Magic Kingdom Rope Drop & Early Entry Tips 2026: Morning Rides to Do & Avoid

Morning is one of the best times at Magic Kingdom, and a great way to beat crowds at Walt Disney World’s busiest park is at opening. This strategy guide for Early Entry and rope drop shares tips & tricks–prioritizing TRON Lightcycle Run and Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, what time to arrive, where to start & avoid, 7 different step-by-step plans, and everything you can do without Lightning Lanes.
For starters, this is specifically a Magic Kingdom park opening guide for 2026. It’s been “rebuilt” from the ground up as we’ve done field-testing of new strategies following changes, ride openings & closures. We have over two dozen step-by-step photo reports of our morning experiences at Magic Kingdom from the last few years, and this is the culmination of those.
We’ve also tested Early Entry a half-dozen times in the last few months, because a lot has changed at Magic Kingdom. This includes the lengthy closures of Big Thunder Mountain Railroad and Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin, and end of the virtual queues for TRON and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. Most importantly, there have been procedural changes to the Early Entry process at Magic Kingdom.
All of this could really complicate a strategy guide for mornings in Magic Kingdom, turning it into a scenario where you’re zig-zagging around the park, bouncing from one side to the other between Early Entry and rope drop. The step-by-step morning plan here offers even more options, but two of them are very straightforward and minimize walking.
What Are Rope Drop & Early Entry at Magic Kingdom?

Early Entry used to be known as Extra Magic Hours, but there are some key differences. Early Entry is offered at all 4 theme parks every single day, offering 30-minute head-start access to certain attractions for guests staying in all Disney resorts and select on-site third party hotels.
Early Entry at Magic Kingdom is only available to Tomorrowland and Fantasyland, but not every attraction in both of those lands. Currently, the big exception is TRON Lightcycle Run. Early Entry is not available for Frontierland, Liberty Square, or Adventureland. (See our Guide to Early Entry at Walt Disney World for more.)
Rope drop is simply regular park opening–when all lands and attractions officially greet guests following the Welcome Show. It’s called rope drop because the land entrances from the central plaza around Cinderella Castle are literally roped off to start, and that rope is dropped to begin the running of the strollers.
Rope drop is a colloquialism (and verb), so you’ll still hear fans say they’re going to “rope drop Seven Dwarfs Mine Train” even though that’s not technically accurate since there’s no rope at Fantasyland or Tomorrowland due to Early Entry. Feel free to correct them; people love that.
When to Arrive at Magic Kingdom in the Morning?

When you should leave your hotel to arrive at Magic Kingdom in the morning is a pretty common question.
It depends on your priorities and where you’re staying. Do you want to be among the first to ride Seven Dwarfs Mine Train and undertake an efficient touring plan for the day? Staying off-site or on-site? Are you just looking to have a cup of coffee, see the Welcome Show, and soak up the atmosphere of Magic Kingdom waking up for the morning?
If you’re staying on-site, we’re going to assume you’re doing Early Entry. Be at your hotel bus stop (or boat launch, monorail station, etc.) by around 60-75 minutes before Early Entry begins. You could go earlier if you want to be at the front of the pack, but our goal is balance, not depriving you of sleep and shifting your long wait from an actual line to standing in a pack of people waiting for Early Entry to start.
If you’re staying off-site, you’re aiming for ~30 minutes later for the start of regular rope drop. We’d recommend being inside Magic Kingdom at least 30 minutes in advance. This means you need to account for the time it’ll to park, through security, and take transportation from the TTC to Magic Kingdom.

How long all of this takes is a wildcard, and you’re better off erring on the side of caution and building yourself a buffer. It’s better to be too early than too late–you can always spend the extra time getting family photos on Main Street.
Security and the park entrance open to all guests at the same time, which is usually long before the start of Early Entry (it varies from day to day). So anyone is free to walk around Main Street, regardless of whether they’re staying on-site or off-site. It’s the other lands that are roped off (again, hence the rope drop name).
Once inside the park, we like the leisurely stroll up Main Street. Perusing the many gift shops that are open on Main Street without people is a nice experience. Perhaps it’s just me, but the crowds in these cramped stores make me feel a bit claustrophobic later in the day. It’s also nice to grab a cup of Starbucks coffee from the Main Street Bakery as a pick me up.

