New Soarin’ Across America Coming to EPCOT at Disney World & Disneyland

As part of a Salute to All Nations…But Only Really America, Walt Disney World and Disneyland are debuting Soarin’ Across America at EPCOT and DCA in 2026. This shares behind the scenes photos & video, poster art, and everything else we know about the new version that’s coming to celebrate the 250th Anniversary of the United States of America. Plus, why we absolutely love this news and hope the new ride is not only for a limited time!
Soarin’ Across America is just one part of a once-in-a-lifetime celebration of our nation’s 250th anniversary that the Walt Disney Company is joining with a new initiative called “Disney Celebrates America.” Kicking off on Veterans Day 2025 and continuing through the July 4, 2026 weekend, this celebration will bring together Disney’s beloved brands and platforms to honor America’s past, celebrate the present, and inspire its future.
Through heartfelt storytelling, experiences, and meaningful support for veterans, military families, and communities, Disney will shine a spotlight on the people, places, and moments that make our nation special—a tradition of honoring and uplifting others that’s been part of Disney’s story for more than a century.
America’s preeminent storyteller was Walt Disney, and in honor of that, the company bearing his name will help bring the semiquincentennial to life by celebrating the dreams, stories, and optimism that have inspired generations. From sports and entertainment to travel and tourism, Disney will encourage families everywhere to explore, learn and discover the diverse lands, and vibrant communities that make up our shared story.
“At its heart, America’s story is one of imagination, ambition, and possibility – the same ideals that have guided Disney since the beginning,” said Robert A. Iger, Chief Executive Officer, The Walt Disney Company. “This celebration honors both a nation and a spirit that never stop dreaming about what’s next.”
Here’s the announcement about Soarin’ Across America, coming next year to EPCOT at Walt Disney World and Disney California Adventure at Disneyland Resort:

Buckle up and get ready for takeoff! The fan-favorite attraction Soarin’ will be receiving an all-new airborne adventure across the U.S. That’s right— you’ll soon be Soarin’ Across America at Disneyland Resort and Walt Disney World Resort, debuting Summer 2026!
The new bi-coastal offering will showcase the United States—from sea to shining sea—highlighting some of the country’s natural beauty and iconic cityscapes. Here are a couple of behind the scenes photos showing the making of Soarin’ Across America:


Soarin’ Across America will be brought to life with the iconic elements that make Soarin’ unforgettable – the flight, the sights and score, even the scents! Walt Disney Imagineering is hard at work capturing more than a dozen breathtaking locations for the new flight.
Whether you’re taking off from Disney California Adventure park in California or EPCOT in Florida, you’ll be part of the journey that honors the heart and spirit of the nation as it soars into its 250th birthday celebration.
Our Commentary
I love this. Absolutely love everything about it.
Longtime readers know that one of my great passions outside of theme parks is the U.S. National Parks. There was a time when I was visiting Yosemite National Park multiple times per month, and I already have a ton of stamps in my U.S. National Parks passport (see My Top 10 U.S. National Parks So Far.)
The whole reason we started TravelCaffeine.com, our non-Disney sister site to this one, was to document international travel and trips to U.S. National Parks.

Admittedly, our visits to U.S. National Parks have slowed in the last few years. But we’re fully expecting to get that back on track when our daughter is just a little older and has the stamina for hikes and can appreciate their natural beauty. Suffice to say, I have very strong thoughts on the National Parks, and firmly believe that they are America’s Best Idea.
I’m already making a mental list of which U.S. National Parks deserve to be featured in Soarin’ Across America, and might even turn that into a post. The only hold-up would be the practical reality that Disney might have difficulty getting clearance to shoot scenes from the NPS, so maybe it’ll be a situation where they take what they can get.
Obviously, I realize that Soarin’ Across America does not mean Soarin’ Across America’s National Parks. There will be cities, farmland, and other rich biodiversity that makes the United States such a special and great place. But honestly, I’m most interested in the aerials from our beautiful U.S. National Parks than the rest of it. (And some state parks–don’t want to be a NPS snob and leave those out!)

This is in large part because highlighting America’s rich natural diversity is the right move for Soarin’ Across America. When the original Soarin’ returned to EPCOT, I praised that decision despite it actually being Soarin’ Over California because I prefer the original. And one of the things I love about OG Soarin’ is not that it celebrates the Golden State, but that it’s a surprisingly representative selection of scenes of the United States.
Unless you’ve visited Anza-Borrego, Yosemite National Park, Tahoe, Malibu, Camarillo, etc., you probably couldn’t identify where the footage was shot. You might’ve just assumed those locations were the desert, waterfall, rushing rapids, ocean, orange groves, etc. from various places around the United States. That’s what it passes for, and why the original Soarin’ always worked in EPCOT.
Most of the places in Soarin’ Over California are not as readily identifiable as those in Soarin’ Around the World. Orange groves and coastline tend to blend together. The Eiffel Tower, Taj Mahal, and Great Wall of China…not so much. If Soarin’ returned to EPCOT in exactly the same presentation as when it left, the overwhelming majority of first-time guests would’ve simply assumed it’s a flyover of the United States.

