New Hallmark Christmas Movie Set at Disney World!

Walt Disney World has announced a new Christmas movie filmed in the parks & resorts that’ll debut on the Hallmark Channel in 2026! Here’s the full announcement followed by our commentary on this holiday television special (the first big one in a long time) set at WDW.

Big news from Hallmark and The Most Magical Place On Earth! In 2026, Walt Disney World and the Hallmark Channel are teaming up to debut an all-new, original holiday movie called “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True.”

Starring Lacey Chabert, Travis Van Winkle, Richard Kind, Christy Carlson Romano, Bryce Dufee, Taegen Burns, and Asher Alexander, with Patrick Renna in a cameo role, “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” is soon-to-be classic Christmas romance. The WDW movie is set to premiere during Hallmark Channel’s 17th annual Countdown to Christmas in 2026 and will shoot on location at Walt Disney World in Florida. Ryan Landels has written the script and is set to direct.

In between your yearly December sips of warm hot chocolate and waves of joyous Christmas caroling, “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” will surround you in the typical holiday spirit that you’ve come to expect from Hallmark Channel over the years. This collaboration between the Hallmark Channel and Walt Disney World marks the first time ever that these holiday powerhouses will team up for a new, original movie.

“The partnership between Hallmark and Disney dates back decades, when a shared Kansas City connection and friendship between Hallmark’s founder, J.C. Hall, and Walt Disney himself led to our first-ever licensed products, including the very first greeting card featuring Mickey Mouse,” said Darren Abbott, Chief Brand Officer, Hallmark. “We’re thrilled to expand our relationship beyond the products we create together and onto the screen with this heartwarming and joyful Christmas movie that embodies the very best of both brands.”

Following a special appearance from Chabert direct from Magic Kingdom during Hallmark Channel’s broadcast of “The Hallmark Christmas Experience: A Hometown Holiday,” the new film is officially set to debut for Christmas 2026. With this, Hallmark announced that “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” will be shooting on location at Walt Disney World during production, marking an exciting moment as the resort prepares to welcome the crew to The Most Magical Place On Earth.

“Storytelling is at the heart of both Disney and Hallmark, and that magic shines even brighter during the holidays,” said Sally Conner, VP Global Content.  “We’re thrilled that Walt Disney World will serve as the immersive setting for a Hallmark holiday movie highlighting the cheerful festivities of the season.  Across our theme parks, resorts, and beyond, countless unique stories unfold and new memories are made every day with our guests. This film is a wonderful way to share that joy and pixie dust with fans everywhere.”

In “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True,” Lindsey (Chabert) and her extended family head to Walt Disney World to spend a magical Christmas together. But the dream of a jolly holiday gets dashed when Lindsey discovers her room is next door to Philip (Van Winkle), a disastrous first date she recently had, who’s also there on a family trip.

As Lindsey and Philip’s paths cross throughout their stay, the frost starts to thaw as they learn they’re not so different from each other after all. Thanks to the magic of Walt Disney World, the holiday wish Lindsey made in Cinderella fountain just might turn their rivalry into romance.

Our Commentary

This is fantastic news. It honestly made our week, and I kind of wish I were kidding, but I’m completely serious. It was also one of the rare pieces of Walt Disney World news that Sarah “broke” to me.

We watch a lot of Hallmark Christmas movies. I’m not even going to pretend it’s against my will, as is the case with HGTV shows. I’ve learned way too much about open concept design, none of it by choice. I also cringe at some of the “upgrades,” which are about as bland as it gets—and the popularity of which explain why Walt Disney World interior design was so basic and boring for a stretch. But I digress.

In the case of Hallmark Christmas movies, they are a guilty pleasure through and through that I actually enjoy. We have favorite settings, series, and actors—although I know very few of them by name, but rather, what they’re from (e.g. Mean Girls, Full House, etc) or A-list actors they resemble. Now that I think about it, my knowledge of Hallmark movies is shockingly superficial for how much I watch them. But that’s sort of the nature of the beast—they’re mindless fun.

The ending of every single one is predictable from about the 10-minute mark. here’s almost always a small town character (and setting) in a relationship with a big city character who isn’t right for them, or a big city character rediscovering their roots in a small town. Sometimes there are cats and/or castles. I really like these ones.

Every single Hallmark movie (all of them!) has horrible pacing. They take a lot of time to get to the point (like the DTB of made for TV movies, you might say), and then it’s all wrapped up neatly in the last 60 seconds.

Take a bathroom break or look down at your phone at the wrong moment and you quite literally could miss the ending. I’m not even kidding about all of this. It’s baffling, but I assume there’s some analytics reason for this storytelling structure.

