EPCOT Early Entry Fail: Trying to Tackle Top Two Rides

We’ve had a good series of good rope drop runs at Walt Disney World lately, meaning we’re overdue for disappointment. Enter our Early Entry at EPCOT Epic Fail, which shares a recent experience trying (unsuccessfully, as the title suggests) to knock out two headliners before official park opening. Here’s my step by step photo report on what went wrong, how I could’ve pretty easily fixed it, etc.
During a reasonably efficient Early Entry at EPCOT, you can ride two knock out two headliner attractions in World Showcase or the front of the park before the rope drop rush, opening the door for a day without Lightning Lanes. It doesn’t really matter whether you arrive via International Gateway in the back of the park or the front entrance, either.
This field test was done on a peak holiday season day at EPCOT, when the park had a 9/10 crowd level. Since Test Track reopened, there have been more and more days like this, with the worst so far being over fall break (December 22 through January 4, 2026 will be significantly worse). This was not nearly that bad, but wait times for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, Frozen Ever After and Test Track were all between 60 and 180 minutes throughout the day.
This Early Entry report starts from International Gateway, as we were staying at Yacht Club. Skyliner and Crescent Lake Resorts arrive via this back entrance, which is superior to the front entrance for Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Frozen Ever After, the headliners in World Showcase.
If you’d prefer to start with Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind or Test Track, it’s also possible from International Gateway if you don’t mind a bit more walking. As these two attractions now have higher average wait times than their World Showcase counterparts by roughly 10 minutes each, this is what I was setting out to “prove” with this field test.
I did this field test alone during a family trip, which meant that I was running late and crunched for time. (Fun fact: it’s impossible to be on time when traveling with a toddler. It’s actually the little-known Fourth Law of Thermodynamics. It’s true–ask the scientists in Living with the Land!)
I was still early to Early Entry, but not as early as I would’ve liked to have been. I didn’t arrive before bag check, security, or anything else opened. I was nevertheless among the opening ‘rush’ of people heading towards Future World from International Gateway, but I couldn’t tell you precise times when any checkpoints opened.
Upon entering International Gateway, there’s a row of Cast Members scanning MagicBands, resort room keys, or whatever to verify you’re eligible for Early Entry. You get held back by the gift shop and can’t access the rest of the park without scanning here, after which time you can proceed.
In case you missed it, one change that occurred earlier this year is that there’s no longer a secondary checkpoint between the United Kingdom and Canada. Once you’re past the initial holding area by the front of International Gateway, you can proceed all the way to the front of the park.
This started back when Cosmic Rewind joined the Early Entry ride roster and is a hugely positive change. This is what makes Cosmic Rewind and Test Track feasible from International Gateway. This wasn’t the case before!
Here are some photos from my leisurely-ish walk through World Showcase to Future World/World Discovery:
It also used to be the case that there was a holding area for Early Entry in the breezeway between Connections Cafe and Creations Shop. In my more recent experiences since Test Track reopened, this is no longer the case. The only checkpoints now are near the respective entrances and everything is open-access from there. (It’s possible that changes from time-to-time.)
One thing of which I’m not sure is whether International Gateway opens slightly early, if both entrances open at the same time, or it’s luck of the draw. Realistically, I’ll never have any way of testing this definitively because I’m one person doing the testing. Even if I could coax Sarah and Megatron to join me, they’d still be coming from the same direction.
I could’ve asked people in front of me in line for Test Track whether they came from the front entrance as we pass one another in switchbacks. I’m disinclined to do this, as I already draw side-eye when using my ‘big camera’ to take queue photos. The last thing I want, while stuck in a crowd of people, is to awkwardly draw even more attention to myself. “Excuse me ma’am, I would like to know where you came from this fine morning? Don’t worry, I’m not a weirdo; this is Very Important Research.” What could possibly go wrong?!
I can make the trek from France to World Discovery in just under 10 minutes. You don’t need to walk this fast to start at Test Track or Cosmic Rewind, though, as I’ll explain in a minute.
