2024 Disney World Refurbishment Calendar
This Walt Disney World ride refurbishment calendar lists the closure schedule for 2024 and 2025 at Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios & Animal Kingdom. Attractions close for routine maintenance, safety upgrades, improvements, and reimaginings. (Updated April 26, 2024.)
While no one wants attraction downtime during their trip to Walt Disney World, refurbishments are necessary to keep the rides looking good (and safe!) for future visitors. Usually, there are only a handful of simultaneous closures, plus new attractions being built. Note that the list below includes several refurbishments that have either been scheduled last-minute, extended, or are longer than normal.
If you’re visiting Walt Disney World now, the good news is that there aren’t many refurbishments currently on the schedule. The first bit of bad news is that the few of them that are on the calendar are all major thrill rides, which will be closed for portions of 2024 and 2025. And these aren’t the only attractions likely to go down for long closures in the next year, as other ride reimaginings are likely ahead of Universal’s Epic Universe opening in Summer 2025.
The other bad news is that Walt Disney World has not been doing nearly enough preventative maintenance or ride refurbishments during the off-season over the last few years. As a result, you can expect plenty of unplanned downtime. Since this happens as a result of rides breaking downtime, you can’t really plan for it (hence it being “unplanned”), but we still mention this because you should prepare for rides to go offline during your trip. If anything is a “must-ride” for you, be sure to prioritize it and give yourself a buffer just in case it breaks down during your days at Walt Disney World.
There’s also a lot of construction occurring, albeit not nearly as much as even a few years ago. However, that massively understates the current closures and impact of construction on visitors to Walt Disney World throughout the remainder of the year. Speaking of which, if you’re looking for opening dates rather than closures (and reopenings) to existing attractions, see the Disney Parks Project Timeline for 2024 & Beyond. That covers both the official opening dates, plus our predictions about what’ll likely be delayed.
If you want all of the latest updates on attraction closures and ride refurbishments–subscribe to our free Walt Disney World email newsletter. We also share other news and on-the-ground reports from the parks, when discounts are released, and much more.
Here is the current schedule of Walt Disney World refurbishments to attractions, when the closure starts, and when the refurbishment will conclude, updated as of April 26, 2024:
Animal Kingdom
- DINOSAUR – TBD closure date (likely late 2024 or early 2025)
- It’s Tough to Be a Bug – TBD closure date
All is quiet now, but Animal Kingdom will soon be a park in transformation once again. A Zootopia Tree of Life Show is replacing It’s Tough to Be a Bug at some point in the future–likely sometime in late 2024.
What else is next for Animal Kingdom is unclear. Primeval Whirl permanently closed and the company has confirmed that what’s currently Dino-Rama is the next big expansion site at Walt Disney World. They’ve also officially announced that the replacement will be the Tropical Americas at Animal Kingdom, and backstage work has already started to prepare for this.
Walt Disney World has teased Encanto and Indiana Jones concepts that are supposedly just “under consideration.” It’s our understanding that they’re a done deal, but other recent official projects have been cancelled even after construction started. DINOSAUR being converted to Indiana Jones Adventure is almost a sure thing, and we anticipate it closing either late this year or early in 2025.
Magic Kingdom
- Country Bear Musical Jamboree – Opens in Summer 2024
- Tiana’s Bayou Adventure – Opening in Summer 2024
Currently, the only two attractions closed at Magic Kingdom are reimaginings in Frontierland. Country Bear Jamboree is being transformed into Country Bear Musical Jamboree. An exact reopening date is currently unknown, but the attraction will come back in Summer 2024.
Our expectation is that some of the changes could occur overnight, but the Audio Animatronics also need TLC. Honestly, it could last several months–the longer, the better. The attraction could use a fair amount of love. It’s now our understanding that Country Bear Musical Jamboree will open later than Tiana’s Bayou Adventure–expect mid-July or later.
Also underway is the reimagining of Splash Mountain into Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, a new ride based on The Princess and the Frog. Construction walls are still up around the ride and construction workers can be observed on and around the attraction working on the overhaul, but the exterior is mostly finished. The transformation timeline is an aggressive one, and but Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has made significant progress.
In fact, Walt Disney World just announced that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will open in Summer 2024. As discussed in that post, our prediction is that it debuts in late June 2024. (Our specific guess is June 20, 2024–but anytime between around then and the Independence Day holiday weekend is possible.)
