Disney World’s Second-Worst Week of Year Wraps Up

Walt Disney World just wrapped up the week that we forecast would have the highest crowd levels in Winter 2026 due to two holidays coinciding, which doesn’t always happen. Here’s how our prediction performed, how high wait times actually were, plus what to expect going forward. Spoiler alert: it was bad. Worse than all other weeks of the last 52, minus one.

In case you’re new to winter crowds, the bad news is that they’re bad. Or at least, worse than they used to be. There’s this “sticky” perception of winter being the off-season, which is probably in equal parts due to old school Walt Disney World fans remembering the good ole days, and casual tourists to Florida intuitively thinking the Sunshine State and its beaches will be less busy when temperatures are in the 40s to 60s. (The overnight low was just 36℉.)

That perception might be accurate about Florida as a whole, but not Walt Disney World. This is precisely what prompted us to write Winter (Still) Is Not Off-Season at Walt Disney World. That was nothing new; it’s a trend we first observed way back in 2017. It’s only been exacerbated post-COVID, as more people live in Central Florida, work remotely, or otherwise travel during the first few months of the year.

This dynamic is already playing out again over the first two months of 2026, with even the weeks outside of the “worst” one being varying degrees of busy.

Speaking of those ‘varying degrees,’ we predicted that ‘worst week’ of winter at Walt Disney World would be approximately February 13-22, 2026. This is hardly news–that window is always bad.

The reasons for this were documented in our list of the 10 Best & Worst Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World in 2026 & 2027. Many school districts offer a long weekend or full week off, for what’s widely known as Mid-Winter Break (or “Ski Week”), anchored to Presidents’ Day. Several major districts in the Northeast and Midwest also offer this entire week off. Plenty of others have a long weekend break just for the Presidents’ Day holiday.

That happens every year, but the unique wrinkle this year, was Mardi Gras on February 17, 2026.

That does not happen every year; to the contrary, it last occurred in 2023 and resulted in a major spike in crowds. Many major school districts in Louisiana have the week around Mardi Gras off, as do a handful of other school districts in coastal counties in Mississippi and Alabama.

The bottom line is that this is almost always the worst week in the two months prior to spring break season starting, and it is often busier than the early spring breaks in March when Central Florida school districts are on recess. Although it’s not usually worse than Easter, we previously wrote that there’s an outside chance of that in 2026 due to the one-two punch of Presidents’ Day and Mardi Gras.

Last year, we predicted that the worst week of winter would be February 14-23, 2025. In reviewing the wait times data, the worst dates were actually February 14-22, 2025. That stretch averaged 8/10 crowd levels and 41 minute wait times. (February 23rd, which was in our predicted range, ended up at 34 minutes and 5/10 crowds.)

By contrast, February 13th was a 2/10 crowd level with 29 minute averages and February 24th was a 1/10 crowd level with 25 minute averages. Dates before and after those ‘worst week’ dates were similar.

Back in 2024, heavy crowds started on February 15 and continued until February 26. Peak crowd levels were February 16-17 and February 19-21, all of which had 9/10 or 10/10 crowd levels. For those keeping score at home, our predictions performed similarly in 2024, just as they did in 2023.

With that background set, here’s a look at 2026 wait time stats, courtesy of thrill-data.com:

As you can see from the above daily data, the last week-plus saw a sharp spike in crowds at Walt Disney World.

The worst dates within that window were February 13-21, 2026. The peak within that was February 15th, although February 14-17 saw daily 9/10 crowd levels.

It’s not surprising that Sunday, February 22nd saw a drop-off and ended up being only 4/10 crowds. This is something we consistently see at the tail end of peak weeks as tourists head home. The trend has become increasingly true on Saturdays, too. We nevertheless err on the side of caution and continue including those comparatively less busy weekends in most of our worst weeks, with several exceptions (post-Thanksgiving being the biggest).

This stretch was busier than last year, but not as bad as 2023 or 2024. That’s the general trend, though, and not really an apples to apples comparison since the switch from Genie+ to Lightning Lane Multi-Pass as well as the DAS crackdown have dramatically reduced standby line waits (to a far greater degree than Disney has reported attendance changes).

