Money Saving Tips for Discount Disney Gift Cards

This covers our best money-saving tips for buying discount Disney gift cards via Target, Kroger, BJ’s Wholesale Club, Costco, Sam’s Club, Meijer, Best Buy and beyond. Some deals offer big savings for your Walt Disney World vacation, while others are smaller but easier.
Since we are pretty big on stretching our vacation dollar with all sorts of travel hacks, we thought we’d share some of the best methods for scoring discounted Disney gift cards. Some of this might sound complicated and intimidating, but it’s really easy once you get the hang of it, and the upside is so tremendous that it makes the effort of learning well worth it. With all of these gift card deals, we’d recommend trying to stack savings via credit card purchase portals or cashback sites. Chase, PayPal, American Express, etc. all offer bonus savings from time to time.
As good deals come and go, we update this post with the best options for saving money on Disney gift cards. Some of them are convoluted and have limited applicability. Others are open to everyone but have stricter purchase limits. Regardless, this is one of the easiest way to save money on Walt Disney World vacations–and one of the few that is “stackable” with other discounts.
Normally, 10% off is a great deal on Disney gift cards–even if gated behind a membership at one of the club stores. We jump on discounts offering that degree of savings, especially since virtually every Disney gift card deal has limits. You’ll typically be capped at $800 at the most worth of gift cards with any deal, and often limits are far lower than that. It’s very easy to spend $800 at Walt Disney World (let alone $200 to $400). That’s one day (at best?) in the parks!
Usually, the best sales happen between mid-November and mid-December and then again during Christmas in July sales (or Memorial/Labor Day). We’re now past the first sweet spot, and have a while to go before the second.
Hopefully you all were able to take advantage of the ‘infinite money-saving glitch’ on the Early Black Friday Disney Gift Card Deal at Target, and don’t need another deal. You’ve already maxed out your gift card buy for 2026 Walt Disney World vacations.
If not, and still have gift card “needs” for the first half of 2026, it’s time to lower your standards from that 10% threshold. We share all of the gift card sales, so subscribe to our free email newsletter for a heads up when more Disney gift card deals go live. Here’s the latest.

March 2026 Disney Gift Card Deal
There’s a new gift card deal via shopping portal bonuses for Giftcards.com. Topcashback and BeFrugal are offering 8% cashback on the following brands: Home Depot, Airbnb, Sephora, Southwest, Delta, Lowe’s Nordstrom, Marriott, TJ Maxx & HomeGoods, and (most relevant for our purposes) Disney physical gift cards.
Fine print: Orders over $2,000 are not eligible for cash back. Cashback eligible on sales up to a net of $2,000 in any given calendar month. Sales above this value will be adjusted out by the retailer.
Note that Disney and other gift cards eligible for this deal are not discounted, and purchasing discounted gift cards voids the cashback. Basically, the cashback is the discount here.
To each their own, but I do not view this cashback offer as “worth it” unless you have a trip coming up soon and have no better options. Something is better than nothing, I suppose. If you have more time, waiting for a better deal is probably the better course of action. We use a lot of cashback portals, and the big issue is that tracking is not perfect.
If you’re wondering what other options occasionally exist for saving money on Disney gift cards, we have a rundown below. Note that these are not always available–they come and go. If you click a link and full price gift cards come up, you’re not missing anything–the deal isn’t being offered!

Costco
Costco Wholesale sometimes sells Disney eGift cards for ~10% off, but we don’t see any Disney gift cards currently available. Stay tuned!
When this deal is offered, you need to be an active Costco Member and signed in to your account to purchase at sale price. This is delivered via email, so the recipient’s email address must be supplied in email field on the Shipping Address page.
There’s a limit of 2 Disney gift cards per membership. These can be combined with other gift cards via Disney’s online management tool. We’ve seen scattered reports (with hit or miss results) of some Costco members being able to make two different transactions, each with 2 gift cards in them.
It seems like you’re more likely to be successful if you have a membership with multiple members on it, each having a unique ID. Or if you place one order one day, and another the next. Regardless, don’t be surprised if your second transaction is unsuccessful. (We haven’t heard of anyone managing 3 or more orders. Two is the max.)
Sam’s Club