EPCOT
- CommuniCore Hall & Plaza – Opens on June 10, 2024
- Luminous: The Symphony of Us – Now showing!
- Moana’s Journey of Water – Now open!
- Test Track – Closes on June 17, 2024
- World Celebration – Now open!
The biggest thing on the horizon is Test Track closing for a multi-month reimagining. A reopening date has not yet been announced, but it’s unlikely to return any time this year.
This Test Track reimagining will likely last until at least Spring 2025, with a reasonable probability of it taking until Summer 2025. We expect 9-12 months of downtime, with an outside chance of the closure lasting even longer if Test Track 3.0 really is getting elaborate show scenes like its predecessor, World of Motion.
After 4 long years of construction walls around the center of the park, World Celebration is now open. Along with it, Moana’s Journey of Water has debuted. However, walls are still up around CommuniCore Hall & Plaza, which is slated to open in Summer 2024. Along with the debut of that on June 10, there’s also a new Encanto sing-along, and it’s possible that there will be a summer celebration of some sort.
Back in World Showcase Lagoon, Luminous: The Symphony of Us has now debuted. This is EPCOT’s new permanent nighttime spectacular, replacing the temporary EPCOT Forever and Harmonious before that.
Looking forward, Spaceship Earth is long overdue for track and ride system maintenance, and that would necessitate a multi-month (if not year-plus) closure. Journey into Imagination is also about a decade overdue for a redo, but there’s no word that’s on the horizon, either.
Disney’s Hollywood Studios
- Jedi Training Academy: Trials of the Temple – Permanently Ended
- Star Wars: Galactic Spectacular – Permanently Ended
- Mickey Shorts Theater – Closed April 29 through May 24, 2024
- Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster – Closed now through Summer 2024
- Voyage of the Little Mermaid – Reopens in Fall 2024
Two very big additions to this schedule. The first is that Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster is Closing for Multi-Month Refurbishment in 2024. That covers everything we know about the likely end date and the scope of the project.
Walt Disney World also has announced that Voyage of the Little Mermaid won’t be returning. At least, not by the same name. A reimagined version of that stage show is coming in Fall 2024 and will be renamed to “The Little Mermaid – A Musical Adventure.”
Outside Theme Parks
- Blizzard Beach Water Park – Closed for the Season
- Star Wars: Galactic Starcruiser Resort – Permanently Closed
Blizzard Beach has once again closed, which occurred simultaneous with Typhoon Lagoon reopening. This is a standard seasonal closure, and happens every single year due to a lack of demand during the colder time of year. The big question is whether both will operate simultaneously in Summer 2024. Our guess, unfortunately, is that they will not.
Otherwise, the attraction closures above are pretty straight-forward. To the extent that specific dates are not yet listed, those will be updated once Walt Disney World provides precise start and/or end dates.
In addition to scheduled attraction refurbs, unscheduled downtime can also occur during a visit. This usually only occurs for a few hours at a time, so if you find an attraction is closed during your vacation and it’s not listed below, it’s likely a temporary closure that will last (at most) for a few hours. Check with nearby Cast Members to confirm.
For resort work, please see our 2024 Walt Disney World Hotel Construction & Refurbishments. If you are worried that any of resort hotel renovations will impact your stay, here’s a general rule to keep in mind: room refurbishments rarely impact hotel stays. These occur in specific clusters, and you’ll rarely notice the work being done.
Now, here’s a bit of my philosophy concerning refurbishments…
General Thoughts on Refurbishments
When news comes out about any refurbishment, my immediate reaction is always, “this is great–it means they’re actually doing something to the attraction!” My mind races with the possibilities of how attractions could be improved or plussed by Walt Disney Imagineering. Even though we might miss it on our next Walt Disney World visit, I’m always excited.
In reading feedback from others, I’ve discovered this perspective puts me in the minority. Others online fume about this, and how it would alter or impact their vacation plans. The saying “vacation ruined” has attained near-meme status among some fans, and that felt apt for some of the complaints. I can understand the perspective. Assessing the scope of the refurbishment in advance, scheduling liberal refurbishment dates, and opening early (under-promising and over-delivering) is always preferable to the alternative.
