Review & Info: Disney Visa Credit Card by Chase

This Disney Visa credit card review covers sign-up bonus info, rewards, and perks, including discounts at Walt Disney World & Disneyland. It also compares the regular Chase Disney Visa vs. Premier, pros & cons of each card, and whether the Disney Visa credit cards are worth having. (Updated September 6, 2025.)

Disney Visa credit cards offer nice perks, special offers, and discounts (discussed in detail below), which is the primary reason to get them. Even though we’re huge Disney fans, we don’t think either of the Disney Visas are good primary use credit cards. This is especially true if you’re looking to earn travel rewards to redeem on Walt Disney World, Disneyland, or other vacations. In that regard, these credit cards are pretty weak.

For maximizing your rewards, see our List of the Best Credit Cards for Disney Travel. These credit cards instead are solid secondary credit cards to have in your wallet or purse, mainly for the benefits. Just be mindful that both credit cards are issued by Chase and thus subject to the 5/24 rule. That means you won’t be approved if you’ve opened five or more personal credit cards from any issuer within the past 24 months. With that out of the way, let’s compare and contrast the two Disney Visa credit cards.

The Walt Disney Company, Chase, and Visa have a multi-year partnership to continue offering the Disney Visa Card, Disney Premier Visa Card, and Disney Visa Debit Card programs. This continues the two-decade relationship of the three companies that offers Disney Cardmembers exclusive benefits, rewards, experiences, and perks at Walt Disney World, Disneyland, and beyond.

As part of this, the partners routinely change out the designs available to debit and credit cardholders. Unfortunately, the Disney100 metal credit card has been discontinued, and none of the current designs are metal. So if you already have that card, hold onto it as long as possible. The good news is that there are new designs, including one for the Disneyland 70th Anniversary, and we anticipate even more being introduced in 2026.

If you want to apply now, you can currently take advantage of a sign-up bonus of up to $300 in rewards dollars after spending $1,000 within the first 3 months with our referral link.

With that news out of the way, let’s turn to our normal review and comparison of the various Disney Chase Visa Card options…

Disney Visa Premier vs. No-Fee Cards

There are a few differences between the regular Disney Visa credit card and the Disney Premier Visa credit card, but the primary one is that the Rewards card has no annual fee and offers 1% rewards. (There’s also a Disney Chase Debit Card, which is totally different than what’s discussed here; we don’t use debit cards.)

The Disney Premier Visa has a $49 annual fee, but offers 2% rewards at gas stations, grocery stores, restaurants, and most Disney locations, and 1% everywhere else. It also offers 5% rewards on card purchases made directly on Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN streaming services.

Typically, the regular Disney Visa offers a $150 sign-up bonus whereas the Disney Premier Visa offers a $300 sign-up bonus. The basic card requires a minimum spend of $500 in your first 3 months, whereas the Disney Premier Visa requires spending $1,000.

In terms of redemption, the Premier’s rewards can be used for a statement credit toward airline travel and all things Disney. The regular card’s rewards can only be applied towards Disney purchases. Otherwise, perks and access to special offers are totally identical.

So the calculus as to which version you should get comes down to how long you expect to keep the credit card and how much you’ll use the Disney Premier credit card in the 2% categories. Setting aside the sign-up bonus, the breakeven point on rewards is over $4,900 worth of purchases per year in the 2% categories.

If you’re keeping the card for fewer than two years or longer but will hit the $4,900 threshold in years 3 and beyond, you should probably get the Disney Premier Visa credit card because the extra 1% in rewards will exceed the $49 annual fee.

I have only the regular version of the card because I’ve had it for approximately 15 years and only charge one recurring $14.99 per month expense to the credit card. As noted above, there are significantly better everyday use and travel credit cards; I have almost a dozen credit cards at any given moment, and use those instead of the Disney Visa. As with all credit cards, your mileage may vary.

Disney Visa Discounts & Perks

In addition to special offer eligibility, there are a range of discounts Disney Visa cardmembers are eligible to receive. Note that the vast majority of these are also available to debit cardholders, so if you don’t want the credit card (or can’t get it due to the 5/24 rule), that’s something to consider.

Here are the discounts:

  • 10% off merchandise purchases at certain Disneyland, Walt Disney World, Disney Cruise Line, and Aulani gift shops, as well as 10% off $50 purchases online at shopDisney.com.
  • 15% off tours at both Walt Disney World and Disneyland.
  • 10% off certain recreation at Walt Disney World.
  • 10% off certain restaurants at Walt Disney World and Disneyland.
  • 10% off Castaway Cay recreation packages for Disney Cruise Line.
  • 20% off select spa services aboard Disney Cruise Line.