Sam’s Club sometimes runs sales allowing members to purchase $200 Disney gift cards for $180–or 10% off–to be delivered electronically. This deal is online only and while supplies last; prices may vary in club. When there isn’t a special promo, it’s typically $190 for $200. Better than nothing, but not a great deal on its own.
Note that this is an eGift card, and it will be emailed within 48 hours of purchase. It also also supposed to be limited to 4 per membership, but in the past that has not always been enforced. Readers have reported subsequent orders not only going through but also being fulfilled–effectively making this 10% off an unlimited number of gift cards, which is huge.
We saw someone say they bought over $3,000 of gift cards without issues during this deal last year! But just because it has worked before now doesn’t mean it will now, or even in a few hours or days. These limits seem to be very glitchy and success varies almost by luck. So expect to be able to purchase 4 discount Disney gift cards–anything beyond that is unexpected icing on the cake!
Note that even if gift cards are only nominally discounted at Costco or Sam’s Club, you can still potentially turn this into a good-to-great deal if you have a Discover card. For the first quarter (through March 31, 2026), Discover is offering 5% cash back on purchases at Grocery Stores and Wholesale Clubs, on up to $1,500 in combined purchases after you activate the bonus. Login to activate your bonus categories on your Discover account to earn rewards.
Of course, this is only a deal sweetener if you wouldn’t otherwise hit $1,500 in the ordinary course of your spending at grocery stores and wholesale clubs. Even with only one toddler to feed, I’m pretty sure we’ll clear that bar pretty easily without adding Disney gift cards given the current cost of groceries! As always, YMMV.
Best Buy

Another currently unavailable but frequently repeated discount is Best Buy offering 10% discounts to My Best Buy Plus or Total members. For those who are unfamiliar with it, this is essentially their version of Amazon Prime, offering expedited shipping and access to exclusive sale prices.
It’s also not uncommon to find discount Disney gift cards are sold at Best Buy without the need for a BB+ membership. That’s happened multiple times for Black Friday or Cyber Monday, with the retailer selling $50 Disney gift cards for $45, or a savings of 10% off.
Where this deal gets really sweet is if you have If you have any Chase credit or debit cards (or the Best Buy card), as many of these have targeted offers for 10% cashback at Best Buy. That should be stackable with this offer, making the discount even better.
In terms of fine print, you’re limited to one Disney gift card per transaction and account, although some people have reported success placing 2 separate orders or buying more with different accounts. Others have had their subsequent order(s) cancelled, not that we know from personal experience or anything. Basically, it’s YMMV after the first order.
Target REDCard

The Target REDcard gets you an automatic 5% discount on any purchase at Target, including gift cards. Among other things, Target sells Disney gift cards both online and in-store, making for a simple way to save 5% on your Walt Disney World vacation.
There are also frequently Target Circle Bonuses that give members rewards and extra savings with just-for-you bonuses. Note that these are targeted (kind of like Disney PIN Codes), so not everyone will receive them. One of these was incredibly common last holiday season during the excellent deal mentioned towards the top of the post, and we just had another in early 2026 that turned a “nothing” deal into over 10% off. But this is YMMV.
If you don’t have a Target Red Card it might be worth getting one just to take advantage of the discounts on gift cards. Consider this: many Disney fans are Disney Visa cardholders (a fairly crumby credit card, honestly) because of the Disney perks. However, by virtue of this one deal, the Target Red Card is unquestionably a better card from a rewards perspective for Disney fans.
It may not have Mickey Mouse’s picture on the card, but the Target REDcard gives Disney fans (who know how to use it) greater rewards. You can also take advantage of it with the Target Red Debit Card, which can be a good option for those who don’t want a credit card…or another one.
Kroger Fuel Points