To that point, it’s worth reiterating that the above crowd levels are as measured by wait times data. There is no great way to measure attendance, and to the extent we get data for that, it’s annual.

In our extensive experience, ‘feels like’ crowds or congestion are always worse during winter than spring through early fall. You can pretty safely expect disproportionate ‘feels like’ crowds from November through February; there are a variety of reasons for this, but weather is the cleanest explanation.

The reason congestion isn’t as bad in months that are hotter is because people prioritize air-conditioning, so they move more quickly from line to line. Crowds are also worse in the (fewer) nighttime hours, especially Extended Evening Hours as a disproportionate number of guests seek out those as a reprieve from the weather.

During months when the weather is nicer, the opposite is true. You’ll see more guests wandering around, enjoying the atmosphere of the parks. These months also draw out more locals, who are (statistically) less inclined to race from ride to ride, exacerbating wait times. There are other contributing factors, but the big difference boils down to weather.

Zoom out and look at weekly wait time data, and we see something somewhat surprising: last week wasn’t just the worst week of winter, it was tied for the second-worst week of the last year!

The only week that was busier was the week of New Year’s Eve, which was significantly worse. Last week was tied with Easter, beating last Christmas and Central Florida’s Spring Break. It was worse than Fall Break, Thanksgiving, and every single week of summer.

That’s pretty noteworthy for a holiday that isn’t even on the radar of a lot of tourists. We call a lot of attention to Presidents’ Day, like Veterans Day, because the “unexpected” crowds always catch people by surprise–and we inevitably hear about it from readers, despite our many warnings.

We predicted that last week would definitely be one of the top 10 worst weeks, and could be one of the top 5 worst weeks, so this isn’t out of line with expectations. However, I wouldn’t have put it at #2.

My expectation is that it’ll still fall to #3 or #4 once we’re looking at the entirety of 2026 as opposed to the (rolling) last 365 days. At minimum, Easter should be worse this year by virtue of occurring earlier. I’m also skeptical that Christmas 2026 will be as slow (relatively speaking) as last year. But Thanksgiving has been trending downward for a while, and it wouldn’t be surprising if the first two weeks of Spring Break are slower.

Regardless, this should underscore just how bad last week was (and again, with worse ‘feels like’ crowds than window during a warmer time of year) and why you should avoid these dates in 2027 or 2028. The good news is that the collision of Presidents’ Day and Mardi Gras doesn’t repeat itself until 2032. Just in time for colossal crowds to descend upon Villains Land!

Also interesting is that, as of right now, February 2026 is the busiest month of the last 12. That’s perhaps the bigger story here, as we knew the week of Mid-Winter Break would be bad.

However, we did not expect the two weeks before it to be as busy as they were; instead of a weeklong reprieve from the crowds as is normally the case, there were only a few 2-3 day stretches of 2/10 to 4/10 crowd levels.

Even as winter has gotten worse, it’s still been the case that there were pockets of low to moderate crowds in the mix. With each year, these seem to shrink and become less predictable. They’re still among our favorite weeks to visit thanks to weather and the EPCOT Festival of the Arts, but it’s getting tougher to recommend these 5/10 to 7/10 dates–with even worse ‘feels like’ crowds from an objective perspective. Beyond increased travel flexibility and a higher Central Florida population, other drivers of these added crowds are youth sporting events, conventions, and South American tour groups.

Ultimately, all of this is is why Mid-Winter Break ranks #4 on our list of the Least-Bad Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World for Families on School Schedules. As we are now less than a year away from our own travel being constrained by school schedules, I’m becoming increasingly cognizant of the practical realities of when we’ll be able to take trips.

If we had only one Walt Disney World vacation per year and could choose it in a vacuum, we wouldn’t pick Mid-Winter Break. (That’s why it ranks #4!) But there are also 6 weeks that are worse than that, and that’s without every single week of summer included on the list. However, we also couldn’t choose it in a vacuum–and a couple of our top choices coincide with family holidays, so those are probably out. Suddenly, Mid-Winter Break, even with its 7/10 to 9/10 crowds, becomes a lot more attractive.

