What’s Up with Housekeeping at Disney World Resorts?

Whenever Walt Disney World resort cutbacks come up, readers complain or ask about scaled back or missing hotel housekeeping. Specifically, whether it’s returned to normal, if there’s daily cleaning, and what can be expected of mousekeeping. This answers with official policies, our experiences, what readers have shared, and more.
As you might recall, Walt Disney World instituted a range of health safety protocol back when the resorts started to reopen. Disney released operational changes and policies for its resorts, reflecting all of this. One thing that covered was resort cleaning, which would be both enhanced or scaled back, depending upon the circumstances.
A lot of attention was paid to surfaces throughout the parks, resorts, and even guest rooms. Prior to arrival, rooms were cleaned comprehensively, with deep-cleaning to surfaces and floors. During stays, only light housekeeping was performed occasionally. Obviously, a lot has changed since then–both in terms of Walt Disney World’s official policies, which are largely back to normal, and what guests experience from Mousekeeping.
With that said, here are the current housekeeping policies at Walt Disney World:
- Deluxe Resorts – Daily full housekeeping service.
- Deluxe Villas – Guests paying cash rates to stay at Deluxe Villas (DVC Resorts) will receive daily full housekeeping service.
- The Cabins at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort (DVC Resort) – Unlike other Deluxe Villas, cash guests at the Cabins at Fort Wilderness will receive housekeeping service every other day unless you are using Disney Vacation Club Member Points or a DVC Member discount.
- Moderate Resorts – Full housekeeping service every other day.
- Value Resorts – Full housekeeping service every other day.
- Disney Vacation Club Resorts – Guests staying at DVC resorts on points will receive trash and towel service on the fourth day. If staying more than 8 nights, full housekeeping service is offered on the fourth day followed by trash & towel service on the eighth day. Disney Vacation Club Members and their guests may purchase additional housekeeping service by visiting the front desk or contacting housekeeping via their in-room phone.
Full housekeeping service includes: making the bed, replacing towels and amenities, cleaning the bathroom, emptying the trash and recycling, and tidying the room by dusting, wiping counters, and vacuuming (as necessary).

There are a few of additional options and policies pertaining to Walt Disney World housekeeping services:
- If you wish to decline housekeeping service at any time during your stay, you can opt out by speaking with a Cast Member in person or by placing the “Room Occupied” sign on your door. Please note that the opt out feature is no longer available during the online check-in process.
- If there is more than one room on your reservation and you choose to decline service, your selection will apply to all rooms on the reservation.
- If you require additional housekeeping amenities or have specific housekeeping requests, please visit the Front Desk or contact Housekeeping via your in-room phone.
- Walt Disney World reserves the right to enter any room at a Disney Resort hotel for maintenance, safety, security or any other purpose, even if the Room Occupied sign is displayed on the room door. (More on this below.)

Although Mousekeeping has largely returned to normal (at least officially), it comes against the backdrop of Walt Disney World continuing to deal with housekeeper shortages as of late 2025. These are likely to be a problem for a while–perhaps forever–and this impacts the actual guest experience with housekeeping at Walt Disney World (more on that in a bit).
We stay at Walt Disney World at least once per month, and have done over a dozen multi-night stays in the last ~8 months at Walt Disney World. In the last 2+ years since housekeeping returned to normal, we’ve logged more stays than I can count–probably around 40. (It’s not nearly that many trips–we do a lot of split stays.)
Accordingly, we have a ton of recent firsthand experience with Mousekeeping during our stays at Walt Disney World. The biggest thing we’ve noticed is far more consistency with cleaning in the last couple of years. Prior to that, I would’ve described housekeeping as hit or miss at Walt Disney World.

On the Deluxe Resort end of the spectrum, we’ve done stays at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort, Grand Floridian, Contemporary Resort, BoardWalk Inn, and Yacht Club–all provided daily housekeeping consistent with what’s described above. (Note that these stays were on the hotel side of each resort–totally different ballgame on the DVC sides.)
We’ve also done stays at every single Value Resort and Moderate Resort during that time. We’ve done All Star Sports, Pop Century and Caribbean Beach each multiple times. At these resorts, service has consistently been every other day, as advertised.
I’ve also done many stays at Coronado Springs and Gran Destino Tower during that time, and would note that it generally offers near-Deluxe service. (This is no surprise–although not official, Disney aims to exceed expectations at Gran Destino because it caters to different clientele.)

