Best Time-Saving Strategies for Disney World

With higher crowds & wait times, you need superior strategy for saving time waiting at Walt Disney World. That’s the purpose of this post, breaking down the best & worst options–Lightning Lanes, extra hours & rope drop–to beat long lines at Magic Kingdom, Hollywood Studios, EPCOT and Animal Kingdom. (Updated March 5, 2025.)
Our goal is to find the ideal approach to using standby lines and/or Lightning Lanes, as well as the best times of day at each park. Spoiler: there’s no one-size fits all answer for all people or all parks. That’s the big thing we’ve learned while extensively visiting the parks extensively for the sake of research to test various strategies.
Even many longtime Walt Disney World fans are overwhelmed by the options, so we’re here to provide insight into reducing friction from your days in the parks. As the ole tantalizing teaser goes, “…and the results will surprise you!” But seriously, they will. What we accomplished (or didn’t) with some of these approaches actually caught us off-guard.
Before getting going, we want to stress the importance of this strategy for time frames when the 2025 Walt Disney World Crowd Calendar is 7/10 or higher. When wait times are below that threshold, you can “get away” with sloppier strategy–crowd levels of up to 5/10 can be beaten with moderate planning and effort, following the general advice here but without being overzealous about it. Less than 4/10 and, frankly, you don’t need much strategy at all.
Once you get to 7/10 or higher crowd levels, savvy strategy becomes downright essential. You don’t necessarily need to purchase Lightning Lanes every single day for the reasons explained here, but you need to be prepared with a plan and follow it pretty closely.
During these busier dates, the tips & tricks here will enable you to accomplish a lot more than the average Walt Disney World visitor. If you’re visiting during the peak season, holidays, or during school breaks, this advice is arguably more valuable right now than anything else on this website. Not to set unrealistic expectations, but this strategy should save you several hours per day at Walt Disney World (and it should save you money, too!).
Next, let’s do a quick run-through of the various mainstream ways to save time at Walt Disney World. This isn’t comprehensive, leaving out the priciest options–like doing VIP tours for the duration of your trip or renting out the parks–for what should be obvious reasons. Even though it’s safe to assume George Clooney, Oprah, and Carrot Top are loyal readers of this blog, most of you probably aren’t that big of high rollers.

The first option is the controversial Lightning Lanes (e.g. Paid FastPass), which offer one way to skip standby lines. Unfortunately, these come with a cost–not just a monetary one, but also with frustrations, back-tracking, making ride reservations 3 or more days before you arrive, and the steep learning curve of mastering the new system. Look no further than our lengthy Guide to Lightning Lanes at Walt Disney World for how confusing it can be.
With the switch from Genie+ to Lightning Lane Multi Pass, there’s once again and on-site advantage and the ability to make 3 selections in advance. With this comes the loss of stacking, a disadvantage for off-site guests, and likelihood that you’ll be scoring fewer Lightning Lanes per day. There’s also the reality that you’re likely committing to buying (or not) before starting your trip and seeing/feeling crowd levels.
Lightning Lane Multi Pass also isn’t cheap. Current per-person prices range from $16 to $39 before tax each day, with holiday weeks (e.g.Thanksgiving) at Magic Kingdom or multiple parks expected to be at the upper end of that range. If you’re on a budget or more price-sensitive, this adds up–amounting to $400-$800 in added costs for an average family during a week-long trip.
The silver lining is that Lightning Lanes are not necessary at every park or every day. In fact, at 3 of the 4 parks, there’s superior strategy–precisely what we’ll be covering here! So you’ll only “need” to buy Lightning Lane Multi-Pass one day of your trip. A couple other days are optional, but often recommended.