I can also understand that there’s other pent-up frustration at play here, ranging from radio-silence on projects to Walt Disney World’s tardiness in releasing park hours while expecting guests to plan several months in advance. Neither of these moves by Disney, among others, are defensible. At best, this communication is poor guest service. At worst, it’s demonstrative of a contemptible attitude towards guests.
However, I remain of the mindset that this refurbishment extension–and other current refurbishments–is potentially a good thing. Among the most vocal fans upset about the extension are those who are like me: guests who visit Walt Disney World at least every-other year. We are playing the ‘long’ fandom game.
From my perspective, investing in the long-term quality of an attraction is far more important than the temporary satisfaction I’ll get out of riding it on my next visit. I get excited when thinking about ways rides could be plussed, improving the experience for years to come. This is why it always perplexes me when regulars contend that their vacation will be ruined because their favorite attraction will be closed.
If it’s your favorite attraction and you’re active in the Disney fan community, that means you’ve been to Walt Disney World before and probably will visit again. It would thus stand to reason that you would want something you love to get the TLC it deserves, and continue to improve.
DINOSAUR works as a good example here. This attraction used to be called Countdown to Extinction (“CTX”) before an ill-advised movie tie-in was added. During that era, DINOSAUR had a litany of additional effects, many of its AAs had greater functionality, and the attraction was, as a whole, more impressive.
If you are a long-term fan, would you rather experience DINOSAUR every single year with 66% of the effects working, or every single year minus one with 95% of the effects working? For me, the answer to that is easy. I’ll take a superior long term experience every time. (That this is even a legitimate question for long-time fans speaks to the ‘instant gratification’ nature of things today, but that’s well beyond the scope of this post.)
Beyond that, there’s the much more compelling justification for regular refurbishments: they are essential for the safety of attractions. While we think of these attractions as all fun and games that offer a safe sense of exhilaration, that’s when they are properly maintained.
It’s unpleasant to think about, but there have been several preventable deaths in the history of Disney’s parks. During a dark era of Disneyland history, improper maintenance was the cause of death on Big Thunder Mountain (thankfully, Paul Pressler’s reign of terror is over). Years of neglect at Disneyland Paris have led to incidents of injury that could be attributed to a lack of maintenance (again, this has been addressed).
This is not meant to scare anyone or provoke an emotional reaction; the fact is that Disney’s worldwide safety record is sterling as compared to other park operators. It’s still important to remember that these fun, ‘magical’ places also exist in the real world and use a lot of potentially dangerous elements if safety is not viewed as key. (Or, in Disney’s case, one of the “Five Keys.”)
When it comes to maintenance that is not essential to the safe operation of an attraction, we are left to contemplate what amount of show quality should be accepted. If following a strict Nunisian practitioner of the Four Keys, show is another paramount consideration, and it should always be 100%. This is nice corporate propaganda, but I think the practical reality is that 100% is an unworkably high threshold in many circumstances.
I think we have seen this play out with Expedition Everest. Fans joke about the “Disco Yeti” and lament the fact that this jaw-dropping Audio Animatronics figure has not worked in nearly a decade. There are numerous theories as to why the Yeti hasn’t been fixed; what each of these share is that there are large-scale problems and no quick fixes.
Fixing the Yeti will require a closure of at least 6 months, and be quite expensive. The working Yeti is truly a magnificent sight to behold (and one most of you probably haven’t seen in A-mode unless you rode over a decade ago), but the attraction is still impressive with the Disco Yeti. At this point, it’s likely that Disney has determined the closure would take too long, cost too much, and the improvement would not be worth the investment.
There’s also the reality that Animal Kingdom is lacking in rides. Even after the opening of Pandora – World of Avatar, the park still is heavy on shows and animal exhibits and light on rides. Taking one of the park’s flagship rides down for 6 months to a year to fix one Audio Animatronics figure that guests see for 1-2 seconds might not be worth the sacrifice.
As a staunch proponent of show quality, I have a difficult time accepting the same argument for any attraction in Magic Kingdom, a park with a veritable “mountain range” and diverse slate of other attractions. In fact, the same goes for every castle park. These parks have enough attractions to pick up the slack if 1-2 attractions have to be taken offline simultaneously without ruining any vacations.
Guests are understandably concerned when it appears an inordinate number of attractions are closing during their vacation. Walt Disney World vacations are not cheap and are often once in a lifetime experiences. First-timers certainly do not want to miss out on experiences about which they’ve read extensive hype.
