Disney World Confirms Grand Floridian Gingerbread House Won’t Appear This Year.

Walt Disney World has confirmed that the Grand Floridian Resort will not offer its iconic Gingerbread House for the 2026 holiday season. This might sound like old news, but the first guest-facing announcement differs and offers more room for optimism for Christmas 2027 and beyond than what was previously revealed.

Let’s start with quick background. The life-sized Gingerbread House at the Grand Floridian was a staple of the holiday season for 25 years, and celebrated its 25th Anniversary in 2024. That was the busiest we’d ever seen the lobby for the Gingerbread House, with fans turning out in full force and spending freely on not just the shingles and other snacks, but also the large, limited edition merchandise collection.

We’ve come to view the Gingerbread House at the Grand Floridian somewhat like the Cinderella Castle Dream Lights: an investment made by Walt Disney World that paid big dividends in terms of sales. Not necessarily in the booking of trips or resort stays, but via PhotoPass, food & beverage, merchandise, and more. Given the perpetual line at the Gingerbread House, I would hazard a guess that it did tens of thousands of dollars in revenue daily.

Gingerbread House Cancelled Due to Construction in 2025

Fast-forward to last year, and the multi-year Grand Floridian reimagining project finally resumed after a lengthy hiatus. With that, Walt Disney World announced renovations to the lobby and revealed the new Birdcage Bar.

Here was the construction warning bulletin for the Grand Floridian that was posted last year when work on the lobby bar began:

As part of the ongoing enhancements at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, refurbishment work will continue in select areas through mid-2026. Guests may see or hear work during daytime hours. Efforts will be made to minimize disruptions, and most pools, dining, and other amenities will remain available for Guests to enjoy.

As renovations continue at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, the gingerbread display will not be available during the 2025 holiday season.

Last year’s notice is potentially relevant here, as we take a look at the updated construction bulletin…

Grand Floridian Construction Bulletin (July 2026)

Walt Disney World has now issued its first public statement confirming the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House will not appear for Christmas 2026. This comes via an update to the construction warning notice posted on the hotel’s official website (and elsewhere).

Here’s what that Grand Floridian construction bulletin says as of July 1, 2026:

Renovations at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa will continue in select areas, including the covered entrance, through early 2027. Guests may see or hear work during daytime hours and may need to take alternative routes.

From mid-July through October 2026, Grand Floridian Cafe will temporarily close for a refresh. During this time, brunch will continue to be offered at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, but it will temporarily move to Cítricos. All other dining locations at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa will remain during the renovations.

This holiday season at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa, Guests can enjoy elegant seasonal décor and festive offerings, along with new miniature gingerbread displays featured throughout the Resort. To help keep the lobby flowing smoothly for Resort Guests, the traditional large gingerbread house will not be offered this year.

The last paragraph is the new one. While the project was previously slated to wrap up by now, it has since been extended to 2027 as work continues on the front entrance (and soon, Grand Floridian Cafe).

There is no work currently being done to the lobby, nor is any expected. That project was materially completed with the debut of the Birdcage Bar last November. Nevertheless, the word choices here are curious and a slight contrast to what Walt Disney World previously shared with us about the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House. Here’s that below, from last week…

Grand Floridian Gingerbread House Retired

Walt Disney World confirmed to DTB that the iconic gingerbread house at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa will not return to the flagship hotel for Christmas 2026. The edible display has been permanently retired according to Walt Disney World.

The gingerbread display did not appear last year due to construction in the lobby. And although more work remains ongoing at the Grand Floridian until early 2027, we have confirmed that this is not simply another one-year cancellation. The Grand Floridian gingerbread house is gone for good according to Walt Disney World.

Walt Disney World also confirmed with us that, in place of the gingerbread house, the Grand Floridian Culinary Team will create new small gingerbread displays that will appear around the hotel. No further details were provided about these exhibits, but we expect more to be revealed closer to the start of the Christmas 2026 season.

Walt Disney World further shared with us that changes to the gingerbread displays are unique to Grand Floridian. Other resorts, such as Beach Club, BoardWalk, Contemporary and Animal Kingdom Lodge, are still expected to offer their typical gingerbread displays. Further details about those will likewise be shared at a later date.

Hope for the Future?

Let me preface this by saying that I don’t want to give false optimism. My belief remains that the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House is gone for good. I first shared that perspective last spring, when the one-year hiatus was announced, on the basis of simple space and logistics constraints. Unless they’re removing the Birdcage Bar (doubtful), it’s hard to see that changing.