As for what the service has entailed, it also has mostly been as advertised. Making beds, taking out trash, replenishing supplies like towels and coffee. There has been some tidying up of our stuff, but I would call it less comprehensive than many real-world hotels.
I can’t speak with authority to vacuuming or the cleaning of surfaces because we’re typically not doing things that would necessitate either or make it apparent when that had occurred–especially when I’m traveling alone. Although we have a toddler, she’s not really the crumb-y kind (yet?).
There have been a couple of times when it’s been clear that surfaces have been cleaned, but I’m not really sure one way or the other beyond that. (Hopefully readers can share their experiences.)

In addition to Coronado Springs, I also want to draw specific attention to All Star Sports, where both housekeeping and the guest experience have been especially (shockingly) good. During one of many stays there, a manager of the resort stopped me to inquire about the newly remodeled room and how things were going, generally.
She indicated that feedback on the new rooms at All Star Sports has been universally positive. Guest satisfaction is up and Cast Members prefer the new rooms, too. (One motivation behind many of the room updates has been making them easier and more efficient to clean.)

A lot of readers have shared their experiences with housekeeping during their stays at Walt Disney World, and those anecdotes are mixed. Some have reported that things are essentially back to normal.
Others indicated that housekeeping barely set foot in their room, except for the infamous safety/security checks. These people stated that not even the every other day services were occurring. Many also have shared that they didn’t receive any Mousekeeping at all without calling the front desk.

The middle ground of reader feedback more or less reflects the official policy–that housekeeping took out the trash and changed the towels, but not much else.
Our perception is that cleaning actually is more comprehensive in the Deluxe and Deluxe Villa Resorts (in addition to occuring daily), and faster and superficial in the lower tier-resorts. If you have experience with Walt Disney World Mousekeeping in the last two years, please share it in the comments.

Shortly after the original publication of this post, we also shared Housekeeping “Hassles” at Walt Disney World. Ironically, we have not experienced any of this issues in our stays since. That could simply be luck on our part–that does play a big role (just read the comments to that post with some regulars never having experienced the problems, and others having them with regularity).
There have been recent changes and more departure day issues (thanks to a new-ish My Disney Experience app feature for checking out), so it’s worth being aware of that new wrinkle to the housekeeping. Again, we have not had those problems firsthand and it does seem to us that the app feature has been fixed. (Knock on wood.)

Speaking of recent changes, another is that the ‘Hey Disney!’ Amazon Alexa device is now found in all hotel rooms at Walt Disney World Resort. This smart device can be used to make specific room requests, such as more pillows, towels, or coffee.
We’ve used it successfully for the purpose of such requests, which honestly felt like living in the future. Just asking a device for more coffee and having it delivered by a human shortly thereafter. When it works, it’s magic. When it works being the operative words.
We’ve also made a request that resulted in nothing happening. Perhaps we would’ve had similar (bad) luck when calling, but we now only use it if there’s no urgency on the request and we’re fine with trying again later. YMMV.

We’ve done many third-party hotel stays in the United States and internationally in the last few years. Our perception is that things are likewise improving at real world hotels.
Across the board, our experiences in Anaheim have been consistent with Walt Disney World resorts. However, Anaheim is also a unique market–with a lot of parallels to Central Florida–so I’d stop short of generalizing our experiences in Southern California to the whole industry as a whole. (Las Vegas is probably also a similar story, but I’m not sure about other domestic destinations.)
In Anaheim, it’s been common for housekeeping to be every other day or only “upon request,” especially at budget and family-friendly hotels. At many of these hotels, we’ve noticed garbage outside other guest rooms in the hallways, and even that sometimes sits there for hours.

It’s also more common for hotel chains to give the option to decline housekeeping across-the-board upon check-in, which some chains used to offer as an incentive. Notably, Marriott eliminated its “Make A Green Choice” program, which gave Bonvoy members the option to receive 500 points for each day they declined housekeeping.
We were big fans of this, and always took advantage. We’re not trying to single out that brand as some sort of anti-Marriott agenda; they’re not the only chained brand hotel to quietly do away with its incentives for declining housekeeping. My guess is that hoteliers realized they could get away with cutting that bonus under the guise of health safety and just never brought it back.

