Disney Character Warehouse Outlet Sunrise Store Permanently Closing Soon!

One of the Disney Character Warehouse clearance centers, which is an outlet store where Walt Disney World and DCL ship unsold merchandise to unload it at deep discounts, is going out of business soon. Here are details about the permanent closure of the Sunrise, Florida store located at the Sawgrass Mills Outlet Mall.
As basic background, there are three Disney Character Warehouse shops in Florida. Two of these are a short Uber or Lyft ride from Walt Disney World. One is on International Drive (4951 International Drive Suite 95, Orlando, FL 32819) and the other is on Vineland (8200 Vineland Avenue Suite 1252, Orlando, FL 32821). The Vineland location is closer to Walt Disney World, whereas the I-Drive location is closer to Universal Orlando Resort.
The third and final Florida Disney Character Warehouse is in Sunrise, Florida (12801 W. Sunrise Blvd., Sunrise, FL 33323) at the Sawgrass Mills Outlet Mall. This one is in South Florida, near Miami and Fort Lauderdale. You’ll need to take the Brightline from Orlando International Airport to access it from Central Florida (or drive, obviously). It’s even closer to the Port Everglades Disney Cruise Line terminal.
We were right there for a recent cruise aboard the Disney Destiny (and even had a rental car!), but honestly, I totally forgot at the time that Disney Character Warehouse had a location in Sunrise. Now I’m regretting that, as reports have emerged that the Sawgrass Mills location is permanently closing. I’ve never been, and have always been curious about how it differs from the two Central Florida stores.
Anyway, regular customers and Cast Members are both sharing reports that the Disney Character Warehouse in Sunrise will permanently close in two months. Here’s the latest…
According to Cast Member chatter, Disney has elected not to renew their lease with Simon at the Sawgrass Mills Outlet Mall. Per these Cast Members, the Disney Character Warehouse in Sunrise, Florida will close on April 15, 2026.
There’s a lot of speculation about the reasons for this online, but we’ll start with the most likely explanation, in our view.
Money. This is obvious, right? But we’re seeing a lot of speculation about the closure that, oddly, focuses on other things. Sometimes even pointing to things that are basically the opposite of money to explain the closure.
The bottom line, though, is that commercial leases are expensive and many companies have made the business decision to close brick & mortar locations. Even relatively high-performing ones. It could be a matter of Simon increasing rent, Disney not wanting to be locked into that location for another X years, realizing that they don’t need outlets outside of Central Florida, or even not wanting physical storefronts at all in the future.
Here, there’s the unique wrinkle that Saks Global Enterprises, the parent company of Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus, announced that it will now close its many of its outlet stores amid its Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Saks say they made the “strategic decision” to close the majority of Saks OFF 5TH retail locations and all remaining Neiman Marcus Last Call stores.
One such Neiman Marcus Last Call is one of the anchor tenants right by Disney Character Warehouse in Sawgrass Mills. So right away, that’s a major loss of foot traffic to the store, which is already tucked away on a far end of the outlet.
Other alleged reasons for the Disney Character Warehouse closure include an influx of resellers, personal shoppers, live streamers, and the distance from Walt Disney World.
This is where the supposed “explanations” for the closure lose me. Don’t get me wrong, I hate eBay piracy just as much as anyone. But this sounds very much like projection. People really need to get better about conflating “this thing I don’t like sucks” with “this thing I don’t like is objectively bad for business.” They are not the same statement.
If you’ve never experienced the eBay pirates pillaging and plundering at Disney Character Warehouse, how unpleasant it is cannot be overstated. I’d rather watch back to back showings of Beauty and the Beast: Sing-Along than visit the outlet on the mornings (it’s always the mornings) when these buccaneers are battling for booty. These eBay pirates are rude, aggressive, act entitled, and seemingly love to embrace their role as villains. It’s easy to see why so many fans hate them. I hate them!
However, as we’ve discussed previously, Disney tolerates eBay pirates precisely because they are good for business. Disney’s end game with Character Warehouse is unloading unsold merchandise. They don’t care how. Liquidating thousands of dollars worth of junk to an eBay pirate in a single transaction is more efficient than someone like me perusing the aisles for 30 minutes before buying $40 worth of heirlooms.
It’s a similar story in the parks with “collectible” popcorn buckets or whatever. The company could tighten up policies if they viewed resellers as a legitimate problem. For the most part, they don’t…so they haven’t.
There have been a few exceptions to this, such as when supply chain shortages were causing issues with empty shelves. Or when there was a crackdown on resellers using their AP discount to buy product in bulk.
To this point, the Disney Character Warehouse retail stores just instituted a stricter new return policy as to deter resellers.
As of February 2026, all sales at Disney Character Warehouse and Cast Connection are final, meaning nothing can be returned for refunds or exchanged. All sales are final and as-is, with no exceptions.