Early Entry at Magic Kingdom
If eligible for Early Entry, head to the right of the East Plaza Garden. There’s a row of Cast Members stationed to scan MagicBands or room keys to verify Early Entry eligibility. You can’t access Tomorrowland or Fantasyland without scanning here. Once you’ve done that, you’re good to go for the morning.
From there, you proceed on to either the Tomorrowland Bridge or Fantasyland Bridge. It used to be the case that guests were held on this bridge until roughly the start of Early Entry. As a result, a large crowd would form that was basically a large, amorphous blob of humanity.
There was no line. It was a “fill in all available space” situation. It could be stressful and unpleasantly crowded, especially if you arrived early and saw late arrivals squeezing past you. Then, once this was packed with people over the course of 30 minutes or so, the rope would drop at the start of Early Entry, and the amorphous blob would all “race” towards Tomorrowland or Fantasyland. But really, there was no racing since there was so much congestion. Also unpleasant!

New Early Entry Rules (2026)
The new procedure for Early Entry still involves a rope drop at the bridges to Fantasyland and Tomorrowland, but it occurs far earlier.
Sometime before 8 am, these bridges open and guests are allowed to proceed to their first destination. There isn’t really a crowd to speak of at that time, as Early Entry is still 30+ minutes away.
This new protocol started last year, and we can confirm it’s ongoing as of 2026.

Multiple Cast Members on the ground have confirmed that this is the new normal for Early Entry. I’d stop short of calling it “permanent” because few things are truly permanent when it comes to Walt Disney World protocol.
I could see the Early Entry approach changing again once TRON Lightcycle Run officially joins the ride roster, sometime later in 2026, or 5 years from now. In any case, it’s been the process for the last 9 months and the intention is to continue indefinitely.
Once the bridges open and guests are allowed to proceed to their first destination, that means they can line up for an attraction. You could just wander around Tomorrowland or Fantasyland enjoying the atmosphere, but most people proceed directly to one of 2-3 rides.

Nothing else has changed with regard to Early Entry. Bag check, turnstiles and Main Street still open at approximately the same time.
The start time of Early Entry is also unchanged. Attractions still begin operating at 8:30 am (or 7:30 am on select mornings), meaning guests are allowed to “pre-load” into queues for ~30 minutes.
With that said, I have experienced attractions opening ahead of schedule on a few mornings since this new process began. It’s not at all consistent, but there have been times when Seven Dwarfs Mine Train opens 5-15 minutes before Early Entry officially begins. Don’t count on this, though.

We love the new approach to Early Entry. You aren’t standing in a sea of humanity, anxiously watching as later arrivals squeeze into space around you. Arrivals are pulsed organically, meaning there is no jockeying for position on the walk from the bridges to the attractions.
It also saves a bit of time, both because the walk to the first destination began before Early Entry and because sometimes an attraction or two might start operating before the rest. In just about every conceivable way, this is the more guest-friendly approach to Early Entry.
Take it from someone who has done this dozens of times: this is by far the best approach to Early Entry.

Magic Kingdom Morning Strategy
The biggest change to Magic Kingdom morning strategy in the last two years is more guests head to Tomorrowland instead of Fantasyland during Early Entry.
It used to be a 90/10 split in favor of Fantasyland. Now it’s around 75/25 in favor of Tomorrowland. That’s due to TRON Lightcycle Run, which is now the top priority for most guests. This is a game-changer.

Officially, TRON Lightcycle Run isn’t open until official park opening. Despite that, guests are racing there during both Early Entry and at regular rope drop. And you’ll often see a sign outside the attraction indicating that it won’t open until official park opening, with Cast Members outside warning guests of the same.
Unofficially, our experience in the last several months has been that TRON Lightcycle Run has been open for Early Entry. That doesn’t mean it’s always available, but I’m 6 for 6 since last August. Prior to that, I’d say it was closer to 50/50. And maybe it still is 50/50, and I’ve just gotten lucky. Six attempts isn’t exactly a large sample size!
The problem with prioritizing TRON Lightcycle Run is this uncertainty. You won’t know whether it’s going to be open until you walk over there, at which point pivoting to Seven Dwarfs Mine Train will put you behind many other guests. And you won’t really want to stay in the TRON line, as that’s adding 30 minutes to your wait during the most valuable time of the day.