Sticking with the pay to play options of sorts, there’s Early Entry (EE) and Extended Evening Hours (ExEH), which replace Extra Magic Hours in the morning and at night. Early Entry is daily at all 4 parks and all on-site guests are eligible, but is only 30 minutes long. By contrast, Extended Evening Hours typically is once per week at Magic Kingdom and EPCOT, lasts 2 hours, but is only available to guests staying at the top tier resorts.
These have their own pros & cons, from being only available to on-site guests (or a subset thereof) to requiring people to get up early or stay late. If you’re unfamiliar with the ins and outs of each, learn more in our Guide to Early Entry at Walt Disney World and Guide to Extended Evening Hours at Walt Disney World.
Additionally, we have about a dozen or so “Extra Hours” Photo Reports, with more coming in Spring 2025 now that both Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind have standby lines and the latter is part of Early Entry. We’re also still hoping to see TRON Lightcycle Run added to the Early Entry lineup, but it’s been months and that still hasn’t happened, so it may not.

Next, there’s tried and true rope drop or regular park opening.
For those unfamiliar with this inside baseball-esque term, rope drop is simply when the lands and attractions officially open, which is synonymous with the published park opening time. (It’s literal–there’s a rope that is dropped, opening the lands to guests.) Since the front gates usually admit guests before park opening, Disney fans have demarcated the two times with this rad term. In practice, rope drop is pretty much anytime during the first hour of regular operations.
Finally, there’s the end of the evening, which is usually the last couple hours of regular operations. We don’t have a rad term for this one, but I feel like that’s a huge missed opportunity for a cryptic moniker. Just imagine how many of the uninitiated we could confuse by referring to this as “rope rise.” (Get it? Because they drop the rope at the beginning of the day, so it stands to reason that they pick it–you know, nevermind.)
If we did call the end of the night “rope rise,” no one would know what the heck we’re talking about, so fewer people would take advantage. In any case, wait times tend to be shorter towards later at night. When and by how much they fall varies by park, and is often not fully reflected in posted wait times.

Of course, there’s also the middle of the day, or anytime between around 10 am and 6 pm.
With few exceptions, this is the busiest time of day at Walt Disney World–when crowds peak as most guests have arrived, but few have left. The majority of guests visit the parks during these hours, making them the worst time to do anything popular. Conversely, it’s the best time to focus on unpopular, low-wait attractions like stage shows and other entertainment.
Got all of that? Good. Now let’s go park by park and discuss which approach is best right now. We’ve tested and retested every single strategy for all of the parks, and updated our conclusions as things have changed. Here’s the park by park rundown of which time-saving approaches are best…
Magic Kingdom

When it comes to beating the crowds at Magic Kingdom, let’s start with Early Entry. Unfortunately, we’ve found that on-site perk to be less successful here than at any other park. This is due to a mix of higher demand and only Fantasyland and Tomorrowland being open. We’ve done Early Entry at Magic Kingdom over a dozen times, and have always had less success there than at the other parks–but that is starting to change as of 2025 (see below).
If you’re not eligible for Early Entry, regular rope drop is actually still somewhat good because Frontierland and Adventureland are not open during Early Entry. This makes rope drop alone, or Early Entry plus rope drop a great approach. If you’re only eligible for rope drop, doing Frontierland and Adventureland first and saving Fantasyland until later in the day can be a workable approach.
There are more strategy options for Magic Kingdom than any other park participating in Early Entry and at regular rope drop. See our step-by-step Magic Kingdom Morning Tips & Tricks in 2025: Rides to Do & Avoid at Rope Drop & Early Entry for multiple options not just for the first 30 minutes, but the first couple hours of the day.