This new return policy actually is the direct result of resellers, who would exploit the previous policy by purchasing stuff speculatively, relisting it on eBay, and then returning unsold inventory to the outlet. This was savvy of the swashbucklers, as it reduced their risk. It also created extra work for Disney in processing the returns, managing inventory, etc.
And that is why the policy changed; because eBayers stopped being an efficient means for liquidating merchandise. Not because Disney suddenly hates pirates and is cracking down on them. The relationship is still very much a symbiotic one, Disney just wants to dictate the terms so it stays that way.
Honestly, I’m surprised the Disney Character Warehouse clearance centers still exist at all. It seems like the writing is on the wall, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the two Walt Disney World area locations close whenever their leases end.
For starters, there’s the bigger picture about brick and mortar shopping. Although malls are seeing a renaissance, this isn’t across the board. Outlets have struggled to recover in the last couple of years, and I’d assume this has worsened recently due to a drop in international travel.
At the same time, inbound visitor numbers for Orlando are booming, so I’m not sure whether this applies to those two outlet malls. It doesn’t really matter either way, though, as Disney doesn’t need Character Warehouse even if sales are strong.
This is because there’s the reality that Disney could cut out the middleman, reduce overhead, and have its own online outlet. As a certified dealhound, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve bought something on eBay that is via a company’s official outlet or a sanctioned third-party liquidator. On deal forums, this dynamic is well-documented, and users know precisely which (seemingly random) stores are the legit.
Even if Disney Character Warehouse is still getting plenty of foot traffic (and based on my experiences, it very much is), online outlets are cheaper and more efficient. There’s no lease for a storefront, staffing and other expenses are lower, and the global customer-base is exponentially larger than the Central Florida one. This is precisely why eBay pirates are able to achieve their markup–because they are reaching a wider audience, selling for actual free market rates.
I’d also add that the optics of eBay pirates are bad for Disney. Even if they’re good for business, I’ve been somewhat surprised that Disney hasn’t cracked down more on pirates. Photos of pirates inevitably make waves on social media whenever a new collectible is released, and there’s always outrage among fans. I guess Disney sees that most fans blame the pirates instead of the company for condoning it, so it’s allowed to persist. But the bottom line is that Disney could put an end to eBay piracy overnight.
On a positive note, Disney Character Warehouse does not have the same issue as other “factory stores” that actually sell lower-quality items that are made specifically for the outlets. This has become a common practice in the last decade or so, and is another reason we dislike the outlet mall experience.
As more outlet stores have been built, it’s simply not possible for them all to carry overstock or past-season items. Instead, they’ve adopted the lower-quality factory store strategy to offer illusory discounts. In reality, you are paying less, but you’re also getting less. We share this here because many people may be unfamiliar with this paradigm shift at outlets, and as a blog heavily focused on saving money and getting deals, we think it’s pertinent.
This is to say that something you buy from the Banana Republic Factory Store, for example, was never sold in a retail Banana Republic, and is more like Old Navy-quality. Most stores, from fast fashion to luxury designers, are all playing this same game. If you’re buying for the status symbol or having a label emblazoned on something, outlets are fine (I guess?), but if you’re buying for quality, they’re generally awful.
Ultimately, that’s why we haven’t been to the Disney Character Warehouse outlet in a while. We used to go at least monthly, and weekly for a while back when we first lived in Florida. I even wrote monthly outlet reports! But it just stopped being fun thanks to the proliferation of eBay pirates and livestreamers. Selection became more hit or miss, and the store itself was more of a hassle.
Disney Character Warehouse is just unpleasant and not worth it much of the time. I’d happily pay ~20% more via an online outlet operated or sanctioned by Disney. (I have not, and will not, support pirates on principle.) It would be worth the premium pricing just to save the time and expense of visiting the Orlando outlet malls. It would also give more fans a chance at purchasing unsold inventory without the excessive markup. Feels like the everyone wins outcome, except for the pirates, but I assume we’re all fine with that.
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Your Thoughts
What do you think of the permanent closure of Disney Character Warehouse at the Sawgrass Mills Outlet Mall? Have you ever gone to the one of these clearance centers? What have your experiences been with eBayers, lines, virtual queue wait times, or souvenir selection at the stores? Find anything good, or did you think it was a waste of time? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing feedback about your experiences is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!










While I agree that there should be no ebay piracy in large bulk amounts and no returns allowed at the outlets to control that trend, I wouldn’t lump in the live streamers with them. The streamers show the merch to those of us that live far away and give us a live opportunity to buy. They don’t just grab huge piles (usually) then return what doesn’t sell. it’s sold live to the viewers, so they aren’t just using disney as a wholesaler and then dumping it back on them. I would be sad if I couldn’t watch and buy remotely. and the ones I watch are nice people.