Then there are all those other closures we mentioned above. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is down until Spring Break 2026. On the plus side, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has ditched its virtual queue and switched to standby, and the ride usually has a manageable line at rope drop and beyond.
Accordingly, regular rope drop of Frontierland–once a fan-favorite–is now more difficult to recommend. On a good day, it can be smart to rope drop this side of the park, but that won’t be the case consistently until Big Thunder Mountain Railroad reopens. We much prefer Frontierland as part of a 1-2 punch.
It’s a similar story with Adventureland. Hitting Jungle Cruise early on can be advantageous, but what do you follow that up with? Pirates of the Caribbean has a moderately high average wait time, but it’s not enough to consider that a worthy 1-2 punch, especially without a 3-4 follow-up.
In order to make rope dropping Adventureland and Frontierland “worth it” as of Winter 2026, you really need to run the table with all of these attractions. It’s tough for Early Entry guests who are debating doing a couple attractions in Tomorrowland, and then bouncing to the other side of the park, unless you don’t mind walking.

While it’s not strictly necessary, especially with a good plan of attack, that makes Lightning Lane Multi-Pass complementary to this morning strategy.
You can make your first selection for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (highly recommended, especially if you’re concerned about rolling the dice on breakdowns) or Jungle Cruise, and other picks for Pirates of the Caribbean and even Haunted Mansion (in which case, remove it from the below). See our Top 10 Tips & Tricks for Lightning Lanes at Walt Disney World.
When approaching mornings at Magic Kingdom, you have to optimize for your first several (ideally 4-6) attractions of the day, and once you do that, the easiest and most straightforward starting point becomes clear: Fantasyland.

#1. Early Entry for Average Guests (Play It Safe)
For average guests staying on-site taking advantage of Early Entry, we’d recommend the following step-by-step approach to Fantasyland:
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train
- Peter Pan’s Flight
- The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
- Haunted Mansion
- “it’s a small world”
- Under the Sea ~ Journey of The Little Mermaid
- Character Meet & Greets (optional)
#2. Regular Rope Drop for Fantasyland
For average off-site guests doing regular rope drop, we’d tweak that slightly:
- Peter Pan’s Flight
- Haunted Mansion
- The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train
- “it’s a small world”
- Under the Sea ~ Journey of The Little Mermaid
- Character Meet & Greets (optional)
Note that this plan is built for moderate crowd level (5/10 to 7/10) days, but will easily work in lower crowds. Further adjustments will be necessary for high crowd days–such as moving forward the character meet & greets in Fantasyland by a step or two.

#3. Regular Rope Drop (More Aggressive)
Not everyone wants to purchase Lightning Lane Multi-Pass, in which case our rope drop strategy is more traditional, starting on the west side of the park before bouncing to Fantasyland:
- Jungle Cruise
- Tiana’s Bayou Adventure
- Pirates of the Caribbean
- Haunted Mansion
- ‘it’s a small world’
- Peter Pan’s Flight (optional)
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train (optional)
- Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
With regard to the ‘optional’ headliners, the goal is to hit those in a mid-morning lull after wait times have already spiked and guests start hitting their balking point on those attractions. Wait times will still be high, but you’ll benefit from their trajectory–trending downward before lunch. We don’t recommend doing both Peter Pan’s Flight and Seven Dwarfs Mine Train then–choose one or the other. Buying a Lightning Lane Single Pass for the latter can also be a smart approach.