To each their own, but I would happily take higher ‘feels like’ crowds/congestion over higher ‘feels like’ temperatures. That’s precisely why more weeks from November through March make our list of the best time to visit. In our view, way too much emphasis is placed on wait times, as if they’re the end-all, be-all of Walt Disney World trip timing. At least for us, they aren’t the top 2 or 3 considerations. You can beat high crowds; you cannot escape oppressive heat and humidity.

If you’re looking for the best of both worlds, the good news is that there should be a reprieve from the crowds for the next couple of weeks. The parks won’t be anything close to ghost towns (see all of the above commentary about winter, as a whole, being busier than it used to be), but these next two weeks won’t be as bad as last week or even the median week of winter.

Thus far, this week has seen 4/10 to 6/10 crowd levels at Walt Disney World. It used to be one of our top weeks of the year, but that changed within the last couple of years as crowds started to creep up. With Mardi Gras moving forward, that opens up the first week of March, which we generally like more.

Again, it won’t be dead, and there are still major pitfalls to avoid with the start the 2026 EPCOT Flower & Garden Festival, along with ESPN Wide World of Sports events, but it should be possible to hit 3/10 to 4/10 days by choosing the best days of the week to visit each park.

To this point, Mardi Gras coinciding with Presidents’ Day has one obvious upside, which is that it’s not occurring a different week. By consolidating crowds that are normally spread out, the dates that follow in late February and early March 2026 should be better than last year.

That won’t last too long, as Central Florida’s Spring Break is right around the corner next month, but it’s actually a similar story with Spring Break. Easter moving forward by 15 days in 2026 means shoulder season should arrive sooner!

Weather, on the other hand, is a bit trickier. Central Florida has had multiple unseasonably cold stretches this year, to the point that it might be off-putting to tourists who booked trips to the so-called Sunshine State. On the plus side, this should reduce the numbers of locals visiting by a non-negligible amount, yielding an objective improvement in crowd levels.

From a subject perspective, most tourists will probably prefer mild weather. But as someone who has extensive experience with triple-digit heat in Central Florida during summer and fall, I will happily take “extreme” cold (by Florida’s standards) to extreme heat. Just like beating crowds vs. beating heat, you can always overcome cold weather by adding layers…there are only so many you can remove before you’re escorted out of the park.

Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!

YOUR THOUGHTS

Did you visit Walt Disney World during this worst week of winter in 2026? What did you think of the crowds? Have you done Mid-Winter Break (or whatever you want to call it) in the past? If you’ve visited previously when Presidents’ Day and Mardi Gras coincided, did you notice colossal crowds? Do you agree or disagree with our predictions? 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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20 Comments

  1. We just spent a week at Disney and personally I don’t think it was that bad-I judge crowds by the line to the women’s bathroom and there never was one!!! A blessing! Thanks to your blog we zigged and zagged as needed with our plans. We had a great time. The only down side was the OVERWHELMING use of double strollers-Yikes!!

  2. Any predictions yet for 4th of July? I know it’s been slower the past few years but concerned about it being the 250th. Love your blog!!

  3. We just spent Monday 2/23 at Epcot. It ranks up there with one of my worst Epcot days ever. Early entry at International Gateway at 7:30 for Frozen, (had the 4YO 1st time granddaughter) was a wait in line until 8:40, with no communication, to the be told “we’re going to keep you here, it shouldn’t be too long”, only to wait (FREEZING) until 8:55, when LL were finally handed out. Then over an hour wait (10th in line) for Meet Anna and Elsa. Needless to say, our whole morning strategy was blown at that point.
    Spaceship Earth down for hours, Test Track down for hours, Frozen down for hours. It was a disaster of a day. with 3 major rides down, wait time for everything else inflated to 60+ minutes. The day was redeemed by Extended evening hours with quick ride on Remy and essentially a Cosmic Rewind walk-on.

  4. Will Disney World ever extend the park operation hours till 11:00pm or midnight like many years back. How about an extra hour vs 30 minutes in the morning like Universal’s hotel guest enjoy? Just having more park hours would help with crowds!