There are also enough worthwhile secondary attractions in Magic Kingdom that you can round out the rest of your day with relaxing, low wait shows and more. Many of our smartest and sexiest readers enjoy filling out the middle of their days by watching Country Bear Jamboree on repeat.
One thing to note here is that TRON Lightcycle Run still does not participate in Early Entry. Despite this, TRON has become the #1 destination for Early Entry, meaning that on-site guests are taking their 30-minute head start and using that to pre-queue up for TRON Lightcycle Run. Hurry up and wait.
As explained in Why You Should Skip Magic Kingdom’s Biggest Ride During Early Entry & Rope Drop, we strongly recommend not doing this. Starting at Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Peter Pan’s Flight, or elsewhere in Tomorrowland are all better options. The opportunity cost of using that 30 minutes to wait for a non-operational ride is too high, as is the time cost. You’re better off waiting until later to do TRON Lightcycle Run, especially given that evening is the best time for the attraction from a subjective perspective.
Speaking of switching to standby, it’s worth reiterating that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has ditched its virtual queue, but it also is not participating in Early Entry. This is to be expected, as Frontierland opens with regular rope drop. However, because Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is down until 2026, we do not recommend prioritizing this corner of the park until next year.

With all of that said, it’s Lightning Lane Multi-Pass that works best at Magic Kingdom and it’s really no contest. Thanks to a high worthwhile attraction count available via Lightning Lanes, Magic Kingdom is the one park where we highly recommend buying LLMP.
Take a look at our Magic Kingdom Lightning Lane Multi-Pass Rankings & Time-Saving Strategy for recommendations as to your first 3 picks, as well as subsequent selections. During a normal day at Magic Kingdom, you should be able to score about a half-dozen good Lightning Lanes.
This is very difficult at the other parks, especially Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Unlike those, Magic Kingdom is the park where Lightning Lane Multi-Pass is easiest to use and presents the fewest headaches. At Magic Kingdom, you can book Lightning Lane ride reservations with a more leisurely approach and less criss-crossing the park.
It’s especially nice that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is included with LLMP. This is the newest attraction at Magic Kingdom, and it still has reliability and downtime woes even after switching to standby. Due to these issues, the attraction can be frustrating and wait times are inconsistent. The difference is that, at least if you do get a Lightning Lane, you’re essentially guaranteed being able to ride Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. It’s a good hedge to have on a day when TBA is unreliable.

Next, there’s the end of the night. Like every other park, wait times at Magic Kingdom do fall off in the evening as guests grab spots for the Happily Ever After fireworks. You can enjoy shorter waits if you’re willing to skip those, or watch them from a last-minute location in Fantasyland.
The drop-off isn’t quite as pronounced as the other parks, but it’s still significant. That plus queueing up for Seven Dwarfs Mine Train or TRON Lightcycle Run one minute before park closing is a great approach if you don’t buy Lightning Lane Single Passes for them.
For select guests one night per week, there’s Extended Evening Hours. We’ve done this a handful of times, so our sample size is still relatively limited, but our success rate is 100%. Low waits everywhere and blissfully uncrowded parks.
Even if you take advantage of one of the aforementioned approaches and “conquer” Magic Kingdom before this late night perk, do it anyway. It’s a delightful way to enjoy Magic Kingdom, offering a serene experience that’s a great way to decompress from the earlier chaos during peak season. (See Magic Kingdom Extended Evening Hours Photo Report.)
Epcot

Early Entry is the best way to beat the crowds at Epcot. That’s doubly true if you’re arriving via International Gateway, as you’ll be able to do Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure with a 10 minute wait or less. (See Early Entry at Epcot via World Showcase.)
From the Rat Ride, it’s entirely possible to do Frozen Ever After as a near walk-on and Soarin’ Around the World with minimal wait…and everything else in the new neighborhoods with no waits. It’s a lot of walking, but that’s par for the course at Epcot, and you could modify this approach to minimize steps if you’re staying the full day.
If you’re coming from the front entrance, the obvious starting point is Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, which now uses a standby line. You should be able to knock out Cosmic Rewind, potentially more than once, before the regular rope drop rush arrives. Or you can move on to one of the other top attractions in the front half of the park.