Here are other non-discount perks:

  • Exclusive character meet & greet locations at Epcot and Disney California Adventure, both only available to Chase Disney Visa holders. The characters at these locations are “random,” and you don’t know who you’ll get before entering the locations, but at both locations only a few characters appear. (It’s currently a rotation of characters in their Walt Disney World 50th Anniversary outfits at Epcot, as pictured above.)
  • Exclusive Star Wars meet & greet locations in Disneyland and Walt Disney World (ending or being relocated as of September 25, 2025 at Disney’s Hollywood Studios).
  • A free PhotoPass photo download when you visit the characters at the exclusive meet & greets.
  • Discounts to Disney Broadway musicals.
  • No interest for 6 months on theme park or cruise packages when charging the package to their Chase Disney Visa prior to arrival if booked through Disney or by a Disney-authorized travel agent.

Additionally, it’s not a perk per se, but you can choose the design of your Disney Visa Credit Card from roughly a dozen different designs. It’s free and you can do so anytime. Plus, all Disney Visa Cards are now contactless and enabled for tap-to-pay. Right now, there are several different Star Wars Disney Visa credit card options, including Baby Yoda from the Mandalorian on Disney+.

For a while, three or four times a year we would receive notices via US mail or email that we could receive 3X or 5X rewards for certain purchase categories, such as gasoline, dining, or groceries if we spent over a certain amount of money per month. Sometimes, the thresholds were set sufficiently high that we would have had to spend more money than normal to reach them. Other times, the thresholds were quite low.

We most recently received one of these two summers ago. If we used the Disney Visa Card to pay eligible utility bills, we’d earn 4% on those bills, for a maximum of $500 rewards back. Not too shabby.

Disney Visa Special Offers

The main reason we have and recommend the Disney Visa credit cards is access to the discounts and limited-time cardmember perks. From time to time, there are special room discounts available exclusively to Disney Visa cardholders. These are typically better than the rates offered to both Annual Passholders and Florida residents.

Currently, there are no Disney Chase Visa exclusive discounts available for Walt Disney World (there’s one for Disneyland, but it’s not great). However, there have been several discounts for Disney Visa cardholders in the last couple of years, including early access to the popular Free Dining promotion, deeper room-only discounts, and more.

Normally, the biggest special offer that Disney Visa credit cardmembers are eligible for revolves around the popular Free Disney Dining Plan promotion. For several years, Disney Visa cardholders have received an extended selection of dates to book the Free Dining Plan deal at Walt Disney World, with extra dates or early access to the promo–meaning the best availability.

With pent-up demand being fully exhausted and Walt Disney World needing to do more to compete with Epic Universe, it’s likely more aggressive discounts are on the horizon and many of them will be targeted towards not just Annual Passholders and Florida residents, but also Disney Visa cardholders, Disney+ subscribers, and others.

This type of aggressive targeted discount has been happening more and more, which is a big reason why we advise holding onto a Disney Visa card if you’re planning on visiting the parks and staying on-site. There’s no way of knowing which affiliations will be targeted for discounts in 2026 and beyond. We’ll keep you posted, though!

Beyond Walt Disney Word, there are occasionally deals for Disneyland, Disney Cruise Line, and other Disney destinations. During the winter off-season, it has been common for Disney Visa cardmembers to save up to 30% on select rooms at Aulani, A Disney Resort & Spa in Hawaii plus a $75 Resort Credit per night.

The longer you stay, the more you save with this deal–3 night stays are eligible for 20%, 4 nights are eligible for 25% off, and 5 night or longer stays receive 30% off. We haven’t seen this deal released yet for Winter 2026, but it has been for the last several years, so look out for it.

In addition to these discounts, the no interest for 6 months on theme park or cruise packages can be huge. This is especially true at a time when interest rates are higher, meaning you could take the money you’d spend on a Walt Disney World vacation, and simply park it in a high yield savings account (or wherever) and let that money earn interest for 6 months before paying off your package.

Disney Visa Credit Card Review

The decision to open a new line of credit should not be taken lightly, and certainly shouldn’t be made on the basis of whether you will receive a “cute piece of plastic with a castle on it.” Opening a new credit card will have a negative short-term impact on your credit score, and poor credit card management can have disastrous results.

Using credit cards to earn rewards is only a pragmatic strategy if you can and will pay the balance of the card off in full each month. Otherwise, interest rates fully negate any benefit you may accrue from the card. However, I’m not here to lecture anyone, so I’ll cut to the chase regarding whether I think the Disney Chase Visa credit cards are worth having.

