Poly’s Island Tower Now Open at Disney World!

The new Island Tower at Disney’s Polynesian Resort is now open to guests as of today, December 17, 2025. This shares photos & videos of the hotel expansion, plus a few first impressions of the high-rise that’s been plopped in the middle of the monorail loop at Walt Disney World and purports to celebrate the South Pacific, Moana, and natural elements.
Located on the shores of Seven Seas Lagoon and offering views of that and Magic Kingdom, the Island Tower replaces Disney’s Spirit of Aloha Dinner Show. The new Island Tower is essentially between the existing Great Ceremonial House at the Poly and the Grand Floridian, and right next door to Disney’s Wedding Pavilion.
It’s a towering addition to a monorail loop ‘skyline’ that already looks dramatically different than it did 15 years ago, with many more guest rooms added to the mix. For its part, the Island Tower at Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows adds 260 guest rooms in a variety of types that will sleep from two to nine guests. This includes duo studios, spacious one and two-bedroom villas, and brand-new two-bedroom penthouse villas. The tower will also include deluxe studio rooms, adding to the deluxe studio rooms already available at the Poly Villas.
According to Walt Disney World, the new 10-story Island Tower’s architecture pulls inspiration from early concept art of the iconic property by Walt Disney Imagineering. When pitching the project to fans, the company has invoked legendary Imagineer Marty Sklar’s quote: “A good idea never goes away!”
In their defense, early concepts for Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort included a multi-story terraced structure surrounded by three-story buildings along the shores of Seven Seas Lagoon. The original design for the tower at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort would have been modern for the 1970s and reminiscent of the luxury hotels found on Waikiki Beach.
Here’s a look at the original concept art from the late 1960s:

Disney keeps touting this, so I’m going to once again push back on it–especially since we also often use the line that a ‘good idea never dies at Imagineering.’ Perhaps the statement is, in fact, more accurately that ideas never die–both good and bad–at Imagineering.
It bugs me that Disney is taking plans that never made it off the drawing board to argue that this completes the original vision for the Polynesian Resort, as if everything from the past is automatically good. Perhaps there’s a reason the tower concept didn’t come to fruition in the first place decades ago. That it was and is a bad idea, not a good one.
Ironically, every change away from Walt Disney World’s past that actually was realized is justified with a Walt Disney quote about progress. Guess they decided to switch up the playbook here.

To each their own, but this argument falls flat for me. Mostly because I have eyes. I can look at the thing in question, evaluate it, and determine whether or not it’s a good or bad idea. If others just want to blindly believe that the Island Tower completes the vision for the Poly based on what Disney is saying, I suppose that’s their prerogative.
Frankly, I’d prefer that other Disney fans disagree with me on the merits, and think the Island Tower actually looks nice and the complaints about its appearance are overblown. I can accept that–different strokes for different folks and all that.

Not only that, but the Island Tower is very different than the decades-old concept art Disney is showing to justify its existence. (The act of them doing this alone suggests to me that they felt it necessary, as the thing cannot speak for itself on substance.)
While I don’t love the look of the unbuilt tower and think the Poly is/was better without it, the structure is at least visually interesting, evoking a mountain–perhaps Diamond Head. It reminds me a bit of the Hyatt Grand Cypress but with a more ambitious design. We’ve actually stayed in tower hotels designed like this–they can be eye-catching. By contrast, the Island Tower is more boxy, reminding me of Gran Destino Tower more than anything else.
Beyond that, the Island Tower as finished is very different than that concept that had a tower at the heart of the Poly. It would be one thing to have a quasi-tower with bungalows radiating out from it. That’s not what this is. Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort was already built one way, with a purposeful design and layout–and no tower. Now it has a tower plopped at the periphery of the resort, and in a different style.