However, the problem with a “not during my vacation” attitude like this is that it’s always going to be someone’s (or tens of thousands of someones) vacation. If attractions with show quality issues don’t close for refurbishments for fear of some guests during a time-limited window missing out, all guests in perpetuity are going to have a lesser experience.
Running an attraction with broken effects is only going to compound problems, and eventually a single broken effect will turn into myriad broken effects. Imagine this scenario park-wide, played out to its natural consequences. That’s not exactly what I’d call the “Disney Difference.”
Again, DINOSAUR is a good example here. If it’s your first visit and you experience DINOSAUR with 66% of the effects working, you won’t know what you’re missing. Riding it will, no doubt, be superior to not riding it. However, I’m guessing your satisfaction rating of the attraction wouldn’t be nearly as high, and you might question why so many people love the attraction, and why Disney was lazy with so much empty, dark space. (Or, perhaps you won’t: if you only ever eat dog food, you won’t know what you’re missing in a nice steak.)
The thing is, if Disney would not close DINOSAUR during your vacation so you don’t miss out on it, chances are that they would extend the same “courtesy” for other guests, and it would be standard operating procedure to never close anything during anyone’s vacation.
The end result of this would be a park full of “66% attractions” and first-timers would be left wondering why there was so much hype about Walt Disney World, in the first place. If you’re reading this as a lifelong fan, consider the possibility that you wouldn’t have become a lifelong fan if this were actually Disney’s modus operandi. (In fact, I’d argue that Walt Disney World is trending in this direction, dragging its feet on several necessary refurbishments, with the inaction being predicated upon short term guest satisfaction or cost-savings.)
This might sound like we’re applying ‘heavy’ Rawlsian theory to the lighthearted topic of theme parks, but philosophy isn’t worth a damn if it can’t be applied to theme parks. 😉
A lot of this might seem like an effort to absolve Disney of blame when it comes to refurbishments, but this is not the case. Disney has brought a lot of the guest unrest concerning refurbishments upon itself. The first issue is that Disney has numerous parks that have opened in the last two decades with incomplete slates of attractions, making it difficult to justify taking attractions offline for refurbishment. So step one, a wholly impractical step at this point, would be to open theme parks that are complete on day one.
Failing that, Disney could avoid a lot of the guest backlash concerning refurbishments if they would schedule more 3-4 day refurbishments of attractions to proactively address problems with preventative maintenance. Although this would not totally negate the need for extended refurbishments, it would improve show quality across the board and help avoid a lot of situations where attractions have to abruptly close because they are in dire need of maintenance. Moreover, a 3-4 day refurbishment is shorter than the duration of most vacations, allowing tourists to effectively plan around the refurbishment.
In this case, both parties planning ahead would prevent those “vacation ruined!” complaints. Don’t worry, Disney, we fans are resilient: we’ll still find something else to complain about. 😉
Joking aside, I realize that’s a tough line to draw between an excusable refurbishment and a frustratingly irritating one. Even if you subscribe to the some degree of the ‘philosophy’ I’m advancing, there is no bright-line rule. It’s still going to amount to a value judgment about what should ‘trigger’ a need for refurbishment, how many attractions should be down simultaneously across Walt Disney World, and what times of year are ideal for which refurbishments.
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Your Thoughts
Any questions about the current refurbishments at Walt Disney World? What do you think about refurbishments at the Disney Parks? Are you more concerned about an improved long-term experience, or do you think “not during my vacation!”? Where do you draw the line? Any other factors you think are worth considering? As mentioned, we think this is a conversation, so please share your ‘refurbishment philosophy’, or any other thoughts or questions you have, in the comments!
Victoria, other sites are saying that it’s a closure from Sunday, January 23 until Thursday, January 28th (disregarding the fact that the 28th is actually a Friday). Those sites are also reporting that it’s only the Epcot line of the Skyliner that will be down. The Hollywood Studios and AoA/Pop Century lines will be open.
Hi Tom! Long time reader, first time commenter. Just a quick question about the Skyliner – Is is closed from January 23 – 28 or is it closed UNTIL January 23-28? I just wanted some clarification – hoping to book a trip for sometime in January as it seems to have the best pricing right now for Canadians and also hoping travel will open up a bit for those of us in Canada by then. Thank you for the wonderful site, I have spent so many hours of my time on it!