Similarly, Walt Disney World had been offering gift cards as part of the “Service Your Way” program for those who declined housekeeping at select resorts. This did not return when the resorts reopened, presumably removed with the same underlying motivations as other hotel operators.
Disney’s “Service Your Way” offer started a few years ago. It was one of the rare perks that got better as time went on, as Disney increased the dollar amount to entice more guests to decline housekeeping. We also always took advantage of this, and there were some occasions–like when booked in tandem with Free Dining–where it felt like one of those “there’s gotta be a catch?!” things. Disney was practically paying us to stay there.

Of course, there was a catch and none of these hoteliers were offering points or cashback for their purported reasons of environmentality or customizable service. Its motivations were purely economic, just like a lot of recent changes that offer coincidental environmental or other benefits.
While I cannot speak to Marriott or chains in other markets around the country, Walt Disney World’s motivation was staffing shortages. Even from 2017 through early 2020, the company was having tremendous difficulties hiring and retaining housekeepers. College Program participants were offered incentives to change roles, there were multiple job fairs, hiring bonuses, and wage increases–but the shortages persisted.

As you’re undoubtedly aware if you’re read this blog at all, staffing shortages for many roles have only gotten worse, and housekeepers are one specific role that is always advertised for job fairs and hiring bonuses.
There are currently open positions on Disney Careers for full-time and part-time housekeepers with a starting rate of $23 per hour. This is actually higher than many frontline Cast Members in non-tipped positions (although some guests elect to tip housekeepers, it’s classified as a non-tipped position).
When it comes to the role expectations of housekeepers, the job listing indicates that they’re expected to clean 14-22 rooms per shift. (Anecdotally, we’ve heard that it’s usually at the higher end of the range–at least during higher occupancy times.)
They also “clean and sanitize Guest rooms by cleaning floors, making beds, emptying trash and recyclables, electronics, telephones, windows, mirrors, glass, dusting all surfaces, clean and disinfect bathrooms by scrubbing basins, bathtubs, shower walls and doors, toilets, and tile floors with proper chemicals.”

The reasons for the aforementioned labor shortages are multifaceted. I won’t pretend to understand all of the nuances of the labor market for housekeepers in Central Florida, but I’d hazard a guess that there are few key factors at play.
They have been further exacerbated by the United States having an aging population, and many baby boomers have left the labor force entirely in the last several years. All of this makes the housekeeper shortage one that higher wages alone cannot resolve. However, there are a couple of significant issues that often get overlooked.
First, legal immigration to the United States has slowed down considerably. This alone leaves the country with a shortfall of over 2 million workers. This is of particular relevance for housekeeping roles, as they were disproportionately filled by immigrants. Legal immigration returning to previous levels would likely have the biggest impact on addressing the housekeeper shortage, but that seems unlikely to occur.

Second, development around Central Florida has exploded during that same span of time. I’m not going to crunch the numbers on how many hotel rooms have been added to the Orlando market during that time, but it’s easily tens of thousands.
Hotels aren’t the only thing that has been built. Residential construction has also exploded, with huge swaths of undeveloped land now filled by seas of subdivisions.
With more homes comes more demand for maids and residential home cleaners. In my cursory research, it appears those positions pay more than Disney. I’m also going to go out on a limb and guess they’re lower stress.

Ultimately, all of this is why I’m skeptical that housekeeping will ever return 100% to its pre-COVID normal. Not just at Walt Disney World, but for the U.S. hotel industry as a whole.
One expectation is that the degree of service will vary with occupancy and load levels. Guests who travel during the off-season or stay at unpopular hotels are probably more likely to encounter regular and comprehensive cleaning.
It’s also possible that housekeeping upon request becomes the industry standard going forward. However, the days of consistent and unsolicited housekeeping–or an economic incentive for declining it–are probably gone for good.