The bigger issue is that the walk adds a lot of steps to a day that’ll already have a ton of steps. Given how much food “research” I do in a day at EPCOT, I’m okay with this extra walking. I also personally prefer Test Track and Cosmic Rewind when by myself. Speaking of unwanted attention, same goes for a middle-aged dude riding Frozen Ever After or Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure by himself at the crack of dawn. Single riders on thrill rides are much more common and socially accepted.
Nevertheless, I want to underscore that I do not necessarily endorse this approach of entering through International Gateway and walking all the way to the front for Early Entry. It’s probably not for the average guest. But it should work well for the high-stamina commando tourists.
Anyway, I made it to Test Track at around 8:07 am.
The outdoor overflow queue was fairly full, and there was a steady stream of people flowing into World Discovery from both the front and back entrance at this time. I also passed a few people heading towards Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure from the front, but not until I was already in Future World.
This suggests to me that International Gateway had released guests slightly before the Spaceship Earth checkpoint. Observationally, this seems like a common occurrence; it happens fairly often in my testing. But that’s just anecdotal and could be luck of the draw as opposed to policy. There’s no way to make this perfectly fair, so it is what it is.
I’d also hazard a guess that most (~75%) of the guests in front of me in line for Test Track had come from the front. But that’s just a guess, as I did not survey those in front of me in line. Sorry. I love doing these field tests, and I’d like to keep it that way.
Honestly, it doesn’t really matter!
Some Walt Disney World fans get so caught up in being at the front of the pack for Early Entry that they don’t consider the actual upside and downside of doing so. The goal should be balance–arriving as late as possible while still beating the crowds. Being too early has its own costs (sleep, fatigue, midday breaks, etc).
Although not all vacation time is of equal value, it’s still senseless to arrive to EPCOT at 7 am or some ridiculous hour and spend ~90 minutes waiting for nothing. Especially when arriving then versus 7:45 am might amount to being a couple dozen people farther forward and saving 1-2 minutes in line for your first ride. Every minute matters during Early Entry, but not that much. There’s also the fact that it isn’t a single file line from the entrance to the rides, anyway; walking speed matters more than when you arrive once the checkpoint opens.
Arriving to Test Track at 8:07 am easily clears that bar for ‘still beating the crowds’ and the same would’ve been true had I shown up at 8:14 am. My photos indicate that there were only another few dozen people in line behind me by then, which isn’t much. The real rush happened between 8:15 am and 8:25 am.
The doors to Test Track opened and the line started moving at around 8:23 am (prior to that, only the outdoor overflow queue had been pre-loaded). I was inside the building by 8:25 am, so I couldn’t tell you what arrivals after that looked like.
What I can tell you is that you can make it to Test Track or Cosmic Rewind from International Gateway before 8:15 am regardless of your walking speed, and whichever entrance opens first. Whether you should do it is another story entirely. But the point is, don’t sweat this small stuff too much. Other variables outside your control are more outcome-determinative in a successful rope drop run.
Once the interior queue opened and filled up (presumably because the line outside had gotten so long), the line stopped once again. Based on my observations, the ride started loading at approximately 8:38 am.
That’s 8 minutes after the start of Early Entry. Eight excruciating minutes.
I’m not trying to sound melodramatic or anything, but after just coming off an incredible streak of Early Entry experiences at Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Hollywood Studios–during which Slinky Dog Dash, Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, TRON Lightcycle Run, and more all started running well ahead of the published time–even on-time would’ve felt late. I had been spoiled by success.
In this particular case, I had purposefully chosen to do Test Track first because it’s faster.
Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind has something like a half-dozen pre-shows, and even if you barge through the doors like a heathen, it’s still a tough task to finish that attraction before the regular rope drop rush. And that’s on a normal day, not a 9/10 crowd level one. The total minimum time commitment is much higher. This matters a lot when it comes to Early Entry.