Those arriving for regular rope drop will still enjoy success and time savings pretty much everywhere except Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. With both attractions, we’ve found that there’s a mid-morning lull around 90 minutes after park opening, so you should target one of the two then, and save the other for the end of the night. It’s easier to do Cosmic Rewind earlier, as it’s closer to the main entrance.
If you’re at the front of the pack, doing Cosmic Rewind during regular rope drop is also possible with a below-average wait. As for Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, it’s easy enough to save for the end of the night. You can either do it around 8 pm and be done in time for the Luminous fireworks, or wait until 8:59 pm if you don’t mind skipping that nighttime spectacular. Off-site guests who aren’t eligible for Early Entry aren’t at too considerable of a disadvantage at Epcot.
Speaking of which, the front of the park empties out at Epcot in the evening hours, because guests eat and drink around the World Showcase, and secure spots for the fireworks. Hitting these rides the last two hours of the day can be a smooth move, especially since it’s not imperative that you get a front row view for the fireworks.

For those arriving after rope drop, Lightning Lanes are your default. Epcot is our second least favorite park for the line-skipping service, and we don’t recommend it here unless you’re Park Hopping or cannot take advantage of the aforementioned strategies.
If you’re visiting on a busier day when Lightning Lane Multi-Pass costs the most, it’s highly unlikely that you’ll score Lightning Lanes for Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, Frozen Ever After, Soarin. On those days, I still strongly favor arriving early or staying late, especially since Lightning Lane Multi-Pass at Epcot can force you to do a lot of backtracking.
Extended Evening Hours at Epcot are not quite as delightful at Epcot as Magic Kingdom. The lower ride count, more obvious top priorities, and walking distance between headliner attractions means wait times for the trio of headliners don’t fall as dramatically and it takes you more time to accomplish less. On top of that, if even one ride is down, it can throw a real monkey wrench into things.
With good strategy, you can still accomplish Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, Frozen Ever After, and Test Track during this post-closing perk, but it does require determination (and luck). You can also do Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind at the absolute last minute, but that often comes at the expense of one of the other 3 rides with standby lines. Unless you get incredibly lucky, it’s almost impossible to do all 4 in one night.
Hollywood Studios

We’ve been saying for the last few years that Hollywood Studios is the most frustrating park at Walt Disney World. Among other things, this is due to the top-heavy nature of its attraction lineup, and lack of secondary rides. There was a point during the phased reopening when this was particularly problematic, but it has gotten much better with the return of most stage shows and entertainment.
For much of the last two years, wait times at Disney’s Hollywood Studios have peaked earlier than any other park at Walt Disney World. In the last month, this has started to shift with the return of Fantasmic, and we’d expect that trend to continue. Even Animal Kingdom, which opens earlier and is commonly derided as a half-day park, doesn’t see its longest wait times of the day until afternoon.
Against this backdrop, the best option for beating the crowds at Disney’s Hollywood Studios is Early Entry. In large part, this is because Early Entry encompasses all important, high-wait attractions at DHS and also because it usually ends up being much more than a 30 minute head-start.
That’s especially true if you prioritize Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, with the added upside of doing this first being that you’re less likely to encounter a breakdown while you’re in line for it. Check out our report on Early Entry at Disney’s Hollywood Studios that covers our experience knocking out the “triple digit trio” at DHS before the park opened to regular guests.

The worst strategy for Disney’s Hollywood Studios is relying on traditional rope drop. This should be pretty intuitive for the two reasons identified above: wait times peak early and all headliners are open for Early Entry.
If you can’t enter DHS until regular park opening time, you’re going to get maybe 1-2 attractions done with below average waits. Your likelihood for frustrations–and thus leaving before the end of the night–will also be higher.
Instead, consider an afternoon arrival and staying until park closing. The good news is that there’s still a pronounced drop-off during dinner and Fantasmic. If there are two showings of that nighttime spectacular, you’re golden–take advantage of lower crowds during the first Fantasmic, and watch the second one at or after park closing.