  5. My husband and I went for a Valentine’s get away that weekend and it was definitely the most crowded we’d ever experienced. But, we were still able to get reservations for our dinners and Beak and Barrel, still had a magical time. We’ll be back for spring break!

  6. We did! Magic kingdom Sunday 2/15 and Epcot 2/16. Took our kids 4,4, and 2. LL multi pass were bought for both days and two individual rides. I’ve finally accepted that I’m only punishing myself by not buying and with three littles knew waits would be non option. Almost $600 for two days (4 of us and two grandparents, ouch) but we got passes to everything we wanted. I also used Standby Skipper (probably goes against everything you stand for lol) but I wanted to be present with the kids, not in my phone all day booking/refreshing. They did find several rides that initially were showing sold out so that impressed me (worth it for $20/day imo).

    Where we felt the high crowds was our two attempts at quick service at both Riviera and AOA at dinner time. Both took 45 mins to get food AFTER we tapped we had arrived. Lots of angry people standing around but cast members seemed to be doing their best. Seemed the system was allowing more orders than the staff could handle. Pretty bad.

    Oh and our room was getting turned over on checkout day before we ever checked out…went to breakfast around 9 and husband took puking child back (yeah, good times) and room was all tore up. Not trying to focus on negative but I know you wrote about housekeeping issues on check out day a while back and this one had my hubby pretty hot.

  7. Ha, we thought we would escape the long wait times by purchasing after hours tickets for Epcot Feb 19. Would not recommend it. After the fireworks, we rushed to Ratotuli where we had our shortest wait time of 20 minutes (the posted was 10, but that wasn’t accurate). Unfortunately, about 1/3 of the ride’s projections were not working, so that was disappointing. Then we tried to walk the shortest distance to Frozen, only to be blocked by cast members who informed all that we had to walk back clockwise. We skipped Frozen for that reason. Next, we tried Test Track as we hadn’t ridden it since the changes. Posted wait time 35 min. Real wait time 55 because it broke down literally on the car immediately before we would have boarded. Last was Guardians of the Galaxy with a 45 min wait accurate to the posted time. At least this ride only had glitches in the pre-ride segment, not during the actual ride. So 3 rides in 3 hours with lots of walking and waiting. After hours is much better in Magic Kingdom, but Epcot lacks the extra fireworks show that MK has for AH and also lacks the number of attractions to spread out guests to reduce wait times.
    True to Tom’s post, the park was crowded before after hours kicked in as well as in Animal Kingdom on Feb 18.

  8. We attended WDW during the “worst week.” We arranged our trip only two weeks ahead, found a resort and made reservations for dining. We made it to the Beak and Barrel on Wednesday night during the first parade only after repeated tries, but it worked. Then made it to the fireworks at the circle before the castle, and on to a great view of the parade at the circle before the firehouse. Afterwards, we had extende hours, so we were able to just walk on to the Pirates and Small World rides, with about 30 minutes to the Jungle Cruise. Thursday late breakfast at Bomas, then the Epcot arts festival. Saturday, returned to Magic Kingdom with a fun lunch at the themed Skippers Canteen restaurant complete with a punning server. Gave up on rides because of crowds, went to Hollywood Studies, same crowd issues and down rides in Galaxy’s edge, so we just shopped and rode Star Tours with no lines. Back to Epcot for arts desserts, an evening performance — lots of seats for those of us not reserving them, and the fireworks, with lots of good viewing around the lake available. Sunday at Animal Kingdom and Tiffins. We did spend a lot of time just enjoying the “magic” and blowing off rides. We did wait almost two hours for Ratatouille on Saturday and decided that was our long line ride of the visit. But we didn’t have small kiddos or must do’s and plan to return another time. Great trip despite the crowds. We like reserving a table meal when things are crazy busy or returning to resort for pool and relaxation in the middle of the day.