#4. Early Entry (More Aggressive)
For guests who do have Early Entry, here’s how we’d modify the above plan of attack:
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train
- Peter Pan’s Flight
- Jungle Cruise
- Tiana’s Bayou Adventure
- Pirates of the Caribbean
- Haunted Mansion
- ‘it’s a small world’
- Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh
Basically, the goal here is to knock out the first 2 Fantasyland rides during Early Entry, and then pivot to Frontierland and Adventure. You might be behind regular rope drop guests at this point as Seven Dwarfs Mine Train and Peter Pan’s Flight will probably take more than 30 minutes combined, but that’s fine. Lines still shouldn’t be bad for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Jungle Cruise, etc. until after the first hour of the day.
Even if you do purchase Lightning Lane Multi-Pass, the above approaches are efficient options for minimizing wait times while maximizing walking. As someone who doesn’t mind backtracking and crisscrossing the park, I tend to favor this approach.

#5. Early Entry for Tomorrowland
For average guests staying on-site taking advantage of Early Entry, we’d recommend the following step-by-step approach to Tomorrowland:
- TRON Lightcycle Run (if open–potentially multiple times)
- Space Mountain (if TRON isn’t open–potentially 2-3 times)
- TRON Lightcycle Run (if TRON wasn’t open during Early Entry)
- Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin (once it reopens)
- Astro Orbiter
- Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover
- Tomorrowland Speedway (only if you have kids or poor judgment)

#6. Regular Rope Drop in Tomorrowland
For average off-site guests wanting to start in Tomorrowland, here’s what we’d recommend:
- Space Mountain (potentially twice)
- Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin (once it reopens)
- TRON Lightcycle Run
- Astro Orbiter
- Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover
- Tomorrowland Speedway (you’re better off pretending it doesn’t exist)

The reason TRON Lightcycle Run isn’t prioritized if it’s not open for Early Entry is because we view all waiting as equivalent, and coming with an opportunity cost. In this case, of doing Space Mountain as a walk-on.
Then for regular rope drop guests, there’s no sense in being right behind the Early Entry crowd for pretty much the exact reason–the opportunity cost of waiting for TRON while lines are short everywhere else. Instead, take advantage of the mid-morning lull after the posted wait time spikes as the ride ‘processes’ the first two waves of guests. (That’s the same rationale for moving SDMT down a few slots on the prior list.)
The reason Tomorrowland is the plan B or C for Early Entry and rope drop is, quite simply, because there are fewer entries on those lists than Fantasyland. If you add up the time saved, you’re coming out ahead in Fantasyland. However, the scales can tip if you’d do Space Mountain multiple times (it’s a fun ride to repeat!) or if you wouldn’t do character meet & greets once those open in Fantasyland.

#7. Early Entry (Most Aggressive–My Favorite!)
Finally, here’s our recommendation for the most aggressive on-site guests doing Early Entry and regular rope drop:
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train
- TRON Lightcycle Run
- Space Mountain
- Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin (once it reopens)
- Jungle Cruise
- Big Thunder Mountain Railroad (once it reopens)
- Tiana’s Bayou Adventure
This might sound like an unrealistic plan of attack, but it actually can work. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train can be knocked out quickly if you’re at the front of the pack, and by the time you’re done, the app should show a wait time for TRON if it’s open.
I’ve documented my experience with this approach twice in the last few months: Magic Kingdom’s Extra Early Entry is a Must-Do for Low Waits at Disney World’s Biggest Rides and My Excellent Early Entry at Magic Kingdom. I did TRON Lightcycle Run several times one of those mornings.

Note that both run-throughs were during Party Season on a 7:30 am Early Entry morning.
However, I had a similar experience on a regular day last August. Granted, it was a low-crowds day, but the point is that it’s possible with a normal 9 am park opening. Probably not on a peak season day, but I’ll be testing this approach again in Winter 2026 and then probably during Spring Break just to see how it holds up.
Suffice to say, the aggressive strategy will perform perfectly on a 7:30 am Early Entry morning. It might work with modifications on a different day, too. The key is going to be finishing Seven Dwarfs Mine Train before the regular rope drop rush. If you exit SDMT with 8-10 minutes on the clock before official park opening, proceed to TRON. If not, consider pivoting to Peter Pan’s Flight. Good luck out there!