Finally, it’s possible that Walt Disney World will institute more changes, and Mousekeeping service becomes a way of segmenting among the various tiers of resorts even more. Which is to say that in the future it might not be offered period at Value Resorts and only lightly at Moderate Resorts. We’d expect daily service to continue being the standard at Deluxe Resorts and other luxury hotels.
This would be a way of addressing housekeeper shortages and also guest demand for daily room cleaning. Probably not a popular way among guests, but one that could make sense to the company if these shortages persist and costs keep rising. Wages have already increased significantly for housekeepers in the last few years, and even so, Walt Disney World still has trouble filling those open positions. So although things have returned to normal with housekeeping, it seems appropriate to append “for now” to that.
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YOUR THOUGHTS
What have been your recent experiences with housekeeping at Walt Disney World–and beyond? Think housekeeping reductions are another cost-cutting measure by Walt Disney World, or agree that there are externalities that’ll make it difficult to restore housekeeping? 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!

We stayed at SSR in. Dec 2021 for a week. I had showered the night before I went to bed because I was sweaty from being at the parks and didn’t want to go to bed feeling dirty. I showered and went right to bed. I got up in the morning and went to shower before we left, I stepped into the shower and my feet were so black from walking on the floor that I left footprints on the porcelain. I had only walked in the room. It was so disgusting and made me realize that they were not cleaning the floors very often!!
The security checks sound creepy-and ironically a potential safety hazard. What I mean is-how do you know the person knocking on your door is really a cast member who is authorized to “search “ your room?(what are they searching for??). I am going to instruct my family to a) refuse to open the door for anyone outside the family-if they belong searching make them use their key and b) insist on seeing name tag/id when they enter, take their photo, and check with the front desk that their entry was authorized. Everyone should take measures to keep their family safe. This is a perfect way for bad people to trick trusting vacationers and do harm.
While I haven’t stayed at WDW since August 2020, I’ve had several trips to Laughlin, Vegas, and Hawaii. Hawaii included a couple nights at Aulani and the rest at a hotel in Waikiki. I feel like housekeeping has been rough at every location except maybe Aulani, which was still fairly fresh from reopening when we visited. I know here at Disneyland, where I live, staffing pretty much every role has been beyond difficult, and housekeeping has been hit hard. That being said, with understandable staffing shortages, and thus an understandable decline in service quality, should come an equal deduction in price.
Any hotel that charges more than $200 a night should provide daily housekeeping without requesting it. Opting out is a nice option with or without the financial incentive. Can you imagine a $500 dinner for two where you’re required to clear the dishes between courses? This kind of stuff drives me crazy! Staffing shortage leading to reduced service? Fine – just reduce your nightly rate by an equivalent amount.
I stayed at Pop in November of 2020 for a week and didn’t have any problems with housekeeping every other day except not having trash liners for the bins. My next trip was in December 2021 at All Star music for a week. I declined housekeeping this trip as I was staying in the room by myself. I figured if I needed anything, I could call or ask the front desk on my way out for the day. There were 6 towels in the room so didn’t need them replaced, and I brought my own trash bags. In the middle of the trip, the housekeeping manager knocked on the door, during my mid-day break, for a “mandatory room inspection.” My first thought was it’s probably because I declined housekeeping for the week.
We stayed at All Star Movies the week after Thanksgiving. Towels were replenished and garbage removed every other day. I hated not having our beds made because there are no fitted sheets. So the bottom sheet moved all over the place and were too small to stay put tucked in. Drove me nuts. The room was clean on arrival, so no issues there.
We have been to other hotels during the pandemic and received standard daily housekeeping. You could decline it if you wanted to, but I like having the room cleaned with having 3 boys. There is no way we will stay onsite again and pay even the cost of a value resort without regular housekeeping.
We recently stayed at port orleans riverside 12/10-12/23. The housekeeping was very disappointing. We had to ask for the trash to be taken out and for towels. One morning they knocked on the door at 8 am, the issue, we had our do not disturb sign on. They came back three more times, wanting to know when we were leaving. Once we left and returned, nothing was done. We could tell someone was in the room, but they didn’t do anything. The other issue is they put the large carts with towels and sheets on them in the wall ways, you could hardly get by.
I agree with some, this is a way to save money.