For those of you near Kroger grocery stores, this is one of the better “everyday” ways to save on Disney gift cards (well, technically, you’re saving money on gas, but it’s because of the gift cards). Normally, every dollar you spend at Kroger earns 1 fuel point, or 2 fuel points on gift card purchases. However, Kroger offers 4X fuel points from time to time, which really sweetens the deal.
For every 100 fuel points you redeem, you save $0.10 off every gallon of gas (up to $1/gallon off) you purchase on a single fuel purchase. The precise value of this deal varies based upon how large of a gas tank you’re filling (and how empty your tank), so obviously those with trucks and larger vehicles are going to do better here.
Let’s say your gas tank has 25 gallons of empty space: the normal offer could be worth $25 for every $500 spent (5% savings). With the 4X deal, you’re looking at 10% savings. Stack this with a credit card that earns extra at grocery stores, and this can be one of the best deals out there when the 4X bonus is available.
While we use this for Disney gift cards, like many of the offers here, the same theory can be applied to a variety of other stores, including Target, Lowe’s, Southwest Airlines, GAP, iTunes, and Visa. Note to be mindful that the generic ‘Visa’ gift cards have an activation fee, which more or less kills the deal.
Meijer Mperks

If you live in the Midwest or one of the other regions in the United States with Meijer stores, they often run $5 off $50 promos on gift cards. When available, this is limited to a total of 10 rewards purchases–or $500 in gift cards–per Mperks account. (Meijer routinely runs this offer, usually multiple times per year.)
This means you can purchase a single Disney gift card for $500 and you’ll earn ten rewards of $5 (or $50 total) to use on future purchases. This essentially makes it identical to some of the better warehouse club deals, but without the membership requirement–the only catch here is that not everyone has Meijer stores near them.
BJ’s Wholesale Club

Similar story here as with the other warehouse clubs–Disney eGift cards are discounted from time to time. Unlike Sam’s Club and Costco, these are not usually 10% off–they’re random prices, like $24.49 for a $25 gift card or $141 for $150.
Those savings aren’t as good as what you’d find at the other warehouse/wholesale clubs, but there is one important thing to note, which is that BJ’s occasionally loads coupons into accounts and those can be used on gift cards. So if you have one for $10 off $125, suddenly that $150 gift card is potentially more attractive! (Of course, that means not using the coupon on something else, so there is opportunity cost.)
There’s also the reality that most households don’t have memberships to multiple wholesale clubs, and this is better than nothing. Also that limits on gift card deals may mean that you buy the “good enough” savings after maxing out the best deals!
Warehouse Clubs

Even easier than the Kroger Fuel Points is the discounted Disney gift cards Sam’s Club and Costco sometimes sell. These gift cards (or packs of gift cards) aren’t always available, and when they are, the savings are usually 4-6%, but if you’re not too keen on the other methods (or don’t have Kroger near you), it can be a “better than nothing” scenario.
This deal can be sweetened if you have a Chase Freedom credit card, as wholesale clubs are one of the rotating 5X categories (this quarter, in fact). Speaking of credit cards, make sure you have the correct credit card when visiting your warehouse club of choice (Sam’s Club now accepts Visa; Costco stopped accepting AmEx). You don’t want to have to pay in cash, causing you to lose out on that bonus!
Cashback Portals

Another way to sweeten the deal is by combining the gift card churning with cashback shopping portals. There are a variety of these, and the percentages of cashback they offer can vary based upon what promos they’re offering, and the product purchased. I like to use cashbackmonitor.com or evreward.com for a quick “at a glance” comparison of the cashback portals.
I use cashback portals fairly regularly, but this typically does not hold true when it comes to gift card churning. Many retailers exclude gift cards from their cashback offers, and while you can still game the system to get cashback on gift card purchases (although they are technically excluded, the retailers and cashback sites often do not effectively communicate as to the substance of the order), it’s inconsistent.
More importantly (for me, at least), I’ve heard stories of people being blacklisted from certain online retailers as a result of “manipulating” the cashback portals for their gift card purchase rackets. This is another “your mileage may vary” situation, so consider giving it a try for greater savings.