The bad news is that, like everyone else, you’ll probably want to eat and see Fantasmic…and if it only has one showtime, this is tricky. This is definitely a big blow for our favorite way to do DHS, but it’s definitely not a net-negative. Fantasmic is great, so we’re very happy to have it back; also, DHS is now drawing crowds away from EPCOT and Animal Kingdom in the evening hours, making those comparatively less crowded.
Posted wait times are lower in the last two hours of the day at DHS, but that only tells part of the story. Actual wait times are often dramatically lower, particularly for Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, Slinky Dog Dash, Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, and other headliners.
The only caveat we’ll add here is that this approach with the unreliable Rise of the Resistance is risky–if you only have one shot at it and the ride goes down in the last two hours of the day, you might be out of luck. Read our Ride Guide for Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, which offers an overview of the best & worst ways to do that, and plan accordingly.

Finally, there’s Lightning Lane Multi-Pass. We’ve covered experiences with this extensively, most recently in My Great Day Using Lightning Lanes at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.
DHS has a top heavy lineup, which can make it tricky to score 4 or more good selections via Lightning Lane Multi-Pass. That was the case under the old Genie+ system, to the point that we heard more complaints about Lightning Lanes at DHS than any other park. However, since the switch to LLMP, that has not been our experience at all.
Disney’s Hollywood Studios is now the #1 park for purchasing Lightning Lane Multi-Pass at Walt Disney World. As discussed in our new Top 10 Tips & Tricks for Lightning Lanes at Walt Disney World in 2025, there are a few reasons for this. More than anything else, it’s because DHS has gotten better as Magic Kingdom has gotten slightly worse.

Beyond that, Disney’s Hollywood Studios offers the most upside with LLMP. It’s the park with the highest average standby wait times, the #1 overall Lightning Lane Multi-Pass, and easier same-day availability for tier two attractions and ride reservation refills if you leverage the rolling 3 rule and put a little elbow grease into your refresh game.
Lightning Lane Multi-Pass at Disney’s Hollywood Studios is now a great option most of the time, but we’d still recommend viewing it as a safety net. It’s still the best practice to arrive for Early Entry and/or stay late, but if you can’t for whatever reason, you should purchase LLMP and possibly Lightning Lane Single Pass for Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance.
Any of these time-saving strategies for Disney’s Hollywood Studios can be headache-inducing, but not any more so than standby lines, which are just brutal at DHS. You really need to utilize savvy strategy to prevent Disney’s Hollywood Studios from being downright unpleasant. And with an “all of the above” approach and a little luck, you might find yourself able to experience multiple rides on each of the headliners at DHS in a single day!
Animal Kingdom

We go from the most frustrating park to the easiest one. Strategy for Animal Kingdom essentially amounts to “don’t go during the middle of the day and stand in long lines,” which seems to be what the vast majority of guests do for some odd reason.
Going early, staying late, or using Lightning Lane Multi Pass are all solid strategies. Almost equally so. We’d give the edge to Early Entry, which starts at 7:30 am on most dates. That is absurdly early, and a huge barrier for most guests. If you’re able to arrive to Animal Kingdom by 7 am, this gives you a huge advantage.
Traditional rope drop also works, so long as you prioritize something other than Avatar Flight of Passage. Again, most people aren’t up and out the door this early in the morning on vacation, and that applies even to regular park opening time at Animal Kingdom. (With the peak season 8 am official opening, you might be able to hit Flight of Passage with minimal wait even at traditional rope drop.)
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Personally, I’m a fan of doing Animal Kingdom later in the day (see Animal Kingdom Afternoon Arrival Strategy). Subjectively, this is nice because Animal Kingdom is the hottest park at Walt Disney World, and hitting it when the sun is lower knocks a good 10-20 degrees off the feels like temperatures. The atmosphere at sunset and night is also fantastic, and something few fans see.
Unfortunately, wait times aren’t plummeting towards the end of the day like they were about a year ago, which is likely due to more entertainment having returned. While most other rides will be walk-ons or close to it, you can still expect lengthy lines for the two Pandora – World of Avatar attractions.
Lightning Lane Multi Pass is the objectively better option at Animal Kingdom than staying late. Even though the lineup is limited, most eligible attractions have availability well into the afternoon. I’m disinclined to buy LLMP at Animal Kingdom because arriving early or staying late works well and the eligible attraction roster is so limited, but it still offers time savings.
Personally, I only buy LLMP at Animal Kingdom when Park Hopping. It’s our recommendation then because you can knock out the few attractions where Lightning Lanes are useful at Animal Kingdom and also use LLMP to skip a few lines in one of the other parks, too. Outside of Lightning Lane Multi Pass, Avatar Flight of Passage can be worth the cost of the Lightning Lane Single Pass, but we usually hit it early, late, or during the lunch lull instead.