Ultimately, this is how we’d approach mornings at Magic Kingdom in 2026. I know we’ve presented you with a lot of ‘choose your own adventure’ options, and that might be overwhelming. But my hope is the opposite–that it’s nice to have multiple options based on your preferences and priorities, so you can choose the one that works best for your family.
There’s also the subjective side of this. TRON Lightcycle Run is much better at night, whereas Seven Dwarfs Mine Train is only slightly better–but the latter is also awesome in the morning, as the sun rises above Magic Kingdom.
An optimal strategy is going to call for doing one of these two at the end of the night (but probably not both), and I’d rather have that be TRON Lightcycle Run. More broadly, I’d also rather enjoy Tomorrowland in all its neon glory once the sun is down.

Speaking of the subjective, it’s also worth emphasizing that we simply love early mornings in Magic Kingdom. Seeing the park wake up for the day, getting photos of an empty Main Street or Cinderella Castle, walking through the frontier when it’s devoid of people, that soft morning glow of light–the list goes on and on. As we’ve said many times, we’d take the first 2 hours of the morning and last 2 hours of the evening over the entire stretch between.
We really mean that. Not only are lines shorter earlier and later, but the experience is superior. And this experience of being there, soaking up the atmosphere and marveling at the lavish themed design is precisely why you pay the big bucks to visit Walt Disney World over Six Flags. Sure, rides are fun and the primary point–especially of a guide like this.
If you focus only on getting as many “done” as possible, racing from ride-to-ride to complete things checklist style, you’re going to miss out on the little moments that define Walt Disney World. We know this is an odd thing about which to get preachy in a post devoted to morning touring strategy, but we firmly believe that balance is the name of the game.

Time is a precious commodity, especially during the first two hours Magic Kingdom is open. But those moments spent stopping for family photos or to interact with free-roaming characters or letting your kids inspect some random detail or gag is likewise precious. Those moments will produce memories that are far more precious.
You’re never going to remember whether you did 17 or 19 attractions in a single day at Magic Kingdom. What will be ingrained in your mind, in vivid detail, are the seemingly “little things” you paused to enjoy for no reason in particular. Those moments of pure whimsy are when the magic happens, and what keeps us going back.
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
What is your Magic Kingdom rope drop strategy? Do you like to savor the low crowds and knock out popular rides with short lines, or have a leisurely experience? Do you agree or disagree with our approaches to Early Entry and rope drop? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing feedback about your experiences is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