This is another option that can be leveraged in myriad different ways, and with cards that have nothing to do with Disney. If you’re really serious and/or crazy, you could go full circle and apply the principles gleaned here to do manufactured spends. I’m not going to go into further detail on that, as the line between that type of churning and “gift card laundering” is a thin one. Both sides of that “line” are totally legal, the latter might cause some headaches.
With all of these strategies, I’d recommend not doing this too far in advance of your trip; if you’re doing any of this 3 years in advance, you aren’t beating the system at all–you’d be better off making actual investments given typical ROI and the time value of money.
I’d also recommend not tying up more money than you can afford to be stuck in limbo; if you’re paying interest on credit cards to fund this, you’re also losing in the grand scheme of things. Finally, be careful. While all of this is perfectly legal, businesses aren’t exactly “fans” of customers exploiting their policies. If you are cycling a lot of money through any retailer solely in gift card purchases, you might draw some attention to yourself, and risk catching their ire.

With all of that said, good luck leveraging these Disney gift card hacks to save a little more money on your Walt Disney World vacation! With a little work, these strategies can be incredibly valuable and make those exorbitant prices a little more palatable. Once you learn the ropes with using these tactics for Disney, think bigger picture. There are entire blogs and websites devoted to travel hacks, including churning, manufactured spends, etc. Once you get the hang of it, the possibilities are almost endless.
Likewise, if anything sounds confusing, feel free to ask questions–everyone starts from the beginning, and my explanations as someone who has been ‘hacking’ for a while might be insufficient for walking beginners through these processes from start to finish.
Need Disney trip planning tips and comprehensive advice? Make sure to read Disney Parks Vacation Planning Guides, where you can find comprehensive guides to Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and beyond! For Disney updates, discount information, a free download of our Money-Saving Tips for Walt Disney World eBook, and much more, sign up for our free monthly newsletter!
Your Thoughts
Have you tried purchasing “discount” Disney gift cards to cut the cost of your vacation? Any other strategies you’ve used to save for a Walt Disney World trip? Questions about any of the techniques we’ve shared? We love hearing from readers, so please share some of your favorite ways to save, or any other thoughts or questions you have, in the comments!