Ultimately, there are a lot of ways to beat the crowds at Walt Disney World, and that applies even during the peak weeks of summer and beyond. Strategizing has definitely gotten more complicated in the last year, and we’ve heard from countless long time visitors who feel left behind or overwhelmed. The bad news is that there are more pay-to-play options and they’ll either cost extra or have less eligibility.
The good news is that there’s actually greater accessibility to saving time at Walt Disney World. If you read this ~4,000 word post the night before visiting Walt Disney World, you could take advantage of many of these tips. That simply was not possible at this time a few years ago, when pre-booking FastPass+ up to 60 days in advance closed the door for a lot of first-timers who, quite understandably, had no clue ride reservations were booked months in advance.
Now, tactics are uneven and inconsistent among the parks, but there’s pretty much something for everyone. Whether you want to pay extra, not pay extra, rise early, or stay late. As always, we highly recommend our Walt Disney World Park Itineraries for more granular, step-by-step advice for planning out your entire day.
About the only thing you can’t do is sleep in, visit the parks from 11 am until 4 pm, and leave early. This has always been the worst way to do Walt Disney World, and that remains true to this day. Yet, for reasons beyond me, that continues to be the “preferred” approach for so many guests. If you simply don’t do that, you’re automatically ahead of the pack!
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
Thoughts on our suggested strategies for each of the Walt Disney World theme parks? Do you prefer rope drop, “rope rise,” Early Entry, Extended Evening Hours, or Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Single Pass? Or, do you favor a miss of approaches when touring the parks? How do you do things differently in each park? Any other feedback on arriving early or staying late at the Walt Disney World theme parks? 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!