  9. The crowds at the parks may have been down this past Sunday, but everyone must have decided to congregate at Ale & Compass instead. Our 7:25 reservation for 4 got sat around 8:05; it might have been longer if some of the parties prior to us hadn’t bailed. We were sat in a side room with boring decor as you have previously mentioned, but it was quiet and made for easy conversation and laughter. Nevertheless, the food, as you have also previously mentioned, was delicious!

  10. We spent three days (2/16-2/18) in the parks last week. We knew, thanks to this blog, that it was going to be a rough week but the days worked well with our schedules.

    Our kids are younger so luckily we are not worried about many of the headliners. Also, we have had the opportunity to visit several times over the past couple of years so it was not imperative for us to do everything and we knew what was most important for our kids. We used many of the strategies outlined in this blog for early entry and lightning lane usage to develop a solid plan. We were able to execute most things perfectly but the occasional wrench, like Frozen not opening until 9:30 A.M. on 2/18 did cause us to have to pivot a bit.

    Overall, it was possible to get done what was most important to our family. The crowds did take their toll on us (specifically just navigating around the parks) but the weather was amazing. Warm enough to use the pools, but never too hot, and just chilly enough in the night/morning for a sweatshirt. I definitely would not suggest this week for a first time guest though or anyone not going into it with a plan of action!

  11. For me, as a local who let my annual pass lapse, the $64 4-day tickets are attractive compared to what Universal is charging right now.

    I think Disney is a value in the current market at that price point. Maybe others feel the same way and it’s helping the winter numbers.

  12. We have several trips planned this year, including the week of Juneteenth. I’m hoping it’s not horrible. Two years ago, we were there for 4th of July and it was surprising how “slow” it was. The heat was brutal, but we are used to it (me being born and raised here). Hydration and lots of breaks helped.

    Excited for Soarin’ Across America!! I hope they roll out more for the 250th.

  13. I pulled my kids from school to visit Disney for a week through eighth grade. Some of our best family memories were made on those trips. No worries…you’re not stuck with the school schedule for a while longer now.

  14. I spent one day there last week, and yup – it was busy!

    I’m still kicking myself over a rookie mistake I made. I got in line for Frozen with a posted wait time of 50 minutes, but it had been down for two hours in the morning and I didn’t mentally account for that. The lightning lane was packed, causing the standby line to move glacially. The actual wait ended up being 95 minutes.

    In general, downtime made an already-busy day feel worse. Test Track was also down in the morning and jumped to a 2-hour wait soon after it opened. Tiana’s was down for most of the afternoon and later had a 2-hour wait – at night! In February!

    I knew what I was in for visiting last week, but I still had to lower my expectations a bit throughout the day.

    1. “I’m still kicking myself over a rookie mistake I made. I got in line for Frozen with a posted wait time of 50 minutes, but it had been down for two hours in the morning and I didn’t mentally account for that. The lightning lane was packed, causing the standby line to move glacially. The actual wait ended up being 95 minutes.”

      This is a good lesson for everyone else, though!

      As a reminder, this happens consistently and predictably. Walt Disney World always prioritizes processing the backlog of Lightning Lanes when returning from downtime, meaning that the LL:standby ratio changes to favor the former. This isn’t speculation, it’s the official policy.

      If you can catch a ride right when it returns from downtime, that’s great–do it. But if you wait even 30 minutes, you’re going to face a slower-moving standby line. Posted waits are often underestimated as a result.

  15. our first park day is March the 1st, hoping the crowds stay similar to what they have been this week because it doesnt look too bad at all! We are planning Epcot for Thursday the 5th to avoid the first day of flower and garden and hopefully have it not be TOO bad.

  16. We arrive in less than 2 weeks! (March 10). I’m hoping with the winter surge that Spring Break (ours is March 9-13) will be maybe a tad less crowded than normal.

    Thank you, Tom for all you do! I visit your site almost every day.

    1. Not to be a debbie downer, but I’d go in with the expectation that Spring Break will be every bit as busy as normal.

      I don’t think Winter Break being busier has much bearing on Spring Break. I get what you’re thinking, but I think the heavier crowds last week were more the result of multiple weeks of a normal winter being consolidated into one–not pulled forward demand from Spring Break.

      Hope for your and everyone else’s sake that I’m wrong!

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