Conversely, Test Track did away with its pre-show during the recent reimagining. On a good day, it’s possible to be in and out of Test Track in 10 minutes or so. This was not a good day.
Unfortunately, Test Track has an above-average amount of the dreaded delayed openings. This wasn’t that, though!
At least with a delayed opening, I would’ve known there was a problem in advance–a line of Cast Members would’ve been preventing guests from even getting in line. (At least, usually. I’ve had delayed openings where operations is, ahem, ‘wrongly optimistic’ about their ability to have a ride up and running.)
Given where I was in line, a smooth 8:38 am opening still would’ve given me enough buffer to beat the wave of rope drop crowds to Cosmic Rewind. But it wasn’t smooth; there were stops and starts.
Adding insult to injury (okay, now that is a bit melodramatic), I was standing right next to the Single Rider line for the delay.
There wasn’t a single person in the Single Rider line. To the contrary, I watched one person who got in line at 8:46 am get loaded onto the attraction ahead of me! Now obviously, I knew about the Single Rider line at Test Track; I’ve used it many, many times.
But the whole point of this field test was research to “prove” it’s possible for normal guests to knock out both Test Track and Cosmic Rewind during Early Entry. Using Single Rider would’ve defeated the purpose of the test, since most guests aren’t using it! (Hence the line being so much shorter.)
The people around me don’t know all of this, of course. So in their eyes, I’m just stupidly standing in a longer line by myself for no reason. Maybe I should’ve said “no it’s okay, I’m doing this for the internet.”
Then they just would’ve thought I’m weird. But they probably already thought that from all of the queue photos I was taking with a big camera–better at that point to just be weird than weird and stupid. Perhaps I could’ve cleared up everything with a brief survey?!
Joking aside, I know other guests are there with their families or friends and couldn’t care less about what I’m doing or why. Thankfully. This is just my inner monologue, which was bored and amused while killing time before the ride.
I was finally loaded on Test Track at 8:48 am. Still enough time to be off and in line for Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. Nothing could stop me now!
Except two stoppages while riding Test Track, lasting 3 and 5 minutes each. One of which was shockingly abrupt, to the point that I wouldn’t have been surprised if it caused (very minor) guest injuries or lost phones. I don’t think I’ve ever experienced the ride coming to that quick of a halt.
Long story short, I was off Test Track at 9:04 am, behind the rope drop wave. Below is what the Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind queue looked like then; a posted standby wait of 75 minutes, which was well lower than the average for this day–but it was still climbing!
Ultimately, even though I had a “fail” for Early Entry at EPCOT, it should be clear that my plan would’ve worked had there not been the dreaded delayed opening and ride stoppages. Those ate up the majority of Early Entry; with the extra hours only being 30 minutes in the first place, there’s not that much margin for error.
The easy fix, as intimated above, would be just riding via Single Rider. Had I been willing to do that, I actually would’ve started at Cosmic Rewind and tried to do that twice. It wouldn’t have worked on a 9/10 crowds day, but I didn’t realize going in that it’d be that busy. (I did have success with Cosmic Rewind twice during the off-season.) Then I would’ve done Test Track via Single Rider. The other “easy” answer is not getting unlucky with downtime or delays. Simple as that.
This also wasn’t a complete failure, as my all-in wait was still well below-average for that day. In fact, when I exited Test Track, the standby wait had already exploded to 125 minutes. I never saw it drop below triple-digits for the day. Really a ‘not-so-epic’ fail in light of that.
Even though I failed at both, this should nevertheless illustrate that Test Track followed by Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind is possible during Early Entry from International Gateway. That would’ve been true even if I arrived a few minutes later and walked slower to the front.
At least objectively, this is the best plan of attack in terms of time-saved. It also helps that on a normal morning, you could easily knock out Soarin’ next without much of a wait there, either. I don’t know how long the wait would’ve been for Cosmic Rewind had I exited Test Track ~4 minutes earlier on this morning, but my guess is an actual wait of roughly 30-40 minutes. That would be consistent with my past testing, adjusted upwards for higher crowds.