While Soarin’ Around the World highlights the natural world (or rather, a version of nature created by a computer), it focuses more on landmarks. There’s a reason distortion isn’t as pronounced in the original Soarin–because instead of architecture and linear elements, the attraction primarily features geography that can mask distortion better.
I’m not particularly averse to Soarin’ Around the World, but all of the CGI, cheesy animals, and distortion has worn on me over time. Moreover, Soarin’ Over California is not showing its age at all. If anything, it benefits from its footage being real, whereas the extensive CGI of the new version will inevitably date itself much sooner.
Given that, my assumption is that Imagineering will have learned its lesson there, and Soarin’ Across America will focus largely on the natural world to avoid datedness and distortion. Of course, there will be the obligatory flyovers of Washington, DC and New York City since it only makes sense to feature those cities in a new show for the 250th Anniversary of the United States. But I hope that’s the extent of the cities featured–plus maybe San Francisco or Seattle for a bit of West Coast representation (seeing the Space Needle or Golden Gate Bridge is always fun).

All of this is what makes me glad that Soarin’ Across America is debuting at EPCOT and DCA in 2026.
Walt Disney Imagineering has made some fixes to Soarin’ Around the World over the last couple of years, but a new version is still needed. And it’ll be nice, for once, that EPCOT isn’t simply receiving the hand-me-downs of a project funded by another resort (Disneyland in the case of the original; Shanghai Disneyland with the second Soarin.)
My only concern is that Chief Flight Attendant, Patrick “Puddy” Warburton, mentions Soarin’ Across America is going to be a limited time offering in the video announcement. I hope this is incorrect, and it’s the new permanent attraction. I also hope that Imagineering gets a proper budget to pull this off.
Although honestly, a blockbuster budget might have been detrimental to Soaring Over the Horizon/Around the World. Fixing (or creating) places in post-production probably costs a lot more than filming them in the first place. We’ve done FlyOver Canada, and the quality of that production is remarkable–and for what I’d assume is a fraction of Disney’s budget!

Beyond better visuals and showcasing the beauty of the United States, I love Soarin’ Across America precisely because it celebrates America. This is exactly what the United States needs more of in these unnecessarily charged and polarized times.
Exercises in patriotism instead of politics that remind us of what makes this great nation special and works to unite the country instead of divide us. It seems like everywhere you look, there’s an inclination to foment rage–so this is whole “Disney Celebrates America” for the 250th Anniversary of the United States is good counterprogramming to that. I’m not naive enough to think Soarin’ Across America is going to heal our nation…but it’ll certainly do more good than harm, and that alone is a step in the right direction for Disney!
Soarin’ Across America comes at a time when the Walt Disney Company has become more of a frequent fixture of culture wars and, as a result, erroneously accused of being unpatriotic (and more) in some circles. To anyone who actually visits Walt Disney World or Disneyland, the idea that the parks are “anti-American” couldn’t be further from the truth.

Few Americans ever were more patriotic than Walt Disney.
He was so distinctly patriotic that he even attempted to join the Army in 1918 but was rejected for being too young. Walt Disney went on to serve his country in many ways, and that legacy is still carried on at both Walt Disney World and Disneyland to this day.
Entire lands like Main Street USA or Liberty Square are, in my view, patriotic. Then there are the more overt attractions, like Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, The American Adventure, and Hall of Presidents. I would also argue that Carousel of Progress, Electrical Water Pageant, and more are patriotic. There are a variety of little ways that Disney celebrates America that go unnoticed by most guests.

Then there’s Independence Day in the Disney Parks.
We make a point of spending every Fourth of July in the parks, in large part because I can think few places more patriotic than Disney. (Okay okay, and the fireworks.) After several years of EPCOT, we’ve done Disneyland for the last few years.
It’s my new favorite for the Fourth, as there are so many (talented!) military bands that perform in both parks (Anaheim is fairly close to San Diego, so it makes sense). There are also tons of photo ops celebrating America and flag retreat was particularly poignant that day.

The bottom line is that if there are more patriotic theme parks than Disney, I haven’t visited them.
And what separates Walt Disney World and Disneyland from other ostensibly patriotic parks is that it’s substantive and not superficial window dressing. Disney showcases what it really means to be patriotic in sincere and thoughtful ways.
The last few years have been fraught with controversy and political standoffs between Disney and both California and Florida, leading some to question the company’s values. But the reality is that Disney has always been patriotic, and patriotism is not the same as politics. Sometimes it’s good to have a reminder of that distinction.