There is no thematic cohesion or shared design language between the legacy Polynesian Village Resort and the Island Tower. It’s obvious just from looking at them that they’re two different visions from two different eras.
I’m not even suggesting that the Island Tower is inherently bad–just that doesn’t complete some grand vision for the resort as a whole. There’s no unity or harmony between the two. From a design perspective, they’re basically two standalone resorts next to one another that share some visual motifs and common inspiration.
Honestly, if the Island Tower weren’t being wedged in between the Grand Floridian and Polynesian, forever altering the ‘skyline’ of the monorail loop, I wouldn’t have nearly as much issue with it. If this exact same design were being built out on Western Way near Coronado or the All Stars, it would be fine. Good enough, even!

It still would not my personal favorite style, but I’d recognize that modern guests actually want towers like this. Not everything needs to be tailored to my tastes. The issue here is all about where Island Tower has been plopped–what’s around and “connected” to it.
While leaving Magic Kingdom and heading to Wilderness Lodge the other night, we saw the Island Tower illuminated from the boat dock. Sarah stopped in her tracks and said, “wow.” It wasn’t a good wow. Sarah has generally been more forgiving of the Island Tower than me, choosing to focus on the practical upside (it’ll be a great place to stay!) than the way it looks.
She’s also a fan of both Gran Destino Tower and Riviera Resort, and has been optimistic about the addition based on its similarities with those properties. But even she was taken aback by just how the Island Tower dominates the view from all along Seven Seas Lagoon.

Again, the Island Tower is more like the ex post facto additions of Gran Destino and Riviera Resorts than it is something like the original Polynesian tower concept or even Aulani, which would have been (or was) master-planned and has visual cohesion as a result.
Even though I don’t love the exterior appearance of Gran Destino, at least it has become the focal point of Coronado Springs. That resort has been re-centered around Gran Destino Tower. It’s not perfect, but Imagineering really made lemonade out of lemons there. (The stakes were also lower–Coronado Springs was not beloved nor is it park-adjacent.)
That has not happened with the Poly. Great Ceremonial House remains the nucleus of Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort, but now there’s this gigantic tower at the edge of the resort that serves as the focal point of the property. It is incongruous and jarring.
But enough on my rants about the way the Island Tower looks from the exterior and how it irrevocably alters the skyline of the monorail loop. At this point, you either agree with Disney or with me, and even though I could probably ramble on for another thousand words, there’s no further persuasive value in doing so.

Let’s instead talk about the Island Tower’s impact on infrastructure. As noted above, the Island Tower adds 260 guest rooms, but with a higher guest count than that number would suggest if this were a regular resort, as many of those are multi-bedroom units. One of the things we’ve stressed repeatedly during the tower’s construction (and even before it) is that the Poly is already bursting at the seams on busy dates.
During our recent Walt Disney World holiday trip, we made it over to the Great Ceremonial House as part of a Christmas-time tour of the monorail loop resorts. This is hardly stop-the-presses news, but the Great Ceremonial House was absolutely bonkers. Guests overflowing from the ‘Ohana waiting area, a surprising number of people standing around waiting to be seated at Kona, a long line for the monorail–just crowds, everywhere.
To be fair, this is the worst time of year for congestion and chaos at the monorail loop resorts. Families want to do nice meals at the resorts or come to see the decorations, which can make both the Polynesian and Grand Floridian lobbies feel like madhouses. I’ve encountered more or less the same thing each of the last few years at both GF and the Poly. It’s nothing new, and certainly cannot be attributed to the Island Tower.

But a lessened version of this is already the norm at the Poly. The second-level of the Great Ceremonial House has been loud and chaotic every evening I’ve been there in the last several years (save for 2020-2021). My fear is that the Island Tower will exacerbate this. Same goes for stress on the resort monorail, which is already overburdened due to Bay Lake Tower and Grand Floridian Villas.
The Island Tower just opened, so the jury is still out on all of this. I hope that my fears are not well-founded, and that more guests will use the lovely walkway to Magic Kingdom, boat service, or otherwise avoid the monorail.
I also hope that the excellent-looking Wailulu Bar & Grill has more-than-sufficient capacity to service the Island Tower, and even pulls people away from the Great Ceremonial House. That strikes me as unlikely, but I’m nevertheless hopeful.