Tom said, “…if Disney would not close DINOSAUR during your vacation so you don’t miss out on it, chances are that they would extend the same ‘courtesy’ for other guests, and it would be standard operating procedure to never close anything during anyone’s vacation…The end result of this would be a park full of ‘66% attractions’ and first-timers would be left wondering why there was so much hype about Walt Disney World, in the first place.” In other words: Walt Disney World would be as good as, and no better than, Universal Hollywood. Congratulations to everyone.
I have to say that after being here in Canada, unable to travel , I wouldn’t care about any of the refurbs/fireworks – I just want to go to Disney again. I usually go twice a year – and my last trip was Feb 2020….and then came Covid. We are still unable to travel – UNLESS – we want to come back and quarantine in a hotel for 2 days and then go directly home and quarantine again for 14 days….not kidding. There is a fine for those who break quarantine. Please pray for us – I need my Disney fix.
I am booked at the Poly for August 2021. I am waiting to see whether the monorail will be open by then, also hoping Ohana will reopen with the resort. I booked it a while ago.
Regarding limited hotel availability…
I talked to a WDW rep and I asked her why the Poly is completely book for (what seems like) the remainder of the year. She said that since the hotel’s reopening isn’t scheduled until Summer 2021, you can’t actually book most of the hotel right now. She said WDW will allow regular bookings once they finalize the reopening date, but that’s still TBD. She said DVC owners were able to book b/c the Villas are still open (altho they have all been booked now basically), but the rest of the hotel isn’t technically open for booking yet.
Can anyone else confirm this? It makes sense, but this is the first time I’ve heard of this…
It seems Disney is focused on building big rides these days, like they need them to compete with other amusement parks. These multi million ventures are not a draw for me, preferring to keep my feet on terra firms. (I have a sensitive digestive system and prefer to keep food moving in a single direction.) I do hope the attractions such as Finding Nemo the musical return. For folks like myself the people shows with Disney magic are the star attractions and I hope Disney leadership would realize these probably cost less to build/run these attractions than the big rides; and there are few safety risks either.
I think it’s time to ditch the RoL form the list, as it’s been gone a long, long time now.
What are the chances that “Keys to the Kingdom” will return before the anniversary?
People Mover is one of my very favorite attractions. I agree- fix it so we can enjoy it for years to come. I always check to make sure that HM, Buzz and IASM are gonna be open before buying my tickets. Disney has to have higher standards if they are going to charge higher prices.
I think you hit the nail on the head with with saying Disney’s approach was one of contempt, take it or leave it. We were there in March. Stayed off property for the 1st time in 22 yrs and didnt pay to park at the hotel. Took Uber to the parks, dropped off at the gate, no walking miles from the bus stop. Ate at great restaurants at night. Full kitchen in the room also. Parks were disappointment, too many attractions closed but paid more for our tickets. Take it or leave it I guess. I will now try Universal
The MK RR has been down for so long I’m beginning to think it’s being funded by the Federal Gov’t.
Please let the PeopleMover open by April 27th!!
We planned on a December 2022 trip but haven’t ruled out a December 2021 trip of rules/regs roll back and all the normal stuff is back by then and I tell you I groaned when I saw the Railroad is down until 2022. This will be our third trip and I still haven’t gotten to ride it
Any information on cancelation fees/penalties/loss on either side, Disney or the patron?
Any thoughts, ideas, or Magic 8-Ball guesses about when the Epcot monorail might be back up and running? Of all the “temporary abnormal” things, this is the only thing I really care about.
*fingers, toes, legs, arms, and eyes crossed it opens by then*
For those refurbishments you say “likely Fall 2021 or later” is that your estimate or what Disney is actually saying? Just curious.
I noticed you listed Epcot Forever returning. I thought that was a place holder for Harmonious and Harmonious would be the “fireworks” show when fireworks return. Any more scoop on this? I know you showed the massive Star gates and such. Guess I expected Harmonious when things get back to “normal”. TIA
At present, a plausible scenario is Epcot Forever returning for a limited engagement–potentially this summer before Harmonious debuts. There’s also a possibility that Epcot Forever won’t come back.
Potentially not helpful, but the reality is that I don’t believe a definitive decision has yet been made.
Please let the PeopleMover open by May 1st. Please let the PeopleMover open by May 1st. Please let the PeopleMover open by May 1st.