Whether it’s the best realistic or reasonable EPCOT Early Entry plan of attack comes down to how whether you’re arriving via the main entrance or International Gateway. And if the latter, how much you’re willing to walk. Backtracking is pretty common at EPCOT, to the point that you can easily do double the number of steps during a day here versus Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
If you want to take the path of least resistance, start with the major headliner closest to your entrance and with the shortest duration. This means beginning at Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure or Test Track. Follow that up with the next closest option, meaning Frozen Ever After or Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. From each of those starting points, you have a few third-step options.
As always, there’s also the subjective side. I love that morning stroll through World Showcase, and either one of the above approaches give you that (either France to Norway past Morocco, or France to Canada past the UK). The better walk is the inside one, but they’re both enjoyable. That leisurely World Showcase powerwalk is my favorite part of Early Entry, not any of the rides themselves!
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YOUR THOUGHTS
Thoughts on Early Entry at EPCOT? Is Test Track your top pick now that it’s the #1 longest line in EPCOT? What’s your preferred approach to mornings at EPCOT? What’s your top priority now that there are 4 bona fide headliners open during Early Entry at EPCOT? Agree or disagree with our advice or approach? 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!




























Thanks Tom!
So I am a single rider starting EE from International Gateway prioritizing Guardians and Test Track. Do you recommend Guardians first then TT single rider line? Or the opposite?
“Do you recommend Guardians first then TT single rider line?”
100% this. You can push off Test Track even longer; the Single Rider line typically is fine for the first hour-plus after rope drop. But you can also be done with TT in 5-10 minutes via SR, so there’s really no sense in backtracking to something else before doing TT.
Maybe Cosmic Rewind twice if you beat the rope drop rush for the second ride.
Sounds great, thanks Tom! Will judge it when I’m there. Might to GG 1x then a couple spins on TT since I haven’t been on the current version yet.
Report from one random day: we rope dropped guardians from the international gateway. We started meeting people from the front of the park headed towards Remy at the port of entry, meaning they let in the front first today. So that put us behind nearly every single person from the front that went to Guardians. Ce la vie! Still the shortest wait of the day.
More trip intel from Epcot on the 20th, this week. We arrived about 7:30am and waited for them to let folks in. We were allowed in the park and were third in line for Test track, but it did not begin operating until 8:30(exactly).
We were the first group but the sound was not on so we rode a second time after walking through the back to re board. Hopped in line for Cosmic which had a 45 min wait. We already had an ILL for later in the day but one of our family hadn’t seen the queue. It was worth the wait to ride twice and I knew it would not be that low for the rest of the day. We churned our LLs all day. Started with Soarin’, glimmering greenhouse and the Rat. Also rode Three Cabelleros and just enjoyed the day, then hopped to MK for Starlight and fireworks. A fantastic day. We frequently visit late December through NYE and our visit reminded us of prior less rushed/stressful trips.
As always, thanks to your family for all the terrific advice. It makes every one of our trips better!
Thanks for sharing this!
Quick question: did you still make it into line for Cosmic Rewind *before* the rope drop rush?
Yes! The line quickly climbed past the 45 min initial wait once the regular hordes descended….
We were there last week and did Early Entry at the International Gateway (Skyliner from AoA) on 12/16. Thanks to an earlier post of yours, we had what turned out to be a great strategy ~ rode Ratatouille and then speed walked to Test Track, which we were able to ride twice. We also were able to ride Frozen much later in the day, between the end of the 6:45 Candlelight Processional and grabbing our spot for the fireworks. We are a family of 4 adults (“kids” are 19 and 22), and the other 3 prioritized Guardians to an extent that I bought ILL for it. They did let us in early and then held us in the Ratatouille line until official opening (possibly slightly earlier, we are rope drop commandos and the days start to run together after awhile ~ ha).