Anyway, I assume we’re getting this announcement now not just to build hype, but because filming for the 2026 Christmas special is about to start this month. Walt Disney World likely knows that cat is getting out of the bag one way or another with the breathless blogging coverage of everything, so they might as well get ahead of it and make an official announcement.

It’s my understanding that Hallmark movies wouldn’t normally film this early; most shoot over the summer to take advantage of longer days and are filmed fairly quickly by movie standards. They probably benefit from the formulaic style, limited budgets, and few (if any) reshoots. I’d hazard a guess that some could film as late as September and still make a Christmas release.

Of course, the difference here is that Walt Disney World gets decorated for and celebrates Christmas in November, and that is not enough turnaround time for a same-year release. Especially for a movie like this, which sounds like it’ll have a significant portion taking place in a resort hotel. Aside from EPCOT, hotels are usually the last areas of Walt Disney World to get decorated for the holidays.

It’ll be interesting to see at which resort the Hallmark special is set. Immediate odds-on favorites based on the whole Hallmark vibe are Grand Floridian or Wilderness Lodge. I could see it going either way, with Grand Floridian’s recent reimagining giving it the edge as a hotel Disney wants to highlight. On the other hand, Wilderness Lodge is incredibly on-brand for Hallmark. Now watch, it’ll actually be Old Key West or somewhere totally random where the logistics just happen to work out best.

I assume at least some amount of filming will start almost immediately. I’d expect it to pause for Christmas and New Year’s Eve, before resuming again in January 2026. Perhaps later. They could theoretically do a few weeks of filming now with Christmas decorations, and then more during a slower stretch for footage that’s not seasonal. (Hotel rooms and hallways are the same year-round, as is much of Walt Disney World.) Not that it really matters—just thinking aloud as I try to fulfill my life’s (new) dream of being an extra in a Hallmark Christmas movie.

Most Hallmark Christmas movies seem fairly low budget, but there are always a few blockbusters per season. If you watch the credits, those are usually co-produced by a tourism bureau (e.g. Visit Norway), which helps explain the prominence of the locale. We fully expect “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” to be a very similar story.

This is marketing for Walt Disney World, and between that and the fact that this movie will have wider appeal, we’d expect a far bigger budget and production quality than almost every other Hallmark movie ever. This is probably why it features Hallmark’s heavy-hitter in Chabert and an otherwise strong cast by Hallmark standards. Not that it really matters. Schmaltz and sentimentality aren’t expensive in the first place.

Honestly, I hope they don’t overproduce “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True.” Part of the secret sauce of Hallmark Channel movies is that they have this b-movie quality to them. They are cozy, for lack of a better term. Part of why many fans have stopped watching the ABC Disney Parks Christmas Day Parade is because it’s whatever the exact opposite of that is. It feels overly-commercial. (A bit ironic since over-commercializing holidays is like Hallmark’s whole thing!)

My hope is that “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” threads the needle and ends up becoming a guilty-pleasure cult classic. It doesn’t need to be good-good or so-bad-it’s-good. The movie just needs to have just the right amount of cheesiness, Hallmark sentimentality, and Christmas at Walt Disney World window-dressing. This generation really needs what mine had back in the day with the Top 10 TV Shows Set at Walt Disney World and Top 10 Walt Disney World TV Specials. It’d be nice if “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True” becomes a new entry on that second list!

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 do you think of a Hallmark Channel Christmas movie set at Walt Disney World? Looking forward to “Holiday Ever After: A Disney World Wish Come True”? Any predictions about the resort at which it’s set or anything else about the film? What’s your favorite Walt Disney World television special? Anything that didn’t make this list that you’d recommend? Do you agree or disagree with our picks? 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!

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26 Comments

  1. I love love love Hallmark movies (and my husband will watch the promising ones with me). They only shoot for 15 days (although with the Disney budget bump maybe they’ll get some extra time). My guess is that this will be the Saturday after Thanksgiving 8pm movie. The movie in that spot this year was set at the Grand Ole Opry.

  2. Love this! Even though I’ve never been to WDW (I’m a Disneyland girl), I love Disney and Hallmark Christmas movies, so I’m hoping this will be awesome!

  3. I just got back from WDW and we ran into Richard Kind during our stay in Gran Destino Tower. we met him at the club level lounge. it’s hard to imagine they’d film it there, but that seemed to be where he at least was staying.

  4. I knew Richard Kind from college…many…years ago. Too bad I left acting in 2001, I might have gotten to work on Hallmark® Movie. There really is such a thing as the Northwestern Mafia.

  5. My husband and I saw Richard Kind filming something at Hollywood Studios on Wednesday 12/3, and it must have been for this movie!