The alternative is ‘locking down’ the Polynesian (and maybe also the Grand Floridian). Walt Disney World already restricts parking at these resorts (and sometimes fireworks viewing), but perhaps they’ll need to take that a step further and restrict access, period. I’m not exactly how they accomplish that from a practical perspective given how porous arrival points are, but it’s not unprecedented–Tokyo Disney Resort does exactly this with Toy Story Hotel and Fantasy Springs Hotel.
I already have my alarm set for the 7-month mark so we can (hopefully!) book a stay at the Island Tower next Christmas. For research, of course. To see how the resort ‘performs’ during the most crowded time of year after another year of DVC sales and (presumably) higher occupancy in the tower than the remainder of this holiday season.
Let’s end on a positive note, with the rooms! Disney has released room tour videos that offer a better look at the inside of the various room types at the Poly’s Island Tower:
Duo Studios
Perfect for 2 Guests, these Studios offer an outdoor patio and kitchenette, plus vibrant artwork inspired by both Moana and the sky element.
Deluxe Studios
These earth-themed rooms that sleep up to 4 majestically showcase the flora and fauna of the islands, and offer an outdoor patio and kitchenette with a dishwasher.
1-Bedroom Villas
Discover beautiful water-inspired artwork in Villas that sleep up to 5 and feature an outdoor patio, full kitchen, spacious living area, 2 bathrooms and a washer and dryer.
2-Bedroom Villas
In addition to everything the 1-Bedroom Villas offer, these Villas—themed to both water and earth—have a third luxurious bathroom and sleep up to 9.
It might be a controversial opinion with diehard fans (and our commenters), but my overall impression of these rooms is positive. And I don’t doubt for a second that the rooms will be well-received by regular DVC members.
Disney has been doing a great job with the new and reimagined rooms at the villas for the last 5 years. We also just stayed at the new Fort Wilderness Cabins and absolutely loved them, which also seems like an unpopular perspective among fans.

I’m not a fan of the Island Tower and wish it did not exist at all, but the guest rooms are not part of that criticism. My only concern before was that the rooms were overly beige, ‘earthy,’ and one-note.
Given its mid-century and Polynesian roots, I was hoping for a lot more color. But in actually watching the video and seeing the finished product, what they lack in color they make up for in texture and other details.
The jury is still out until we actually stay there, but my first impression is that these aren’t bland, but rather, subtle. A lot of fans will likely appreciate the ‘calming’ design and the way they act as counterprogramming to the existing Poly Villas.

Ultimately, there’s a lot to criticize about the Island Tower and the way it looks from the outside and what it does to Walt Disney World as a whole. Beyond the above, I also think it leeches off goodwill and good design from over 5 decades ago, and that if everything were built this way from the beginning, most of us wouldn’t be Walt Disney World fans in the first place. It’s a brand withdrawal rather than a deposit, to use Disney’s own language.
But what’s done is done. I just wanted to get this out of my system one last time before actually reviewing the Island Tower and repeating the mistakes made in our Disney’s Riviera Resort Review, which focuses inordinate attention on themed design and characteristics that are not relevant to average guests or from a practical planning perspective.
The bottom line is that there’s also a lot to love about the Poly’s Island Tower. Wailulu Bar & Grill, the Moana pool area, and (especially) Terrace Gardens look like fantastic assets that guests will love. I cannot wait to spend late nights or early mornings with a cup of coffee in those gardens, overlooking Magic Kingdom as it wakes up or goes to sleep for the day.