Next, let’s turn to when Soarin’ Across America will open in Summer 2026.
At present, all Walt Disney World has indicated is the season. But they’ve also shared that “Disney Celebrates America” begins this Veterans Day (November 11, 2025) and “continues” through July 4, 2026. That doesn’t necessarily mean it ends on Independence Day. Elsewhere, Disney has stated that the celebration will culminate over the Fourth of July.
While we’d love to see Soarin’ Across America sooner rather than later, it wouldn’t surprise us if the debut of the new attraction happens on July 4, 2026. Disney also indicated this was an “anchor” of the Fourth of July festivities, and could be a big emphasis of the Independence Day “multi-platform broadcast” across Disney+, Hulu, ABC, Disney Channel, ESPN, Freeform, FX and National Geographic.

As for when Soarin’ Around the World will close, it doesn’t necessarily need a lengthy refurbishment ahead of this.
We’d note that there was no downtime for the transition between Soarin’ Around the World and Soarin’ Over California back during Disney100. It was like flipping a switch, with one version being shown one day and another the next. But that was also temporary, so this could be different.
Back when Soarin’ Around the World first opened, there were a couple of closures in 2016 to prepare for the new attraction. When the opening actually did occur, the OG Soarin’ simply closed early one day and Soarin’ Around the World debuted the next day.
Our best guess–and hope–is that Soarin’ does close for a brief refurbishment in 2026. It doesn’t necessarily need to occur right before Soarin’ Across America debuts, but the ride could use some TLC. The projectors could stand to be upgraded and/or cleaned, the queue repainted and refreshed, etc. It doesn’t need to be a lengthy closure–a couple of weeks during the shoulder season would suffice!
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Of course, there are also the bigger picture implications for EPCOT. One of the things we’ve been discussing for a while is EPCOT’s menu of ride reimaginings and enhancements, and why it’s unlikely that multiple major attractions would go under the knife at the same time.
One of the things we’ve discussed at length is how the 2025-2026 Walt Disney World Ride Refurbishment & Closure Calendar is like pieces of a puzzle. That in order to accommodate the lengthier ride reimaginings that are likely on the horizon, other attractions will likely close for briefer ones first.
This is because Walt Disney World is only likely to take one major attraction down for refurbishment at a time. When previously discussed the ongoing Spaceship Earth Ride Refurbishment, we speculated that it could be laying the groundwork for a lengthy reimagining, while also accomplishing duct tape repairs before other projects are knocked out in 2026. And then, it could be Spaceship Earth’s turn for a 12-24 month closure.
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It’s been our understanding for a while that Walt Disney World has refurbishment and reimagining projects lined up for EPCOT. The first of those was obviously Test Track, which reopened from its year-long reimagining earlier this summer. Test Track 3.0 is a smash success, averaging the highest wait time (75 minutes) at Walt Disney World in the last month. This increased popularity could bode well for the prospects of other ride reimaginings.
We’ve been hammering on this point since even before the Spaceship Earth refurbishment was announced. And now, just in the span of a little over a week, Walt Disney World has announced upgrades coming to Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure over the coming months (including a brief closure in November to remove 3D) and that Frozen Ever After is being enhanced with next generation Audio Animatronics of Anna, Elsa, and Kristoff.
All of this does seem to reinforce the animating idea behind that ‘pieces of a puzzle’ approach, which was similar to what was done at Magic Kingdom last summer and fall before the last year-plus Big Thunder Mountain Railroad closure.

Okay, let’s review: version of Soarin’ that celebrates America, offers less distortion and more natural beauty, hopefully no CGI, helps unite Americans instead of divide us…anything else? Oh yeah, have a nice flight!
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Your Thoughts
Are you excited about the debut of Soarin’ Across America in EPCOT at Walt Disney World or at Disneyland? Do you hope that it sticks around indefinitely? Would you prefer to see Soarin’ Over California or Soarin’ Around the World…or all three versions run in rotation? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions? 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!