I spent much of March doing this dance and “earned” over $600! The extra trick I’ll offer is to also buy Amazon gc on eBay. My household spends A LOT of money at Amazon each month, so to take advantage of eBay Bucks promos, I bought about $800 in Amazon cards and put those into our account. Also, within the Disney Store gift card site (where you can check balances), you can “manage” your cards by combining balances. I have one “master” card (Evil Queen) that I add my Target or eBay purchased smaller balances to so I don’t have to juggle as many pieces of plastic.
Hi I was wondering if you could explain the eBay Amazon stuff? Sorry to be dumb. I buy on both sites. I looked on eBay and all the gift cards are selling for more than than what they’re worth. I’m confused. If you don’t mind could you spell it out?? Lol! Thanks, Sherry
If you can get the special eBay Bucks offers, you can get up to 10% cash back on what you purchase, so if you find a card selling for just 5% over value, you’ll make out; even more if you are “buying” with a discounted eBay gift card ( that you bought at a discount off Target with a discounted Target card you bought with a cash back credit card…). So, as an example, I bought a $500 Amazon card for $525, but got $50 back from eBay, so I came out ahead. The eBay Bucks accumulate quarterly.
I ‘m a little confused about one thing, are you saying that you can put any gift card on the Disney gift card ?
No. Through this site, https://www.disneygiftcard.com/Manage, you can have one “master” Disney gift card, and transfer the balances from other Disney gift cards to it so you only have to keep track of one. Especially handy if you are buying them in smaller increments as part of these other strategies.
Whoa. How did I not know this about managing gift cards?! This seems like a very basic piece of info that was somehow a gap in my knowledge. Learn something new everyday, I guess. Thanks for sharing!
Here in Kansas we have Dillon’s supermarkets, which are Kroger markets branded with the name of a long-time local chain that Kroger bought out. Same loyalty card, which I have used at Kroger around the country. One apparent difference is that 4x gas points is the norm here when buying gift cards. One holiday season it was 6x. The fly in the ointment for using gas credits to save is that the credits expire at the end of the month following the purchase. Be sure that you can actually use the gas in time, or you will be losing some of the benefit.
I pride myself on money-saving deals like this… and yet somehow I didn’t know about Ebay Bucks. You learn something every day – thanks!
Everyone give Tom a break, please. He is merely the messenger and trying to save us some cash! Here’s my experience. I got a Disney Visa and earned a $100 credit on my 1st statement, with which I bought Disneyland hopper tix through a travel agent. I saved about 3% by buying through them and an additional 5-10% (can’t remember the discount) by using the Disney card. Then I used my Amex card (3% cash back) to buy Disney gift cards at Safeway and used the gas rewards to save on gas. I’ve done this every week when I buy groceries and nothing has been flagged. If you don’t go nuts all at once it shouldn’t be a problem at all.
I agree. Lets not ride Tom because he is trying to save us money. This is not news. Plus this site is about things to do at Disney and ways to save Money. Other sites and forums cover tips on saving money. I already went and enjoyed shopping on raise. My first cards are on there way.
We just returned from WDW and funded our trip this way – however, we upped it to 15% savings – which totaled about $750 for us – not chump change! Back in December, right before Christmas, Target offered their store gift cards for 1 day only at 10% off – we bought $5000 worth of cards using various credit cards, debit cards, etc. and lots of registers – took us about 45 mins. We then used those gift cards online at target.com, combining it with our Target Red card – all you need to do is pay some portion of the total order with your red card to get the 5% discount – we ordered the max on the disney cards – which was 4x $50 and 3x $100 gift cards – plus a small item – i.e. eos lip balm, shaving cream etc…by using the target gift cards and combining with our red card (x about 25 transactions) we amassed enough disney gift cards to fund our recent vacation at approx. 15% off.
They did run out of stock on disney cards so I was glad I wasn’t doing this in a rush. We even told our WDW travel agent (specialist) and she did the same for her August trip. Totally worth the effort. With the savings, we saw La Nouba, took the kids parasailing and were able to give the kids alot of spending money (doesn’t go far in WDW)…well worth it!
Pretty sure Target has caught on to this since they’ve stopped selling Disney gift cards online. They’ve been “out of stock” for weeks now. I just purchase the $50 gift cards in the store when I’m there and still get the 5% off.
Thanks for the info! I’ve had a target card for ages… Because of you, I just bought gift cards, and saved money! Thanks.
This stopped working recently, the 5% didn’t come off the purchase with a Target red card. Now, Target hasn’t carried the Disney Gift cards in stock for a while. Too bad, I guess this doesn’t work anymore! Oh well
A blog, where a good deal goes to die.
LJ is right. If you get caught doing this you will be banned. I wouldn’t put stuff like this out there. Not to mention last time I ordered my cards got lost in the mail and wasn’t issued a refund. Never again!
Shhhhh. Let’s not spoil this one! It would be very easy for Target to take that 5% away like they did recently. Let’s not give them a thousand more reasons. 😉