In the end, I hate how the Island Tower looks from the outside, but just like Riviera and Gran Destino before it, the ugly and undercooked tower should be great once you’re inside and enjoying views from it rather than of it. The Island Tower is the one place that offers sweeping views of Magic Kingdom and Seven Seas Lagoon, without having to look at the Island Tower! (Kinda feels like DVC has developed its own form of moral hazard, but whatever.)
I’m also confident that actual guests who aren’t armchair Imagineers or online critics (ahem) are going to love the Island Tower. I have no doubt about that. It combines two things that score really well with current guests–towers and the new styles of rooms. (These two things may not rate highly with you personally, but they do perform exceptionally with guests as a whole.)
There’s no undoing the damage already caused by adding this tower to the monorail loop…so we might as well enjoy the good if we have to put up with the bad. We cannot wait to stay at the Island Tower as a family; as a reviewer, I cannot wait for a point in time when Walt Disney World additions don’t need to be evaluated from a “lemonade out of lemons” perspective.
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YOUR THOUGHTS
What do you think of the Island Tower? Is this a net positive or negative for Walt Disney World as a whole? What about for the Polynesian or DVC members? Have you already booked a stay at the Island Tower? Are you optimistic or pessimistic about the Island Tower at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort? Do you agree or disagree with our first impressions? 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!

