the evening? It’s possible more guests are returning all at once, wanting to be done before fireworks? Maybe inebriated guests having more troubles scanning than normal?

Regardless of the explanation, the actual wait times in early evening are worse than you might expect–with the posted wait time being closer to accurate (as opposed to inflated). It’s not truly one of the worst-of-the-worst times to do Cosmic Rewind; it just is far from the best, as you might’ve been led to believe.

Best: 30 Minutes Before Park Closing

My favorite time to do any attraction at the end of the night. I discovered that a variation of my normal strategy, discussed in the next entry, is optimal from a blended subjective/objective perspective.

I didn’t test every 5-minute increment towards the end of the evening, so I’m not exactly sure where the sweet spot is here, but let’s just say it’s about 30 minutes before park closing. The downside to this approach is that you’re going to miss Luminous and end your evening in the former Future World as opposed to World Showcase.

The upside is shorter wait times. Walt Disney World doesn’t stop lines for attractions until park closing, which means you can queue up right until the clock strikes midnight (or EPCOT’s case, 9 pm). This effectively extends your day and is when the actual wait time is lowest for Cosmic Rewind. Given this, you might conclude that the best time to queue up is 8:59 pm. (It’s not–see below.)

When doing this, you will want to ignore the posted wait time. Not only is it reactionary, but also because Disney deliberately inflates wait times at the end of the night to discourage guests from getting in one last ride. The other upside to this is that the Lightning Lane closes at 9 pm, meaning that once those guests are processed, it’s all standby–so the line moves faster.

Best/Worst: Buzzer Beater

Our tried and true approach for any headliner attraction is getting in line 1 minute before park closing. This is like the reverse rope drop, or ‘rope rise’ option. (We like to think of it as the “buzzer beater” approach.)

I tested this twice and that was enough for me. I will never do Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind again in the last few minutes before park closing, and certainly wouldn’t subject my family to it. On both occasions, I was sandwiched among ‘Drinking Around the World’ parties that sounded and smelled drunk. There was an above-average number of guests “catching up” to their parties because, from what I overheard, they had gone to grab more drinks.

I’d like to think I’m not a prude, but the experience was subjectively worse getting in line at the last minute like this. And while I recognize that this is entirely anecdotal and I could’ve just gotten unlucky twice, I could see plenty of other parties while walking through switchbacks. Suffice to say, the guests around me weren’t the outliers.

On a couple other evenings, I literally saw guests running from World Showcase towards Cosmic Rewind at ~8:55 pm to make it to the ride before the line closed. From what I could gather, there were a lot of groups using the ‘buzzer beater’ strategy to Drink Around the World for as long as possible and then jump in line for Cosmic Rewind at the absolute last minute. This is to say that actual wait times are also objectively worse at 1 minute to park closing versus 30 minutes. (Posted wait times are inflated in both cases, so I’m just going with my gut and observations here.)

Obviously, this is a to each their own type of thing. If you are also Drinking Around the World and think the convivial atmosphere of the Cosmic Rewind queue at 8:59 pm is your scene, by all means, do that instead of 8:30 pm. Or if you just don’t care and it makes more sense with your schedule.

It’s also possible that my testing suffers from selection bias, having occurred during spring break. Maybe during summer, fall, or the holiday season, it’ll be a totally different dynamic. I do suspect the last minute influx (versus 30 minutes) will probably hold true, even if the subjective side doesn’t.

Another annoyance later in the evening (not unique to the last minute) is that guests are more likely to shout answers that aren’t family-friendly when asked, “what do they call themselves?” Moreover, in the pre-show, guests disrupt the experience and barge through the doors to exit early (which accomplishes absolutely nothing–you’re just waiting in another line longer).

Best: Extended Evening Hours

I’ve now done Extended Evening Hours at EPCOT twice since Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind switched to standby. This is probably the trickiest one to pin down, as there were ride breakdowns during both of my nights that messed with crowd dynamics.

Regardless, I’m pretty confident that the best time to jump into line for Cosmic Rewind is at the very end of Extended Evening Hours. Even if the line is shorter earlier in the event (and it probably will be!), opportunity cost is once again the name of the game. Doing Cosmic Rewind in the first hour of ExEH will consume a ton of time–time that could be spent walking onto other attractions. Instead, jump in line at the bitter end, effectively extending Extended Evening Hours and pushing your wait–whatever that might be–beyond the end of the offering.