Great point about the best morning being one with balance, where you get a leg up to avoid long lines later, but still enjoy the atmosphere. Hopefully they are ramping up to make Tron an EE attraction–I can’t see why there would be a problem with doing that. I’d be very interested in an updated article on strategy for Disneyland/ DCA rope drop now that EE has been annoyingly taken away.
We have a stay at Disneyland coming up in a couple weeks–I’ll be updating after that.
I don’t expect much to change, honestly.
We’re taking our grandchildren 9,8,6 to MK next week. Staying off sight. Not interested in Space Mountain or Tron. We’ve already got matching tee shirts. Papa’s is the Magical Sponsor $$$. If you could help with a magical itinerary I would appreciate it so much. HH is my personal favorite. The kids grands have never been
As an aggressive on-site guest and roller coaster enthusiast who does Early Entry (and who has not yet ridden TRON or Tiana’s at MK), my morning plan would be to ride Seven Dwarfs, then TRON and Barnstormer, then take the train from Fantasyland to Frontierland to ride Tiana’s.
We stayed offsite earlier this week and arrived at Magic Kingdom on Monday by about 7:45 for an 8am opening. As we got to the bridge area for 7DMT, the cast members started turning people away and one mom came by us saying “they’re not opening this entrance today. We’ve been standing here for an hour.” There’s a lot of variables for the off-site rope drop.
Is there a change in any of the strategy now that you can go directly to the rides at early entry (instead of being held on the bridges)?
I’m also curious to hear Tom’s take on this development. I’ve heard rumblings that it’s a temporary procedure due to some behind the scenes activity
I am also eager to hear the answer to this question.
Hi! I just found your blog, as I was searching for MK itineraries. What do you recommend now that Tiana is no longer a virtual queue (as stated in this article). We are staying on site, so will take advantage of early entry (and extended evening hours (staying at Boardwalk) – wondering if we should wait to ride Tron then?)
My husband and I are taking our 8 year old in April and I have written down 7 Dwarfs, Space Mountain, Buzz, People Mover, then Characters and to save Tron for at night…. when do you suggest we do Tiana’s ride?? I know she really wants to do this. I was a little confused by the order of your blog. Do you suggest we start at Tiana instead of starting at 7 Dwarfs?
Thank you for ALL of your blog posts!! They are so helpful as we try to be efficient and get the most out of our short trip!
Hi
I regularly read your blog – but my goodness- the ads and floating ads are horrific
I also feel sometimes you have really long paragraphs – to add to the time I might be stuck scrolling and seeing the inane ads pop up.
It makes me cringe. And is so frustrating
On the other hand – things like the Rope Drop ride down OMG ruin your morning is real. (If you know you know !).
Thanks
We did early rope drop Wednesday January 15 and headed for 7 Dwarves. The line was moving quickly and things looked great. Then it broke. So our 30 minutes were up by the time we got a lightning lane to make up for the breakdown. We headed to Haunted Mansion which had a delayed opening. Decided to just see the Country Bears since we hadn’t seen the new show. When we came out Pirates was down. Also Jungle Cruise. Went to ride the People Mover because Buzz Lightyear line was way longer than the space for the lines. As soon as 7 Dwarves came back we did well on the lightning lane. Went back to Haunted Mansion posted time of 35 minutes ended up being 70. Went to Mickey’s Philharmonic and then just gave up and went home. (We are old people and had walked 25 miles in 2 1/2 days so were tired. We appreciate your blog and tips on how to do the parks better.
| Feel free to correct them; I hear that people love that.
11/10 no notes. This is exactly the humor I come here for.
Still laughing a year later at that one
For aggressive on-site early entry……why not
1)Space Mountain (as to not waste time)
2) Tron
Then head to Fantasy Land
3)SDMT
Etc while you continue in Fantasy land.
I would think you can beat the regular rope drop guests to SDMT. Especially if most Early Entry went toward Tron to begin with. And by aggressive I mean front of the Early Entry Pack.
I’m curious as to why you suggest SDMT then Tron for this group?
Because TRON isn’t open during Early Entry.
Once it is, I’d probably agree with this approach.
We traveled to WDW late Oct 2024 . . . we followed your advice here, and it was wonderful! We had a fantastic experience with making the most of our time. Thank you!
Thanks for the kind words–and for sharing your experience!!!
Really hoping we’ll be able to wrangle our kids and do early entry utilizing the Fantasyland plan when we go…sounds perfect for us! We are staying at Bay Lake Tower. Since it’s only a walk over to Magic Kingdom, when would you advise we aim to leave the room? 30 min before early entry?
I’d do at least 45 minutes. Personally, I like to have time to make the walk, get through security, into the park, and potentially take a few photos at a leisurely pace–as opposed to feeling rushed. To each their own, though!