However, it is also very curious that Walt Disney World’s first guest-facing statement on the Gingerbread House comes via a Grand Floridian construction bulletin. That feels purposeful, especially since the lack of the display has absolutely nothing to do with construction. Its absence is more a benefit than a burden for guests booking stays at the Grand Floridian, and thus wouldn’t typically be in such a bulletin.

If you were reading that bulletin for the first time without any background knowledge, it would be reasonable to conclude that the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House is on another one-year hiatus for Christmas 2026. The surrounding context of construction impacts, coupled with references to lobby flow and ending with “this year” all reinforce that. If the display were being permanently retired and the goal were conveying that to guests, it’d make sense to use stronger language.

I have no inside information here, but this notice strikes me as a way for Walt Disney World to ‘soften’ the original news that was shared with media outlets, and leave the door open for the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House to return at Christmas 2027. Most guests get their “news” directly from Disney, so this is all they’ll ever see.

Speculating further, I wouldn’t be surprised if Walt Disney World has received an unanticipated volume of complaints to Guest Relations, social media backlash, and longtime guests indicating that this might cause them to cancel their Christmas-time trips. They obviously didn’t expect this news to be well-received, but it’s nevertheless possible that the negative fan reaction exceeded expectations.

If that’s the case, it’s entirely possible that high-level leadership is already scrambling and wants to walk back the decision, or at least leave themselves some latitude to pivot for Christmas 2027.

To be abundantly clear, I have absolutely no clue what conversations are happening internally, but none of this would surprise me given basic familiarity with the machinations of Walt Disney World plus where this guest-facing statement appears, and how it’s phrased.

Something like the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House would involve multiple internal departments and stakeholders, often with competing interests. As we noted in our last post on this topic, there have been complaints from overnight guests about the lobby crowds, chaos and noise for years. It’s not a new thing. However, Disney had ‘tolerated’ those complaints because of the revenue generated by the Gingerbread House. It is possible that the fan complaints about this news have emboldened those internally who want the display to return.

I’d also add that Walt Disney World has a new incoming President (see Walt Disney World’s New President is Precisely Who We Wanted in the Position), and there’s a lot that could change or be undone once he takes the helm later this month. By that point, it’ll likely be too late to bring back the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House for Christmas 2026, but next year would definitely be a possibility.

More broadly speaking, we’ve seen several “permanent” policy decisions in the last couple of months that could be quickly undone with new leadership. Few things are truly permanent at Walt Disney World (unfortunately, filling in the Rivers of America is one of them).

Gingerbread Displays Relocating?

Since specifics about other Walt Disney World gingerbread houses are still to come, there’s the possibility that the GF gingerbread house will move to another resort entirely. In which case, it wouldn’t be “moving” so much as it would be Walt Disney World retiring one display and introducing another.

This has already started to happen. For the last few holiday seasons, Animal Kingdom Lodge has had edible animal displays. These have grown in scale and size, but still are not “big enough” to justify a dedicated trip from most guests. Introducing an actual Gingerbread Lodge (a la Humphrey’s Lodge from ~6 years ago at Wilderness Lodge) would tip the scales.

I had hoped that the solution would be to move the gingerbread house to the Grand Floridian convention center. That would’ve lessened the impact on overnight guests of the Grand Floridian, while largely preserving the revenue stream. Of course, it would’ve had impacts on weddings and other events, while still burdening the infrastructure.

Another possibility is Walt Disney World shifting the Gingerbread Houses to whichever Disney Vacation Club resorts they’re trying to sell. Incentivizing visits to Fort Wilderness over the holiday season with a cool display would be savvy as the campground really shines at Christmas-time. “Oh, by the way while you’re here, tour this new model DVC cabin that we’ve conveniently located in the Settlement!”

When it comes to Christmas 2027, there’s also Disney Lakeshore Lodge that’s potentially on the table. While transporting guests to and from that massive resort presents logistical hurdles to overcome, I would not be the least bit surprised if Walt Disney World and/or Disney Vacation Club wants to get potential purchasers out there (sorry, guests) to see the resort and make the DVC plunge.

They’ve got 967 units to sell, so there’s a massive financial incentive to draw prospective future members (sorry, guests again) out to Lakeshore Lodge. Marketing materials are one thing, but there’s no substitute for seeing in person, and a marquee Gingerbread House would draw wallet-holding humans (also known as guests) and sell the resort more effectively than any DVC pitch.