Be careful with this every one. I have been banned from Target.com forever because I was flagged as a reseller. I ordered what I assume is a reasonable amount of gift cards for someone planning a Disney trip and all of a sudden al my orders were being cancelled and then when I called they said I was banned for life. And it’s not as easy as opening up another account in my husband’s name or anything like that. His account and his redcard were immediately flagged as well.
Another great post. Looks like I need the Target credit card. The 3.5% you save on the first gift card purchase and then the second purchase for the Disney card with the extra 5% percent will all add up. I know its not a straight 8.5% savings but even at around 8% that’s a great deal. Every little bit helps.
I usually go right to Sam’s since they take a little bit off on every purchase.
Great post, thank you!!
Will these giftcards work at Tokyo Disney?
We completely paid for our last trip and our funding our current trip by utilizing our local grocery store’s fuel perks program. They offer $.10 per gallon of gas for ever $50 you spend, up to 30 gallons and often offering 2x that on gift card purchases. We get free gas and then use our Disney gift cards to pay for our trip.
I’m going to research this now. I shop ALOT at Kroger. I’ve only used my perks for gas, had no idea you could use them other ways. I’m interested in how all this works!
Latest reports on disboards say the “Target.com trick” will not work – you will NOT get 5% off using a Target gift card (but pretending to use your Red Card as payment)
I’m not sure if this is what JIm was referring to but if you’re post an affiliate link, be upfront about it with your readers.
How old is that info? I know there was an issue in the last ~2 weeks with the REDCard 5% discount loading online, but that was a glitch in the system. Last I saw, it was working a few days ago. (Gift cards are out of stock now, so I can’t test it to say definitively.)
I’m pretty sure Jim is referring to keeping hacks like this on the DL so that retailers, credit card companies, etc. don’t close the loopholes. I see comments like this pretty regularly on the non-Disney blogs I follow (some people on FlyerTalk actually write in code to prevent newbies from learning techniques), and I think it’s absurd. If it’s already on Disboards, FlyerTalk, Boarding Area, etc., you can bet that Target, eBay, Visa, etc. are all well aware of what’s going on. Everyone knows the score here, and this won’t change anything.
Loopholes *are* closed over time, particularly when companies find ways to close them without impacting the majority who don’t exploit the systems. However, it’s not as if the CEO of Target is reading this blog and learning about a loophole that’s existed for at least 5 years, thinking, “Well gee whiz, this is on DisneyTouristBlog.com? Now we HAVE to stop it!”
It’s true, in the last week, the 5% wasn’t working. Today, I placed a Target order and it worked just fine.
Target, when I look, doesn’t sell Disney gift cards online. I would have to go in store to purchase.
They do, and this would be the link: http://www.target.com/p/disney-gift-card-100/-/A-18768298#prodSlot=medium_1_2&term=disney+gift+cards
Apparently, they’re out of stock right now.
Thank you for the clarification! Have I said my girlfriend and I love y’all? You gave us great tips and tricks! We are going to Be Our Guest and Cinderella’s Royal Table for my May 4th birthday!
It’s saying “only sold in stores” :(…might this change? I hv target gc I planned on using for disney card purchases
Out of stock or stopped selling online?
It’s blog posts like this that could blow this system in the longterm. Hope the short term ad sales for this page are worth it.
Ha, okay? You realize there are entire blogs (many much more popular than this one) devoted to this topic, right? The few people who take advantage of these strategies from this aren’t going to “blow” anything.
It’s not as if Target and other retailers are clueless as to what’s going on. Even with numerous popular travel/money-saving blogs reporting on this, the vast majority of customers are still clueless.
This blog post is “worth it” because it shares another money-saving tip with those who are trying to do Walt Disney World on a dime. That’s one of the major themes of this blog…
Hey Tom, this is a touchy one for me. On one side I want to share the vast knowledge of “gift card hacking” with my fellow Disney enthusiasts and on the other hand I’m concerned, like the post above, that these types of blogs will be the end of our long time “secret” savings society. You are right, there are a lot of places that tell you how to do these, and they are growing by the day. My suggestion would be to buy as many gift cards as you can afford right now and put them in a DVA (Disney Vacation Account). These types of “hacks” won’t be around for long so everyone should take advantage while they’re still available.
I kid. you. not. This morning I said out loud “I wonder if I can save a few dollars on our Disney trip with gift cards…I’ll have to check out the blogs and see if anyone’s written anything on it.” First stop four hours later, your site. Talk about timing. 🙂
Tom,
If you have a reservation already and have to pay it up to a certain date. Will disney allow you to put money in the savings account to gain the 2% back?
So long as you have the money in the account for 120+ days at the time of spending it to pay for your reservation, you’ll receive $20 gift cards for every $1,000 spent.
Does all the money need for trip to be on account 120+ days to get the bonus gc(s) or just an open account with min amount of money in it for 120 dsys?