I have to say I read all your blogs and this was one of the funniest. Great field info as usual that will help me prepare for our third WDW trip since June but also had me cracking up a couple times. “side eye for my big camera”, “middle aged dude riding Frozen or Remy’s alone at the crack of dawn”. Ha! And yes, some GoTG guests are “heathens”. Great work as usual. Thanks you for your dedication to helping others plan.
Test track really does stop a lot! I don’t think I’ve ridden it without any stops or delays since it came back.
I do think assuming it’s up the best use case for most families would be to go to TT first then frozen, and just buy guardians for later in the day. Then you can still hit the rest of world showcase with low waits and have a mostly free afternoon for chilling and exploring around the park. Granted we are more of a sleep in plus LLfamily, but at least good to know this works 🙂
I just got back from WDW and was at Epcot on the 19th. I arrived on the 14th, and it was a great week to be there with low crowds. I couldn’t care less about Test Track or GOTG, so my two priorities were the Rat and Frozen. I entered at International Gateway and got there about 8:15 so was in the line at Rat before the doors opened at 8:30. Then I did Frozen and was done with those two before rope drop. I walked up to the front of the park to do everything there I was interested in and was able to do everything at the front of the park (except the two headliners) with a 15 minute wait or less (and I agree with you the walk is lovely early in the day). I can’t do all of that running around anymore, so I eliminated backtracking. It really was a great day because of the low crowds. Candlelight Processional was mobbed though – I was glad I had a package. BTW, as a woman of a certain age who travels solo I’ve seen every sort of reaction to my being there by myself. And not only from other guests…
Thanks for sharing your experience–sounds like a great day at EPCOT! Candlelight crowds have gotten really bad in the last few years. We’re definitely back to 2019 levels, if not worse, depending on the narrator. CP Dining Package is worth every penny.
Oh, and don’t you just love those early morning, awkward solo on-ride photos at Frozen Ever After?! 😉
We did Early Entry at Epcot once, but the Skyliner didn’t get us to the International Gateway until around 8:20. Ratatouille already had a ~60 minute wait.
The rest of my family won’t do Cosmic Rewind or Test Track, so DAK or DHS is a better use of our Early Entry time.
I’ve got all day to go Single Rider on Test Track, and I’ve learned to save Cosmic Rewind for last, since I may need awhile to recover.
If arriving from the front entrance on say a 6 or 7 (haha)/10 day would you still advise Test Track before GotG considering its rope drop downtime issues?
Yes. Although it has less downtime, Cosmic Rewind is simply longer from start to finish–and that’s true regardless of crowd levels. So it’s possible to get through that before regular rope drop rolls around, it’s really tough. It’s also true that Test Track is more breakdown-prone throughout the entire day, and it has higher average wait times (still!) than Cosmic Rewind.
Unless you’re going to do Single Rider (which we’d strongly recommend), starting at Test Track is the best move for now. Maybe that’ll change as the new(ly reimagined) ride smell wears off; I’ve been surprised by Test Track’s popularity since it reopened.
Awww, toddler life at WDW. Single rider lane, that is a LL bypass scam. Most rides are 3pp only, all others are 2pp. Families of 4+ are forced to pay for LL or stand in long standby lanes. And I’m really tired of them putting disney adults in ride queues ahead of little ones. Every visit, and we go at least 10x a year and are blue DVC, we get in line and the single riders or Disney adults are placed in the ride ahead of little ones. If our little one isn’t able to experience the magic of Disney then who will be Disney’s future customer…..Busch Gardens isn’t doing that well? ROA should be brought back and Cars 3 should replace Tomorrowland Speedway’s exhaust hazardland. WDW revenue shouldn’t be used to pay for Iger’s yacht life around the DHL islands and his Cali wife’s ideology.
As an adult who enjoys going to Disney on my own, I honestly cannot figure out what you mean. If I’m ahead of a kid, then I’m going to be in front of them. That’s the nature of a line.