We were at Caribbean in early December. We declined the Mousekeeping but truly didn’t realize that would mean they would never even come by to ask if we needed trash removed or new towels. We re-used towels and put our trash in bags from our quick serve meals.
I realize there is that mandatory security check but I believe they should knock first and wait just a few seconds for a response before just opening up the room. I was watching TV one morning and there was the knock and I said “one second” and before I could get to the door, they had used their key to come in. I was told that they were there to check the electrical and carpet but was I never asked if we needed anything. We have traveled to other places in the last year and stayed in hotels where there weren’t issues with cleanliness, service or trash removal.
I love housekeeping on vacation (and Mousekeeping at Disney World), and I would never, ever decline service even for a nightly gift card. As someone who cleans a lot at home, part of vacation is coming back to the room and having beds made and things tidied up. I love it.
We were at Disney World in June and didn’t receive Mousekeeping. However, we had a number of security checks that frankly creeped me out. I called Disney World security at one point because of the checks! People repeatedly came to our door. Once someone came with a bag of towels and asked if anyone was in my room and were peering around me. They would ask us when we were leaving so they could search our room. Once, we went out in the evening and came back to a door tag on our room letting us know someone was in our room, but no one was there. I was by myself with my daughter and freaking out. I searched under the beds and stuff to make sure no one was there. I hated it. I wish Disney would put more money into paying their Mousekeeping staff instead of the security staff. Then we could get our rooms cleaned each day and wouldn’t need to deal with security searching our rooms instead.
We visited in September for 3 nights at a value resort. The only issue I noticed is that there were no bags for trash in the cans. Ordinarily, there should be bags in all wastebaskets, be it for regular trash or recycling. Aside from that, I had no issues. I called for an extra blanket and that was brought fairly quickly. Has anyone else noted this problem? Will I need to provide my own bags when we come next
year?
Do they clean the toilet on the light days? Don’t they get gross? Maybe it’s just my IBD issue type family but cleaning the toilet during a week stay is going to be a necessity at least 3 times! I don’t see toilet cleaning listed at all…
I suppose in the villas we can wash our towels ourselves if they don’t replace them but what a waste and seriously for the price that’s a bit absurd.
Housekeeping at Animal Kingdom Lodge was nonexistant on our recent stay this past December. We stayed 6 nights and the only time we recieved trash pickup or clean towels was when we called the front desk. With two little kids i had to request a broom to sweep our floor myself on the fourth night and new sheets which i changed myself after a spilt drink. For over 5k it was very frusterating the lack of service or even care when requesting help. We are returning in early April and are staying in a 2 bedroom suite with a kitchen and living room at the Marriot Grande Vista for half the cost.
I also think it might be worth mentioning that, despite all of the labor shortages and other central FL trends you helpfully name here, Universal has reportedly found ways to provide more robust housekeeping in their hotels. This feels like an intentional (money-saving) oversight on WDW’s part.
We stayed at Wilderness Lodge for 8 nights starting on 11/27. Housekeeping was pretty much as advertised. We got clean towels, trash cans emptied, coffee pods replenished every other day. If we needed something on a “non-cleaning” day, such as additional towels, in the morning before we started our day we would just look down the hall and go to the housekeeping cart and ask the housekeeping person for what ever we needed. They were more than glad to help.
We stayed at the Boardwalk 12/9/21 – 12/12/21 and the only person to enter the room was for the security check. We had to call for towels after returning from the Parks on the 11th.
We stayed at the Polynesian 12/12/21 – 12/15/21 and also no light cleaning at all. Plus side -no security check either.
Then moved to Portofino Bay 12/15/21 – 12/19/21 and we got daily housekeeping service (no rando security check either). One more thing Universal is doing better right now.
I’ve had two stays in Disney World, one at Aulani, and one at Disneyland since the housekeeping changes came into effect. For all four stays, it wasn’t enough. We needed new towels the trash taken out daily. Two of the trips were longer than a week and we needed clean sheets. But what made it all the worse is that the every other day would change and so on what we thought was our off day, they would come in with our towels on the rack and wouldn’t change them, then they’d skip the day we thought they would come and our towels would be on the floor! We felt like we could never really be sure which day they were coming in. This happened at all four locations.