Ranking every DVC tower/building as how well they fit the overall esthetic of the resort:
1. Destino Tower
2. Old Key West
3. Jambo House/Kidani
4. Grand Floridian
5. Beach Club/Boardwalk
6. Bay Lake Contemporary
7. Polynesian
8. Boulder Ridge/Wilderness Lodge
9. Saratoga Springs
10. Cabins at Fort Wilderness
11. Riviera
Although not a DVC property, it should be noted Swan Reserve is the overall worst resort building on the Walt Disney World property (unless Disney was going for a Marriott airport hotel vibe).
Destino tower isn’t DVC…
I know I’m in the minority, but I really wish this timeshare BS never happened to WDW, it’s kinda the worst.
DL too
It has morphed into several things that it shouldn’t have. The one thing that really aggravates me is “renting” out one’s points.” That ends up screwing members who don’t as it boosts the occupancy percentages. I was under the impression that DVC was members only. Stupid me!
Count me in the minority as well.
I’m at the “regular” Poly at the beginning of January and received a notice about parking at the resort:
“To help make sure you and all resort guests staying with us have enough parking and amenities, we’ll only be allowing guests listed on a resort room, dining or recreation reservation to park at the resort. Those with dining or recreation reservations will only be permitted to arrive two hours before their reservation time.
All others, including those visiting registered resort guests, will be asked to park nearby at a different location and take transportation to the resort.
We appreciate your understanding and hope you have a wonderful stay!”
That building isn’t a tower. It’s just a big building with 10 floors. I don’t know why that bothers me so much, but I can’t un-see it…
“…even though I could probably ramble on for another thousand words, there’s no further persuasive value in doing so.”
You know what they say about pictures, don’t you Tom? 🙂
In all seriousness, I do think you should include at least one picture of the Poly Tower among the greater skyline for reference. I’ve not been to WDW since they started construction, and since a large part of your criticism is more about how the tower fits in with everything else than it is about the tower’s design in isolation, I think a pic would help folks like me better “get” your point of view. Just like with the water tacos 😉
In the full review, I absolutely will.
Unfortunately, there’s a reason why I described being at the boat dock and seeing the tower rather than shared a photo of it…having a mobile toddler really changes my ability to capture photos. There are so many shots I wanted to get, but didn’t this trip. Suffice to say, lots of ‘clean-up’ work to do on my next solo research trip.
Originally book at Pop but I was able to get a Studio Duo on rented points for December 21-26 in late October. Right now the plan is to walk to MK on Christmas morning. We will see how the day goes and how crazy the transportation lines are in the evening.
I own at the Polynesian and love that resort. There is no doubt that the rooms are great. I’m sure it will be a big hit. But to me this is one of those situations where I wish they would have gotten the whole thing right, not just the rooms. By that I mean building an addition that is cohesive to the current resort. Something that looks like it. They did it with the Grand Floridian Villas which fit right in. They also had an opportunity to build an amazing and highly themed pool area that absorbs the summer pool crowds. A pool area at least on par with the Dig Site (I know Storm Along will never be replicated). This new one is “nice”, but it’s not Polynesian WOW! Anyway, I wish leadership would quit building these bland towers next to highly themed resorts. I hope the current decision makers are gone before they can build the “12 story Beach Tower at Crescent Lake”. Or the 10 story “Conch Republic Paradise Lodge” at Old Key West.
It’s all in the ROI. Theming at Disney World has gone the way of the Dodo Bird. That should be evident from the weak attempts to thematically justify dropping a Cars Racetrack into Frontier Land. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: “Welcome to Six Flags Disney World!”
I love that the conclusion of this post channels the French writer Guy de Maupassant, who claimed the reason he ate lunch at the Eiffel Tower restaurant almost every day was because it was the only place in Paris where he didn’t have to look at it.
Now that the Eiffel Tower is considered tasteful, locals speak the same way about going up to catch the “Best view in Paris” from the observation deck at the much-loathed Montparnasse Tower. And on that note, I’m sure that someday (unfortunately) another resort tower will be built at WDW that makes the Island Tower look like an architectural masterpiece. Sigh.
another article of complaining
another troll, trolling
I love everything about the new poly tower and can’t wait to stay there in January. The only thing I have a little problem with is how close it is to grand Floridian especially the wedding chapel. The walk up bar looks great but they should have added signiture dining at the top. Ohanas is so hard to book. Nice to have other options at poly.
The interiors look really gorgeous! I’m with you 100% though, that the outside facades look incredibly cheap and dull, plus not thematically cohesive in its location. This building would have been fine if it were located somewhere else on Disney property, but it isn’t. I suppose what’s done is done, but wow, is it ugly.
I have no problem with the design, architecture, etc. The rooms look fantastic.
My criticisms are:
– no dining except a single lounge. For 260 rooms! It wouldn’t be so bad if the rest of the Poly wasn’t already limited. This was an opportunity to give Poly a signature, another QS…. Instead, we get another PF Chang’s, in lounge format.
-It’s far from transportation. Wonder if they might add a bus stop.
But overall, my impression is positive. I’m not buying points there, but hope to stay eventually.
WRT transportation, I’m betting people staying at the end furthest from the main Ceremonial House will go to the Grand Floridian, it looks to be closer. Kind of like some portions of Caribbean Beach are closer to the Riviera’s Skyliner station.