I’m late to this party, but wanted to point out that outlet stores actually had good deals on good merchandise many years ago. I used to live in Virginia where Potomac Mills Outlet Mall was the number one tourist destination in the state.
Back then, retailers really would send overstock to their outlet stores at significant discounts. Outlet stores became victims of their own success. The retail stores selling the merchandise at full retail rebelled. They were furious. Customers were literally avoiding their stores hoping for better deals at outlet stores. And they could usually them.
But the outlet stores were too popular to simply shut down. That’s when manufacturers came up with separate, lower-quality lines of merchandise specifically for their outlet stores.
Yeah, no bueno.
Ugh! I’m bummed to hear this (but glad you shared!) we were planning on going to it prior to our cruise on the Destiny in June, I guess that is scrapped now.
Oct 1, 2021.
MK is packed.
All day lines were 2 1/2 to 4 hours long…for the stores.
The rides were practically walk-ons.
That night, when we were leaving, we saw people grabbing at the beautiful and free limited edition commemorative poster that CMs were trying to hand out one per person in an attempt to get more. We saw families sending their kids back to different CMs to get more and going themselves to different CMs pretending they hadn’t gotten one yet while their spouses or children hid back in the shadows clutching multiple postera and learning their lessons well.
Disney, who did almost nothing to honor Walt and Roy, made sure to cash in by providing plenty of one day special merchandise.
Many people, poor or rich, are this way. Be glad that you are not. I feel compassion for them for they know not what they are missing. Do not allow the behavior of others to affect your happiness.
And above all do not hate anyone or anything.
I wonder how much of their inventory is ebay worthy as a collectible worth a 20% markup. For me, most park disney merchandise is only worth it at a discount as the genuine merch quality is usually pretty low and the prices are very high. So, for me, and probably a lot of non-collector familes on vacation, the alternative isn’t ebay; it’s amazon, the targets near the parks, or even cheap junk gift shops. I don’t need charachter warehouse, but I wish the disney parks had some merchandise at more affordable prices, especially common souvenirs like t shirts, magnets, and stickers (and unrealilistically pins under $10).
I doubt Disney has plans to open an online outlet store because they actually had an online outlet store in the UK for a couple of years, and shut it down a couple of months ago.
My daughter is sad about the closing – she’s been to the Orlando stores and says the Sawgrass Mills one was better. She also lives near a Target in VA that gets a lot of Disney Parks clearance items. I’ve had reels come across lately of new Disney merch showing up at a Goodwill thrift store near Sanford, I think? I suppose Disney doesn’t want to start their own online outlet for fear of cannibalizing their Disney Store business.
I was sad about this too, but I’m shocked that the Sawgrass store could be better!
I’ve been making regular trips to Fort Lauderdale the last few years to help family. The couple of hours I take to visit this store was my reward for facing the other anxiety and stress, and I’ll miss the anticipation of that.
Previously, I bought beautiful Christmas ornaments or ceramic HM themed snack bowls, but I didn’t purchase anything on my last trip. I don’t know if they were starting to wind down the supply chain or it had been ransacked by pirates, but the stock there that wasn’t overpriced was nothing special- something you’d see at a Target or Disney store.
Please thank your daughter for me. If the ones in Orlando are not as good as Sawgrass, I know not to bother.
Does this pirate thing happen at Halloween and Christmas parties too/is it worth it for normal guests to try and buy special merchandise?
Yes. Whether they can make any money on it is another question though. I saw a bunch on ebay for the recent Disney marathon…and then Brooks hard launched everything two weeks later so people had a bunch of shoes no one wanted to pay a $100 premium for. I suspect they will make their money back eventually, but its not the quick return they were expecting.
Comment specifically on ebay pirates: We did several Disney cruises, until we went on a Disney “first” cruise (first cruise to Alaska) and the ebay pirates soured the experience for us. The greedy pigs bought up everything and then used Q&A sessions to complain about not getting enough merchandise (which meant enough to sell on ebay). When something new was going to be released at the ship’s store, they lined up all the way down the stairs hours in advance, getting in the way, and even tried to get room service to deliver to their place in line. Some who did eat in line just left their mess behind in the hall or on the stairs.
We haven’t been on a Disney cruise since. Frankly, we shudder at the thought of doing a DVC cruise because we are concerned that this sort of thing happens there too.
I’ve had a very similar experience to this and can confirm for anyone else that you’re not exaggerating. Ditto in the parks. It’s to the point where I avoid stores on release day for any collectibles because they’re so abrasive. There’s nothing I want badly enough to endure that souring experience.
What I think Disney “misses” in viewing pirates as a positive (because revenue) is how they negatively impact the guest experience for others. Sure, fans may blame the pirates instead of Disney (even though both are at fault) for the encounter, but it’s still a negative experience at a Disney venue, and that’s not a good thing!