Unlike cashback credit cards or those with more flexible rewards, with the Disney Visa credit cards, you can redeem these Reward Dollars only for purchases you make at the theme parks, on Disney Cruise Line, or various other locations like the Disney Store or shopDisney.com. With the Premier card only, you can redeem Reward Dollars for airline tickets in the form of a statement credit.

When it comes to reward dollars, the Disney Visas are not good credit cards for primary use. Almost anyone with a reasonable credit score is eligible for cards that offer better returns, and are less restrictive on where you can spend the rewards. There’s allure in pulling out a cool Disney card to pay for purchases and in having part of your Disney vacation “free” thanks to these rewards.

However, what’s the difference between reward dollars specifically reserved for Disney and reward dollars that are usable elsewhere? If I get another card that offers rewards at Lowe’s at a rate of 2%, every $50 I could have earned in rewards by using the Disney Visa will be $100 at Lowe’s. Since I shop at Lowe’s anyway, I can set aside the $100 I would have paid in cash at Lowe’s in a “Disney fund.”

$100 for your Disney trip certainly should sound more appealing than $50 for your Disney trip, even if the $50 is on a “special” Disney card. My point here is that you shouldn’t let the psychology of the Disney Reward Dollars being “reserved” for Disney make the card overly-appealing. It can be a good credit card for Disney or for travel, but it’s not the end-all, be-all of credit cards.

disney-visa-credit-card

This does not mean that you shouldn’t get a Disney Visa card. The Disney Visa credit cards are great secondary or specialized use credit cards, namely for those who are serious Disney fans. The real benefit of the Disney Visa is the the multitude of other perks. The discounts at the parks, the non-interest for 6 months on Disney trips, and character meet & greets all have their allure, as well.

Since we only hold the Disney Visa credit card for its other benefits and not rewards, we don’t have the Disney’s Premier Visa. However, we also usually have 8 credit cards between us, and we charge very little to our Disney Visa since we do most of our spending with better performing cards. If you don’t expect to have many credit cards and think you’ll be able to hit the $4,900 threshold on the Disney Visa, we’d recommend getting that card.

Overall, the Chase Disney Visa presents sufficient benefits for most hardcore Disney fans to justify having one. It shouldn’t be your primary credit card, though, but rather one you store away in your wallet to serve as an additional line of credit. For frequent visitors of Walt Disney World or Disneyland, the perks alone can justify holding onto one of these Disney credit cards, and fans of the popular Free Dining deal at WDW can find the Disney Visa invaluable when it comes to booking that promo.

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

Do you have a Disney Visa credit card? Which one, the Disney Rewards Visa or the Disney’s Premier Visa? Do you take advantage of the perks these credit cards offer at Walt Disney World or Disneyland? Agree or disagree with our advice and credit card recommendations? 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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185 Comments

  1. I have had the rewards visa for a few years now, and I have a question. Are you able to pay things like your mortgage with this card and earn rewards on that? Or do you only earn rewards on actual purchases?

  2. I was just wondering if you can pay the Disney Visa card off with Disney gift cards? If so, I’ll get the Visa card and charge food and souvenirs to it and get the 10% off and then buy gift cards at Target for 5% off to pay it off! 🙂 Anybody try this before? Is it possible?

  3. you people use a credit card a whole lots more than I do, I’ve had myDisney visa for years, and the rewards are pitiful, we’ve gone to Disney world at least once a year, some years multiple times in the last 15 yrs, and my reward have been next to nothing, yes one year it paid for the rental of a golf cart at fort wilderness but other than a small gift card, there are really no rewards for spending thousands of dollars. To me it’s almost a joke, but yet I do use the card when free dining is available but rewards not so much

  4. I don’t really care for my disney card. I feel as though I do not get enough rewards or disney dollars as I should. I spent nearly 23,000 on the card in a 3 month time and my disney dollars are only 274. That is an issue. I also don’t see the discounts on my disney purchased on disney.com Nor did I see any extras for my family when we spent nearly 2 weeks at wdw, all paid for on the card at a different time. I think I am being cheated

    1. In order to get the discount at the Disney store you have to enter the DRV promo code at check out. If you don’t enter the code you don’t get the discount. DRVCMEMBER

      The discount in the gift shops is only for purchases over $50 and the restaurant discount is only at specific restaurants that are usually in the resorts. For both you have to actually pay with the card, not just your room key/ magic band linked to the card.

  5. I’ve debated getting this card a few times but never did because my primary credit card (PayPal) gives me more reward points and I can redeem them for Disney giftcards. None of the perks, except for the gift card for signing up, ever seemed like they’d be that big of a deal.

    I finally decided to get the rewards card today because I noticed the card also gives you 10% off at specific resort restaurants. We will be eating at Jiko, Sanaa, and possibly Boma on our trip in a few weeks. All of those offer a discount. The current giftcard offer for the regular rewards card is $50. I did the math and between the discounts and gift card I figure this card will save us about $100 and who can say no to $100?