I love reading your tips and how to’s, and your restaurant reviews. However the last bit in this article, about enjoying the little things is what honestly brought me to your blog. I was honestly researching the “hidden magic” stuff that no one seem’s to ever notice. I never knew about them until a documentary years ago, after we took my daughter to Disney World. When my wife and I went back after years of struggles in 2016, I did not want to miss that type of stuff. The talking garbage cans, the phone in the hat shop, the music being played at the music shop ( which I have yet to hear) all that. I read a book about this stuff as well, in which the author wrote about the coming attractions etc, stuff like that in all the parks. I wish you could do a more updated article on that type of stuff, and what is new, since things have changed in recent years. IMO that is where the actual magic lies.
This is a fantastic idea–I definitely need to do more like this!
I would love to read about this too, great idea! <3
Thanks for the detailed guide!
We are from The Netherlands and will visit Magic Kingdom (and the other WDW parks) in about a week for the first time. We will stay at the All-Star Music resort (we didn’t book Pop Century as we thought the Skyliner would be down for refurbishment…). As we are not really early risers, we will probably arrive at the Magic Kingdom at 8.45-9.00 AM, hopefully just before the regular crowd will be allowed to enter Fantasyland and Tomorrowland. Will your (Early Entry) step-by-step plan then still hold? We already purchased LLMP and have got early reserverations for Haunted Mansion 09.05, Tiana 09.45 and Pooh 10.30 (but, after reading your guide, might change the latter to Pirates). I think we will probably start around 10.00 by using the first one (unlocking additional Tier 1 reservations).
Hi Danny! Can I ask you how exactly you bought the Lightning Lane Multi Pass and made ride reservations without being on US soil? I live in Belgium and am going to WDW in 3 months, but was told that I couldn’t buy LLMP – let alone make any ride reservations – before arriving in the United States… I hope you have a wonderful trip!*
Caren, happily they’ve changed the rules and you can buy lightning lanes from outside North America
Hi Suzanne! Luckily I had picked up on that in the meantime, ’cause it stressed me out, ha ha! Thank you so much for placing this comment. <3
We are heading to stay at POP Jan 25th-31st. Really excited they did not close the Skyliner. We have followed your advice on which parks are best on particular days – you have never lead us wrong! I think our plan this year is to actually book our first Lightening Lane pass – I know you don’t use it but we just want a bit more relaxed and enjoy the scenery type trip – around 9:30-10am. We have always done early entry, but we never make it to the evenings at the parks as we are too tired. Do you think there are some popular rides that would be more available at night at Magic during the Fireworks? Like Seven Dwarfs or Tron or Peter Pan?
I had read your early entry tips about the Tomorrowland crush to go to Tron (and lighter lines going to Fantasyland) before our winter break trip and I’m so glad I did! SDMT was even down at early entry open (but we saw the cars successfully doing the test runs), but by going to Fantasyland first we did several rides, including SDMT, and then made it over to Adventureland by 930. And yes, Tron is way better at night!
Glad to hear this approach worked out for you–even with that delayed opening of SDMT. Thanks for sharing your experience!
What time did you get in line for SDMT and how long was your wait there? Thanks!!
Thank You for this updated strategy! It is exactly what I needed for our upcoming trip that will contend with the dance/cheer masses, ugg!!! So dreading badly behaved, unchaperoned teens!! Now I just need similar plans for the other parks and F.A.R.T.S
This question probably isn’t relevant to 95% of your readers, but what if the only ride we wanted that was on your lists above was Tron, and everything else we wanted was either in Adventureland or Frontierland? Wait in the “early entry” line for Tron anyway? Sleep in and do it all at night? I know we’re weird, but MK is really only a half day park for us.
Tom’s recommendation for TRON is as follows: “there’s no sense in being right behind the Early Entry crowd for pretty much the exact reason–the opportunity cost of waiting for TRON while lines are short everywhere else. Instead, take advantage of the mid-morning lull after the posted wait time spikes as the ride ‘processes’ the first two waves of guests. (That’s the same rationale for moving SDMT down a few slots on the prior list.)” Without knowing which rides on the west side of the park you want to do, you could replace multiple Space Mountain and Buzz rides with the Jungle Cruise and another attraction before heading over to catch the TRON lull. If you’re going to be on-site, I’d suggest is getting into the park and over to the Adventureland bridge right before rope drop so you can beat those crowds there.
You know, you *might* just spend the afternoon at MK, get on the Jungle Cruise just before dusk and catch TRON last thing before the park closes. Other than the Cruise, the more popular rides currently open on the West side of the park without virtual queues are continuous loaders and burn through quests quickly. The longest lines right this moment are for the Cruise and rides in Fantasyland and Tomorrowland.
I look forward to utilizing your updated strategy , next year, when staying at Shades of Green.
And to your point, I absolutely love the first 2 and the last 2 hours in any Disney Park! Most notably when the Park stays open later.
I’m also curious to hear Tom’s take on this development. I’ve heard rumblings that it’s a temporary procedure due to some behind the scenes activity.