Another good approach is doing Cosmic Rewind at the very beginning, before or during Luminous, and then backloading Frozen Ever After and Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure. Since those two are more kid-centric attractions, their wait times will almost always drop in the last hour of ExEH. Just beware breakdowns, as they can throw a monkey wrench into everything.

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YOUR THOUGHTS

What’s your optimal approach and time of day to ride Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind? What would you recommend to Walt Disney World first-timers? Will you stick to standby at one of the ideal times or buy a Lightning Lane Single Pass for Cosmic Rewind? Do you agree or disagree with any of our strategy? 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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21 Comments

  1. We just had two days in EPCOT last week and I didn’t listen to your advice the second day and we got in line at the end of the day. My family and I were surrounded by a lot of groups of people that had too much to drink, talked through any of the lead up so you couldn’t hear anything, and pushed and shoved as the doors opened leaving our family separated. This is something Disney needs to deal with if they want to be a family park. At 8:45 pm I should be able to ride a ride with my kids and not have that experience – it felt like the bar scene in my 20s – not a family vacation kingdom.

  2. Hi Tom! I just wanted to say thanks and let you know that your theory of waiting for then”sweet spot” worked amazingly well for us the last two days… this morning we rope-dropped Remy, rode Soarin’, and then got in line for Guardians (50 mins posted) at 10:17. We were seated on the ride after exactly 30 minutes, including the pre shows! Yesterday at MK we rope-dropped Space Mountain and it called on 5 times in a row then rode Tron and waited about a half hour. Thank you so much!

  3. Hi Tom. During your testing entering via International Gateway, were you able to ride Remy in EE and make it to Gardians ahead of the front entrance rope drop crowd? We will be staying at The Boardwalk in August and think this will best approach for us (assuming Test Track isn’t open by then). Thanks for everything as always…

    1. Yes, I was.

      However, I was front of the pack at Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and walked as fast as I possibly could to Cosmic Rewind and barely beat the rope drop crowd there. I cannot stress this enough: I can walk very quickly.

      That’s the whole reason I didn’t end up writing that one up–I doubt 97% of guests could replicate my results.

    2. Thanks Tom, maybe I forget that idea. I’d rather not have to power walk in August heat and humidity! Will come up with a new plan…

  4. Thank you Brother.

    My apologies if I missed it – what WERE your wait times during your Extended Evening Hours testing?

    My kids and I love Guardians so much that we will be Early Entry rope dropping it AND paying the LL $$$ to ride it a second time during the day (in a separate post of yours, I commented that was why Disney took it off Virtual Queue – people like me! Why give away for free the VQ reservation when they can use the same capacity to charge for it and make extra $$$ from people exactly like yours truly).

    Depending on how much time your testing showed the Extra Magic Hours wait to be, we might line up for a third time – we will be there on one of the days when the park stays open until midnight.

    Thank you!!
    P.s. totally unrelated – fom photos it seems you & S carry Megatron to most places. I am curious that if you sometimes park a stroller if you too have yet experienced the Great Disney World Stroller Shuffle(tm) by castmembers? More than 50/50 we would return to where we had parked the stroller, only to find it was not where we left it because ours (and many others) had been moved elsewhere by a castmember.

    Thanks!

    1. My waits were 29 to 43 minutes during ExEH, and then I don’t have times for the end of night attempts because the ride broke down. Those are usually shorter, though.

      Keep in mind that if you’re visiting during summer, ExEH is busier due to weather–even if daytime crowds are lighter.

      We mostly use a stroller now because Megatron is too big to wear comfortably. And oh yes, we’ve had our stroller moved many times! AirTags are our friend!

  5. I can think of an additional metric upon which to grade these times: the probability of hearing some Main Character respond to Terry Crews’ rhetorical question in the first pre-show. (Can they please just alter the script to remove it..?)

    1. As with the pre-show door pushing, this is much more likely to happen later in the evening–and the responses are sometimes not entirely family-friendly.

      On a positive (?) note, one time several drunk (I assume) guests all responded to the prompt at the same time, drowning one another out and making it impossible to understand what any one of them had said. So that was nice.