Definitely no daily housekeeping in the Luxury (or Deluxe) category is what is keeping me from coming at all. Maybe that is the difference? If I’m paying for a Marriott (which typically costs less than half of the Poly), I expect less service. But if Disney can’t offer daily housekeeping at those prices, then I’d rather stay somewhere else. There are plenty of much less expensive condos to rent which don’t offer daily maid service, etc.
What am I getting for my money to stay at a Deluxe Disney property? To me, having to take out your own trash in a hotel is the equivalent to having to clear your table in a restaurant – I accept that at a Quick Service restaurant. I do not accept it at a Signature restaurant.
I want to stay in Deluxe resorts. But for that price, I want the service that includes daily housekeeping. I do not want to walk down hallways filled with used food trays and other trash. Even if there is a lower industry standard now for lower priced hotels, that is not the case at the luxury price point outside of Disney.
We stayed at pop century resort early december 2021. We stayed for a week,and mousekeeping only came twice (and changed out towels once). We have two small kids and diapers and trash were overflowing onto the floor. Finally my parents had to find someone to get us a garbage bag to dump all of our garbage into ourselves.
I’m sorry, if I pay over $1000 a night (like I did for a cash stay at WL in August), I want my room cleaned & beds made every day. We had to go to the pool and grab towels there because ours were not replaced as they should have been. We left the used wet ones in the tub so they knew we wanted them replaced (it was the day were we supposed to have light service). We came back from the parks and needed to shower to get ready for a dinner, and the dirty wet towels were still sitting in the tub. We called for new towels but they said it could take up to an hour for us to get them. We did not have an hour to wait so we went to the pool and grabbed towels there -not acceptable. We were in a one bedroom suite, again paid cash not rented DVC points. If it were DVC I understand there are different rules for housekeeping, but we booked directly through Disney. There were two adults and two teenagers in the room, it was never vacuumed over the 10 nights we were there. Fortunately, because it was DVC’ trash rooms were on each floor, we emptied our own trash nearly every day, housekeeping never did it. Yes, we knew we were not going to have our beds made every day when we booked the reservation, but we did expect to have our towels replaced and the supposed light housekeeping services when promised. I think we may have received new towels once while we were there without having to call. We called and asked for a pan & broom, too because the kitchen & bathroom floors were getting dirty towards the middle of our stay. Never did I think I’d have to sweep my own room at Disney! I wanted a vacuum but they wouldn’t send one. You would have thought they would offer to vacuum, but no. I asked & they said they would do it the next day, though it never happened. Weird thing is someone did put a few glasses and a plate in the dishwasher and ran it, so someone from housekeeping did come in. For me, coming back to a nice clean room with the beds made after a long day in the parks is one of the little luxuries I appreciate while on vacation. Hopefully full housekeeping is back by this summer. If not, along with all the other things that have been eliminated or upcharged, we may cancel the WL reservation and try Universal. I can’t even believe I am saying that! Apologies for the rant!
No need to apologize whatsoever!
Feedback like this is appreciated, as it is helpful to other consumers. It gives people an idea of what to expect for their upcoming stays, or whether they should stay on-site in the first place. So, thank YOU! 🙂
Just got back from a Wilderness Lodge (3 night) – POR (7 night) split stay. I guess we got lucky, but then we’re definitely ones who took advantage of incentives for turning down housekeeping when they existed. Our WL stay was over Christmas, so our room was packed to the gill with gifts and we definitely didn’t want Mousekeeping to have to deal with climbing over all of that. So since it was such a brief stay, we put out our room occupied sign and left it at that. The room was definitely clean when we arrived. Then, at POR, since we had a longer stay, we knew we would need some Mousekeeping. We still brought our Christmas gifts in since we didn’t want them just sitting out in the truck for a week, but they were no longer wrapped and more easily consolidated. We still think daily housekeeping is a waste, so we put up our room occupied sign. Since it’s only two of us, we were able to use the four towels for a few days. Then, when we needed a change, I took off the sign. I had read the horror stories before our trip and was a little worried that no one would come, but when we got back from the parks that day, everything accessible had been refreshed (we had our gifts stacked on the unused bed). I don’t know if we lucked out and took our sign down on the day we were scheduled for Mousekeeping anyway, or if they’re just super on top of it at POR. At both resorts we saw Mousekeeping carts and staff on our floor daily, so they were at least in the area. I will say that across the board, all the staff at POR, including Mousekeeping, were SO friendly and chatty when we walked by. I guess they still have their reopening glow, but they were all in a great mood!