We’re here for a Christmas party overnight on the first public day and while the new tower is still atrocious on the outside, the studio room is really well laid out and feels much bigger than the Riviera (although it may not be). The tiny banquette is both cute and practical and we’ll pretty much book any room with that pull down bed. The Wailulu Bar was also good — the outdoor seating near the mini infinity pool-like planters is really nice and despite some expected first day hiccups service-wise, the food was quite good. I thought the new tower might lure us from the Riviera and it may still for party nights. But the hike to the monorail is definitely a poor alternative to the Riviera’s skyway. Definitely worth a visit for sure, though.
Without having seen the inside in person, I think I agree with your assessment. The Poly Tower has the largest delta of exterior/interior experience at WDW. To me, it is an eyesore that further strains MK infrastructure, but to its guests it is a lovely addition to Poly that allows larger families to stay in one unit with castle views.
I saw that it was open on Monday, the 16th. We got shooed away as we were not guests. General public would be allowed on the 17th.
I love the walk from Magic Kingdom to the Grand Floridian; you can almost beat the boat. I’d certainly like a walk all the way around, connecting the Poly with the Contemporary.
I’ll see it in person later this week but so far it is just very beige… The views from those higher floors look spectacular but the backside literally has views of a road (which is currently under construction) and the pool looks like something you’d find at your local Fairfield Inn. I don’t even want to buy the pin it’s so boring. Completely lackluster for such a gem of a resort . The room layouts look almost identical to the DL tower and we really enjoyed those. But they had a lot more life to them. This also does not bode well for whatever is going on next to Fort Wilderness. Another boring beige tower with a basic pool to ruin the shores of Bay lake is so depressing to think about. But I think you’re right that the average guest just doesn’t care. They want new, and quick. Whatever can get them to MK fastest to get those lightning lanes. You and Sarah should have contest this week. Walking all the way to MK vs waiting for a monorail starting at Poly. Even at 20-30 minutes the walk would be much more enjoyable. Although I am really looking forward to trying the new grill.
I second the notion about the pool as a mom of 1210 and eight-year-olds they looked at the pool and were like “ Can we go to the regular pool?”
As a mom with three tween boys, please, for the love of God DVC add privacy to the shower so that Can still be used while somebody is in the shower! Last time we stayed in the Riviera and I never got to use the nice shower because we were five people sharing one bathroom.
To further your point, barn doors do not belong on hotel bathrooms. Looking at you, Gran Destino.
My biggest concern is the volcano pool. It’s probably the best pool on property for kids and while there last January during what I’d assume is a slower time for hanging by the pool it was pretty crowded. I’m assuming with larger rooms you’re going to get a lot of families at the tower who will want to hang out the volcano pool for the slides/ splash pad area and it’s going to be chaos. My thoughts all along were that they needed to do something to compete with it at the tower. The Moana thing is cute but speaking from personal experience once the kids are out of the toddler phase they want the slides.
To the point of restricting the resorts- I think what they should do is restrict the resort monorail. We were frustrated last time we stayed at a monorail resort at closing time they just started sending tons of people to the resort monorail when the ttc one got backed up and we couldn’t even get on. I feel like they need a magic band touch point and you can use the resort monorail if you’re staying in the resorts or have a dining reservation.
“To the point of restricting the resorts- I think what they should do is restrict the resort monorail. We were frustrated last time we stayed at a monorail resort at closing time they just started sending tons of people to the resort monorail when the ttc one got backed up and we couldn’t even get on. I feel like they need a magic band touch point and you can use the resort monorail if you’re staying in the resorts or have a dining reservation.”
I think this is a good idea, and I say that as someone who visits the monorail loop resorts more than I stay at them.
But I also think it would be logistically difficult–if not impossible–to implement. People with ADRs would invariably have problems with the tapstiles indicating they have access, there’d be backups, etc.
As much as it probably should happen, I just don’t know what Disney can do to deter people from visiting the Poly and GF. It’s a delicate balance between preserving the guest experience for those staying there, logistics, and not being off-putting for everyone else (it would also undoubtedly lead to more complaints about Disney being “elitist” or whatever).
We’re heading down in January. We extended our stay a few days but couldn’t get all if them at AK so we’re probably going to have to stay one night at the “Resort of Many Knees” and get to see the tower up close and personal.
It’s unfair of you to put some of the monorail overcrowding blame on Bay Lake Tower, as it replaced the North Garden Wing, which had been there practically since opening day. The Grand Floridian Villas, on the other hand, added the bulk of the new, larger monorail crowds. I don’t think the Grand Floridian-Magic Kingdom launch took up much of that slack. Walking to Magic Kingdom from Grand Floridian is a stamina-testing task, especially at the end of a long day.
I certainly don’t put the bulk of the blame on BLT, but it’s a contributing factor. It has more rooms (and significantly higher capacity) than the Garden Wing it replaced.
What I’d like to see is an infrastructure project that widens the walkway from Contemporary to Magic Kingdom (maybe even a pedestrian bridge over the road). I suspect many more guests would walk to Magic Kingdom if they knew it was an efficient option. Then BLT really would have no impact on the monorail!