I’m park hopping, and the first park I have a reservation for is Epcot, but I want to get a genie+ ride reservation for Mickey and Minnie at Hollywood studios (slinky dog is not a priority). Advice? Also, It doesn’t seem like I can pin attractions to the top of my tip board for any other park than Epcot.
On my most recent trip (beginning of March), I did what I thought I’d never do and bought Genie+ for Animal Kingdom. Then, we slept in and it was glorious, as I stacked rides up for our afternoon and evening. I think because it seems like such a useless park to buy G+ in, very few people take advantage of it so it made the whole day that much more relaxing! At least until that Monday monsoon came in while we were in Pandora. My partner has NEVER managed to see Pandora at night until this point, but all the photographs are just waterfalls where there shouldn’t be waterfalls and lakes where there shouldn’t be lakes. I guess we’ll have to take another trip so they can finally see it…
But, anyway, in summary…Genie+ at AK ended up being more useful than I expected.
Looking for advice about arrival day strategy for Hollywood Studios. We have found evening touring at the studios is sufficient for us; however, with the long waits for Slinky Dog late into the evening, we are trying to figure out if we should purchase Genie+ and try to get Slinky Dog for the evening. I feel like I could stack a couple of rides while we are driving down that day, but the uncertainty for Slinky Dog is the big unknown. If I could get a return time after 5pm, I’d be set. I just don’t know if I should take that gamble. Before Genie+, we arrived at the park around 6:30 and were able to ride Slinky, Toy Story Mania, and Millennium Falcon as well as get a few pictures and watch the evening show on the Grauman Theatre at 9pm. It was great! I’m just not sure if we could do that again using standby alone. Thanks
On point with Country Bear Jamboree !!
Our “strategy” for enjoying the parks without running ourselves ragged is to show up about 5 or 6 pm and get as much done as we can before park closing. The peak afternoon crowds dissipate and the sun and heat aren’t as intense either. Four or five hours in any of the parks these days feels like plenty, and they are easily twice as enjoyable at night. When it’s 1 pm and you’re in a human trash compactor after festival of fantasy on main street or you’re being obliterated at the hottest theme park on earth at animal kingdom or you’re at Hollywood Studios walking in circles because every ride has as wait time that is ludicrous, or it’s midday at Epcot and the line for “the three cardboard cutouts” in Mexico stretches outside the pavilion … you almost feel like Disney should be paying you to be there.
So perhaps tomorrow morning, Sunday 3/13/22, will be the best morning for Animal Kingdom given the daylight savings time on top of the 7am early entry! Are you planning to do this for research purposes?
i’d have to say epcot is the hottest park because of the lack of shade and benches. it’s veritable concrete jungle. animal kingdom, on the other hand, beats all the parks by a mile in terms of both shade and benches.
I have always thought AK was the hottest park as well. I’m not sure why. It just seems hot and feels like the crowd traffic does not move as well.
Great article! We’ll be staying at WDW in May. What’s your thoughts on going straight to Avatar Flight of Passage first with Early Entry? Or is it still best to leave that till late in the day?
Thanks so much this excellent strategy summary. For me, it validates my instinct to skip Genie+ (for the most part) during our trip the last week in April, instead taking full advantage of early entry, extended evening hours and maybe ILL for ROTR (if we can snag it). As far as Genie+, it’s not so much the cost (although of course that does play into it to some extent) but rather the potential for headaches/frustrations and criss-crossing the parks (which would not go down well with my low-stamina 7-year-old).
Having said that, we *might* give it a shot during our full Magic Kingdom day, based on your reporting of solid attraction availability and less need to run around all over the place. . .
Thanks again for this.
We used your tips and tricks for the Genie+ and LL (7 Dwarfs Mine Train) this week on Thursday 3/10/22 at Magic Kingdom and it was awesome!!! Thank you so much for the detailed instructions. I didn’t follow your Magic Kingdom plan sequence exactly based on some rides being down due to weather, but had no problem maximizing our day!
Well, if I understand you correctly, the answer is that without an annual pass we would not travel down multiple times a year. The pass lures us into multiple visits with consequently more money spent. I have to believe it is the same for most out-of-staters,..
Do you think that days that have extended hours are busier than days without? In other words, if you don’t qualify should you avoid reservations at MK or Epcot on the days when they have extended evening hours?
When using Genie+ on our last trip, we were not impressed. Mostly a headache. We are looking to rent DVC points for the first time so we can take advantage of extended evening hours. Has anyone used the DVC shop? They have way more options than David’s and DVC rental, but wanted to make sure they check out ok.
I used DVC shop for our December 2021 trip. I rented points 48 hours before my arrival date and they worked fast to accommodate that. I would use them again.
“Finally, there’s the end of the evening, which is usually the last couple hours of regular operations. We don’t have a rad term for this one, but I feel like that’s a huge missed opportunity for a cryptic moniker. ”