  6. The pacing of the movie is so that we can see the parts that are actually important: the decorating of the Christmas tree, the eating of baked goods at the local bakery, the Christmas pageant full of small children with the behavioral control of 40-year-olds, the random snowfall, and the drinking of hot cocoa in a kitchen where every surface including the cabinet doors are covered in holly and lights. (You would think this might result in difficulty opening and closing doors or an abundance of power cords all over the place, but that’s never an issue.) Then at the end they have to pause these important festivities to assure everyone that Holly Van Mistletoe will in fact adopt the three kids she just met and marry their dad who owns the local tree farm.

  7. I am SO excited for this! I watch every Hallmark Christmas movie every season and am so happy they are pairing two of my very favorite things. It will be fun to see which resort they choose. I cannot wait to see it!

  8. Aren’t Hallmark Christmas movies were contingent upon a main owning the town inn, which must be decorated extravagantly by a pretty person in flannel and jeans while an older best pal encourages them to open up to finding love this Christmas? As such, wouldn’t the Boardwalk INN be the only suitable home resort for this story?

  9. They filmed a Hallmark Christmas Movie in our sleepy little town of Goshen.
    “One December Night”, with one of my favorite actors Bruce Campbell. It was actually a very good movie despite the absence of Zombies.
    Peter Gallagher was the other star so Hallmark actually spent some money for two decent actors.
    They changed the name of Goshen to Pineville and the Stagecoash Inn to Pineville Inn.
    Our Church was used as the staging area for all the actors except for the four stars.
    A giant green room, where actors had their makeup, hair and wardrobe done and waited for their scenes to be called.
    Probably the only green room with one fo Tiffany’s last and incredibly impressive giant stained glass windows.
    Carolyn was actually our Church rep who kept an eye on everything that went on during the entire filming.
    Shooting was mostly at night.
    If you want to see where we live and the outside of our Church with it’s tall steeple, check out the movie.
    I turned down the opportunity to be an extra so I can’t tell you I’m the guy crossing the street wearing the Pineville Mets cap.
    But check it out.
    You won’t be wasting your time because it actually is a wonderful movie.
    Despite the lack of reanimated dead bodies.

  10. Agreed, this is amazing news! Would love to hear your favorite hallmark movies if you can scrounge up the titles. I personally love “A Biltmore Christmas” (which definitely aligns with your theory about the tourism budget boost!)

  11. There is footage of filming the cast walking out of the Polynesian lobby (ground floor, OG building). Maybe that’s the resort where the magic happens.

  12. The highest quality Hallmark movies are filmed the winter before, so this one should be one of the big ones for next year. They remind me of “non-ironic” sci-fi B-movies where you can enjoy the cheese *and* the heart, like when Jeff Bridges argues with a special effect in Tron.
    I guess now that it’s 2025, Christy Carlson Romano is a deep cut Disney reference, or did she get onto the Hallmark train before this?
    (By the way, is the Hallmark Channel the biggest independently owned cable network before you get into FAST channels? I hope they get the “sponsor an EPCOT festival” pitch that landed them Discovery before they merged with Warner.)

  13. Hey Tom, LOL, my wife and friends joke about my love for Hallmark Christmas movies all the time! I don’t care, I love the comfort of the predictable happy ending. I am literally leaving for Walt Disney World tomorrow morning! Maybe I will get lucky and they will start filming this week?

  14. Hallmark filming is a well oiled machine. They make a film in 30 days. A lot of night shooting which will be great at Disney as they can film after closing. With enough of the right lights you can always make it look like daytime. If they are going to take advantage of the holiday decor (which why wouldn’t they-save a bundle on set decorating) then I’m sure they are filming now. They must have set this up some time ago in order to have a hotel to shoot in. It would be smart for them to stay in the same hotel allowing fewer tourist rooms so they can shoot there and not disturb guests. Looking forward to seeing it. Should be fun to watch.

    Would be fun to be an extra, and spend all night in the park.

  15. I’m with you — SO excited and hopeful that it does justice to both the magic of Disney and the cheesy guilty pleasure that is a good Hallmark movie. They’ve actually been filming this week. I’ve seen posts showing them in AK and DHS. As for resort, I’m thinking maybe AKL? Wilderness Lodge is about as classic Christmas as you can get. I wonder if GF would just be too crowded for filming?

    1. I can’t imagine they’d be filming at Grand Floridian right now in any material sense. Maybe some quick lobby footage at off hours?

      The benefit of shooting at the GF is that it has outlying buildings, so production of non-common areas could be isolated pretty well. Still, wouldn’t expect that to happen right now.

      Also possible some footage isn’t filmed at WDW at all. Will be interesting to see what happens!

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