  6. We got the Disney Rewards Visa about a year ago. As a family of 8, one of my favorite perks is the 6 months, no interest, to pay off an upcoming or current vacation. Of course a package of a WDW resort and tickets must be purchased to qualify for that special financing, but it does allow for some budget smoothing if we plan a trip more impulsively than usual.
    We went to WDW in February and there were character lines that were very long. (Not so great with 6 children). By having the Disney Chase, we were able to get into a line with only 1 family before us and were given at least 5 minutes with Mickey, Minnie, and Pluto, so our 6 year-old daughter could finally give Mickey and Minnie the picture she drew at home before our trip and toted with her all 6 days of the trip waiting for that opportunity. Finally! They were great with her. What wonderful memories and the 5×7 was excellent!
    With the bonus discount of 20% off many of the restaurants and 10% at the stores (with a $50 purchase), it is an excellent card to have handy, even if it is used exclusively for trips.

  7. Like janeo, I am trying to plan a trip in February 2015. This will be my children’s first time but I’m a single mom and on a very strict budget therfore I do not own any credit cards. My neighbor had told me to get the Disney Rewards Card but is it smart to charge the airline tickets, park tickets and the hotel on it when I’m planning on staying in a hotel outside of the resort? I don’t plan on going back to Disney World anytime soon. I plan on canceling the card and paying off the vacation once the trip is over.

  8. Hi there, we are planning a trip in Feb. 2014 for my sons 4th b day/first visit to Disneyland and California Adventure.

    Can someone explain how points are used towards a vacation package and/or tickets? Do you pay for everything up front and then it is taken off your statement or are you given a gift card to pay for the trip/tickets?

    Thanks in advance!

  9. Received invite for Disney rewards visa with a $200 gift card after spending $500 in first 3 months, missed deadline but was still going to try… Was wondering if worth it for a one timer to disney come December? Probably won’t be back! 🙁 would definitely be able to spend the $500. Already put down payment on another card though! Errrrr!

  10. We have used the Disney Chase for a few years to rack up points towards a trip. We took the trip in Feb and I put the balance on the card so I could use the 6 moths no interest. (I love a deal and pay my balance in full every month to avoid interest). I was disappointed to find out that since I have a “balance” I am being charged interest the moment I make a purchase with that card. Basically last month I charged $4100, I paid them $4400 towards the new purchases and portion toward the interest free balance… I was still charged interest. I called tonight and was told I no longer have 30 days to pay for new charges, I’m paying interest the minute I swipe my card as long as that vacation promo is there (of course, they’re not charging me interest on the vaca promo). There aren’t enough deals that make it worth that pain after a vacation, I’m paying the vaca off and canceling the card.

  11. I was just reading your blog about the Disney credit card. We are planning a trip in January 2015 and have not booked anything yet. Can you explain a little more about the free dining promotion? Does that still exist? Also, any updated advice on current promotions, credit card or otherwise? Thanks!

  12. I would love a Disney card but since I’ve sworn off credit cards for live (they became a problem and resulted in bankruptcy) I was wondering if there is a Disney Debit card. I would like to be able to put money on a card each month toward a trip to WDW and then have the convenience of a card while there. Do you know if there is such a thing? Don’t want to use a Disney Gift Card as the amount is rather low and would have to have many cards……

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  14. I would like to apply for a Disney Credit Card for my grand daughter who is 20 years and a full time student at FIU. The card will be in her name and I will guarantee payment. How can I apply for a credit card with the image of Tinker Bell. Please let me know. Thank you,

    Dulce Maria Aragon

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  16. Is the discounts at the Disney shops etc.. done on the card itself on the statement, or do you ask for the discount when in the store? I ask this because DVC members get discounts as well, so I wonder if you can combine the discounts or if it’s a one or the other case…

    Thanks and great article.

    1. Ask for the discount in store, and unfortunately, it can’t be combined with other discounts.

    2. Just to expand on this, on our recent visit our kids had gift cards to use and I was planning on purchasing everything in one transaction and paying the balance on our Disney Visa card for the discount because the overage amount exceeded $50. (I believe the overage was $150.) The cast member was unable to ring up with the discount in the same transaction as the gift cards. A manager even came out and tried to tell me I wasn’t eligible for a discount because of the use of Disney gift cards in that transaction. So I politely asked her to void the transaction and I had her ring up just enough to cover the gift cards in one transaction, then the rest in a separate transaction so I could use the discount. (It amounted to a fair amount so I was NOT going to just disregard it the way the manager wanted me to.)

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