We refer to that time of day in the parks as “the last kiss”
Tom, have you tried the regular data pad on the Disney play app (not the one for starcruiser guests)? It looksFANTASTIC but I haven’t heard you mention it at all. A good way to spend lots of time at HS? Or a terrible, buggy, frustrating experience?
We spent a lot of time using the Datapad when Galaxy’s Edge first opened at Disneyland. I took screenshots and photos of Sarah using the app, but forgot to write the article.
It’s one of those things that you’ll either love or hate. Worth giving a try, as it brings another layer to the land–and you’ll notice details you would otherwise miss. Difficult for me to actively recommend something that involves even more screen time, though.
Rope drop is a great term/phrase. It’s probably the only wonky Disney thing I find myself using in “normal” speech. I remember this past summer when I referenced rope dropping Rocky Mtn. Nat’l park and the other families gave me the side eye that it’s not part of the standard vernacular.
That picture of the crowds for Galaxy’s Edge- no thank you…
Oh same here. “Today, we’re rope dropping In-N-Out Burger!”
Pro tip: if you use any term with confidence and authority, others are more inclined to question their own knowledge rather than side eye you. 😉
PRO TIP #2 When you speak using confidence and authority it helps to be holding a clip board. A clip board is the equivalent of dropping the mike. Nuff said. (drops mike).
I just got back. Went solo two days followed by a conference and then another 4 days at parks with my daughter. I didn’t use Genie on solo days. Kind of did things I hadn’t done in a long time or not at all (hall of presidents-kite show-Lion King Show-Nemo) and just wandered the parks. Hit some high wait time rides during fireworks. When daughter came (last Sunday-Wednesday) we used Genie. I’m not impressed. I don’t want to use one of your plans no matter how excellent they may be as I think they are tailored for first time guests or guests who only come once a year and want to do as much as they can. As a long time die hard WDW fan (pass holder who just moved out of central Florida a few months ago) I don’t necessarily want to rope drop or spend 10 hours in a park. Genie is not good for park hopping plans. And I was on my phone more than I was with FP. I can’t believe this but the money gouging, lack of magical moments (had several CM’s be downright rude this trip) and the new paid genie systems have done me in. I am sadly not going to be a regular guest at WDW anymore.
“Genie is not good for park hopping plans.”
I strongly disagree with this. Park Hopping is the best way to use Genie+ at any park that isn’t Magic Kingdom.
Hard to argue with the rest of it–hope you at least enjoyed the solo days at your own pace! 🙂
Spot on. I always point people to your blog for this stuff. It’s amazing when people don’t try out any of these strategies and still complain lol. For us getting in line at the absolute last min is our flight in mean right of passage! Been doing that since my parents taught me that at DL
A lot of people seem to want the easiest approach to also be the best approach, which will never happen for reasons that should be obvious.
Point of order: I consider Animal Kingdom to be the coolest park (literally and figuratively) since trees are everywhere. Maybe the suggestion of a tropical climate creates the sense of heat but I find there is abundant shade unlike the other 3 parks,..
also, since my comment in the “When Will Annual Passes Resume’ thread is now long buried, can you please at some point answer this:
I’ve never been clear why Passholders from out of state are lumped in with Florida Passholders and both are considered less lucrative guests than the Disney neophyte. In a year that we have passes, we stay on site, eat all our meals within parks and hotels, buy stuff and if we visit three times a year we sort of break even on the ticket price. But our contribution to the Disney coffers visiting 3 times a year certainly would at a minimum be comparable to a family visiting once. What am I missing?
(sorry for the imposition but you do tend to answer early commenters and then disappear as you move on to the next essay,..)
That’s a fair point about the shade at Animal Kingdom. I really don’t know what it is about that park, but it always *feels* the hottest (or most humid?) to me. Maybe it’s in part because it’s the park open for the fewest evening hours? I really don’t know–I won’t pretend that my assertion is scientific fact, or anything of the sort. Simply my perception, which very well could be wrong.
As for the AP question, my guess is that Disney’s internal reasoning would be that they already have you hooked. In a high utilization environment, Annual Passes are advantageous to Disney for unutilized capacity during weekdays and the off-season. If people have the means to travel down multiple times per year, why not charge them for multiple tickets? (This isn’t even really speculation–a push that began during Eisner’s later years was getting fans to visit less frequently, but spend more per trip. It’s only gotten worse in the years since.)
I think part of the reason so many guests perceive AK as being the hottest park is because the vast majority of attractions are outside, certainly compared to the other parks. Particularly with the walking trails, petting zoo, outdoor shows, safari, etc. you are spending a LOT more of your time outside than you would be at the other park’s attractions.