Grand Floridian Gingerbread House Basics

The edible display always drew a big crowd of guests eager to admire its white chocolate candy canes, edible snowflakes, sugar poinsettias, and an 88-pound white chocolate Santa. The gingerbread itself was baked with 1050 pounds of honey, 800 pounds of flour, and 600 pounds of confectioners’ sugar.

The decorations used 700 pounds of chocolate and featured over 10,000 pieces of gingerbread. Every holiday season between its inaugural year in 1999 and 2024, the Grand Floridian Culinary Team spent over 500 hours baking the gingerbread and 480 hours bringing all the dazzling details to life.

The Grand Floridian gingerbread house was a fan favorite, and a Walt Disney World family tradition for many annual visitors. Fans bought gingerbread shingles, drinks and other desserts, along with limited-edition pins and other merchandise.

WDW Holiday Yuletide Resort Tour

A visit to the Grand Floridian is a quintessential holiday-time experience, even in 2026. It’s one of a few must-do stops on our Free Self-Guided Walt Disney World Yuletide Resort Tour. That’s what we recommend doing in the morning before attending Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party (if you opt to do that upcharge) or perhaps just on your non-parks day.

It’s one of our favorite things to do at Walt Disney World, and we make a point of doing it annually–along with separate visits to many of the hotels. We hope it’s still possible during Christmas 2026, even if there isn’t a life-size gingerbread house to see. At minimum, this will give us an excuse to do brunch at the new-look Grand Floridian Cafe.

As with the other monorail loop resorts, it’s easy to visit the Grand Floridian the same day you do Magic Kingdom. Whether it be before heading into the park, strolling over on the walking path for a midday break, or after the park closes (our favorite option), it’s worth the detour thanks to its elegant Victorian decor and grandiose icon tree–even without the glorious gingerbread house. That is, assuming it’s allowed this year without an ADR or resort reservation.

Ultimately, it’s unfortunate but unsurprising that the Grand Floridian gingerbread display isn’t returning for Christmas 2026. We’ve been expecting this day to come for a while, as the writing has been on the wall since even before the Birdcage Bar debuted. With the Grand Cottage being likewise permanently retired this Easter, it was pretty much a done deal for this year.

Honestly, this construction bulletin is more surprising to me than the original news. This still doesn’t commit Walt Disney World to anything, and it doesn’t necessarily conflict with anything we were previously told. However, it is a curious repositioning of the news as construction-related and an impact for Christmas 2026, as opposed to the Grand Floridian Gingerbread House being permanently retired. It’ll be interesting to see what is or is not announced for next year.

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YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you think of the Gingerbread House at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa not being offered this year? Do you view the construction alert as offering a sliver of optimism, or is it the same news previously reported? Think the display will ever be back down the road if some manager decides the food & beverage revenue is too enticing to pass up? Do you agree or disagree with our assessments? 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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4 Comments

  1. I’d love to see it put up in the World Showplace at Epcot. Have the Voices of America with their Dickens costumes. There seems to be enough space there to make it an extension of the Festival of the Holidays.

  2. I would love to see it put up in Epcot’s World Showplace. Have the Dickens costumed Voices of Liberty and create an extension of the Festival of the Holidays.

  3. If Disney wants to lower the foot traffic to its resorts, removing things like the huge Grand Floridian gingerbread house, that attract hordes of guests is one way to do it. I honestly do not expect the large gingerbread house to ever come back to the Grand Floridian, at least not to the lobby. There’s no longer room for the gingerbread house in the lobby. The convention center would make more sense. I also don’t see Disney moving it to a resort that cannot be accessed from the monorail. Transportation would become a bigger nightmare than it already is. Disney has dug itself into a rabbit hole.

  4. Do you have any insight on how guests will be able to visit multiple resorts at Christmas? We are beginning to plan a trip for Christmas 2027. My original plan had been to park at TTC and travel to multiple resorts via Disney transportation on our MK party day. Now I’m wondering if I should instead make breakfast and lunch ADRs – but that would only cover two resorts and I was planning to do the monorail route and go to Wilderness and AK lodges, because they’re my favorite.

    We were going to stay with friends, off-site. But even if we stayed in a Disney hotel, would we be able to travel to other hotels? I don’t mind paying for parking, or for meals, or anything – I just want to know what to do before I start booking. Do you have any guesses about what the rules might become?

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