    2. I feel this way about Guardians AND Rise … the “responders” ruin it for the rest of us – even if we’ve been on the ride 20 times, we still want to feel the magic. Please stop!

    3. I have heard people respond with the oh-so-not-clever “alcoholics” at every time of day, including 11 AM.

    4. Not saying the clock needs to strike a certain time in order for that response–it’s just much more common from late afternoon on.

      Early entry and rope drop are much more likely to be excited first-timers and families–also not saying those guests don’t ride at night, but they’re less common. The vibe is generally better in the morning. At least, in my experience. There are always exceptions.

  6. Let me indirectly endorse the end of the pack early entry strategy. While we did not do this at Guardians, this past Tuesday morning we did it at Slinky Dog. We started at RnR Coaster, rode it, and were headed to Tower. It wasn’t running yet so we headed to Toy Story Land and noticed SDD had a 30 minute wait posted but the line was short. Our total wait was less than 20 minutes, so we inadvertently used this back of the pack strategy.

  7. A recent observation from earlier this week……the impact of people who have apparently been “drinking around the world” is noticeable. On Monday and Tuesday of this week we were knocked around and practically trampled by large groups of drunk ladies. Without spoiling the ride, as soon as the “explosion” in the show room (right before the Guardians appear) occurs, these ladies screamed and ran en masse towards the doors, pushed them open, and ran past the cast member. It was a bit frightening how quickly the mob ran after them.

    Tuesday evening, the same scenario played out. Thankfully, a cast member was standing beyond the doors and sent everyone back in. In talking with them as they masses left we learned that this is becoming a more common occurrence.

    Sadly, repeat riders are treating the preshow with such disdain that it is becoming all but impossible for a first-timer to even hear and comprehend the story line.

    1. Sorry to hear that you had this experience with the pre-show. Unfortunately, it’s incredibly common–especially later in the day.

      I’d add that busting through those doors doesn’t even accomplish anything! You’re just rushing out to wait in a longer line before boarding! The attraction was designed to pulse people through the pre-show, and break up the waiting.

  8. When I was there on 4/14 for EEH, I ducked into the line for GotG as Luminous was about to wrap up, and I pretty much walked the entire queue as if it was a LL. There was barely any delay getting to that first room. Would definitely recommend this approach.

    I tried this strategy a couple nights later at Tron Lightcycle Run and it did not work out for me at all. Ended up taking 90 minutes from entry to exit after getting into the queue while the fireworks were still going. That was not an experience I would repeat. If I hadn’t been with someone else who was committed to getting that ride in and not staying until the final half hour of the night (which we ended up doing, more or less anyway thanks to the queue being longer than advertised), I would have left the line. I do wonder if something else was going on that night, because there was no one there to scan my MagicBand to make sure I was allowed to attend EEH, and I wonder if that meant there were a lot more people in the queue than would be there during a typical EEH toward the end of fireworks.

    1. I think the difference is probably that Luminous starts at park closing, whereas Happily Ever After usually does not. (On the day you were there, I assume Magic Kingdom closed at 11 pm to regular guests and HEA was at 9 pm, with ExEH from 11 pm to 1 am.) So Cosmic Rewind would’ve been restricted to ExEH at that point, but not TRON.

      I actually did TRON Lightcycle Run one night earlier than you (so non-ExEH) during fireworks, and the line was definitely not THAT long. I don’t remember what it was since this wasn’t for research, but it had to have been under 45 minutes. So you had an element of bad luck, too!

    2. Okay. That was the issue. Despite all my planning, I managed to overlook that MK closed at 11 instead of 9 and that EEH started at 11. I must have seen the 11pm closing time and thought it meant the end of EEH. What a miss. If I had realized what we were actually up against that night, I would have coughed up for the LLSP because I just can’t do lines like that. It was rough.

  9. How far outside the building does the standby line usually extend? I’d be curious to see what a long wait looks like compared to a short one.

    1. General rule of thumb is that it’s a short line if it’s not out the door or if there are only a couple of outdoor switchbacks in use. Even that can vary, though, if there’s a LLSP backlog.

      I’d expect to see shorter lines for Cosmic Rewind going forward now that it’s shoulder season–but I haven’t done any testing yet this month (and won’t until after Memorial Day).

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