How about a ride down Minute Man National Park in Massachusetts with Minutemen recreators popping out from behind trees and rocks with puffs of smoke injected into the scene?
A flight down Lake Champlain culminating at Fort Ticonderoga?
Or a flight across the Mackinaw Bridge with a “go over the railing” effect heading toward Mackinac Island and the Grand Hotel with the smell of sweet fudge getting stronger as you get closer?
Assuming 12 locations (for fun) in no particular order
1. Independence Hall/ Philadelphia
2. New York City
3. Washington DC
4. New Orleans / traveling Mississippi River
5. Boston /Fenway (America’s pastime)
6. Mt. Rushmore
7. Grand Canyon transitioning to Las Vegas
8. Yellowstone / Buffalo roam
9. Midwest farmland / amber waves of grain
10. San Francisco
11. Texas / Friday night lights football
12. Finale at Disneyland/World
I really don’t care. which film they run as long as they still have feet dangling in my face.
I’m super excited for this, but that is tempered by the fact that I was super excited for Soarin’ Around the World and that turned out to be worse than its predecessor. I hope they have learned from their mistakes!
Ugh! It was bad enough when they changed it to Soarin Around The World when it was meant to stay as Soarin Over California because, hello, the ride is IN California Adventure, and now their changing it again to some other crap? They’ll just never learn. It’s a complete waste of time if it’s not Soarin Over California. It should’ve stayed that way forever. I don’t see how anyone else could like that other crap.
Very psyched for this! If we’re talking historical East Coast representin’ here, Boston has to be part of this.
Accidentally replied to you under Laura’s comment below!
Well, I was excited for Soarin over the World because I was thinking of the Epcot version, not DCA. The theme made sense there. Also, the California version was really showing it’s age (again, at least in Epcot). The film had lots of lots of black spots that looked like bugs crawling on the screen. Btu while I liked the concept of the new film, the execution left a lot to be desired.
I hope Soarin’ Across America stays at least through our next WDW trip in May 2027. I love Soarin’ Over California and have never liked Soarin’ Around the World nearly as well.
I was going to suggest Boston as well, as well as Plymouth/Cape Cod, for both the Mayflower/Pilgrims and the Tea Party/Revolutionary War History. But, having been to Boston many times, and watched the Smithsonian Channel “Aerial America” episodes on Boston and Massachusetts, I think the problem is they’re not really “soaring” type destinations. Most importantly, since there’s no dialogue/narration in Soarin’, unless you were really familiar with the region you wouldn’t really know what you were looking at. Same goes for Philadelphia, another cradle of early America and where the nation was born on July 4th, 1776. Everyone knows the Liberty Bell but it’s housed indoors, and Independence Hall would require some explanation.
That’s probably going to be the challenge with DC, as well — unless Disney gets a great permit or they lean completely on CGI, the National Mall (Capitol, Lincoln Memorial, Washington Monument) is maybe the only way to represent the city visually, and it’s the no-fly zone of all no-fly zones.
Oops, meant this as a reply to RA above!
Okay, needed a second comment to cover National Parks. I’m obsessed and hope to hit my 40th different park within the next year or two.
Given that the first couple Soarin’ films have only represent around a dozen locations each, and this show will need to represent both nature and cities from coast to coast, and there will be no small controversy about which areas get left out!
So I don’t expect more than a few parks (if that many) to be shown, and probably not anything in non-contiguous states like Alaska/Hawaii. I believe they’ll focus on the most “iconic” parks that represent a region. For the Mountain West region, flying over Yellowstone with the Canyon/falls, Grand Prismatic Spring, Old Faithful (and the Inn) would be a no-brainer if they got permits. The Tetons and Glacier NP are also very iconic scenes even if the parks’ names are less well-known.
I think the Grand Canyon would also be at the top of the list to represent the Southwest (possibly flying from Las Vegas at night to the canyon at dawn?). Monument Valley would be easier (no permits) but it’s “been done” for Soarin’. And speaking of repeats, would they do Yosemite again? Certainly worthy and iconic!
There’s actually a pretty short list of natural features that are truly recognizable across the nation/globe. Zion has started to reach that level in the social media age, but it’s a more recent trend. Rocky Mtn NP and Smoky Mtns NP are gorgeous and highly visited but they don’t have iconic features. Mt. Ranier and Mt Hood (not at national park) are icons of the Pacific Northwest but would the wild beaches and sea stacks of Olympic NP be more emblematic of the region? On the east coast, Acadia beautifully represents the NE coast but again, no one specific defining feature — unless the flight starts at the first rays of sunrise to hit America at the top of Cadillac Mountain.
My last “sleeper” pick will be Badlands NP and the Black Hills, which would do double-duty representing Native American culture and then zooming over Mount Rushmore.
Wow, I could keep going but I’ll stop now!
I…really just want them to bring back OG Soarin’ when it isn’t March, but (shrugs) ok, I guess.
Admittedly I have done several Flyover films and other Soarin’ adjacent/flying theater attractions, and most are excellent. It’s not as though there isn’t plenty about the US that could be beautiful in a film like this.
I suppose I can understand them wanting to breathe some new life into the attraction, as at least at DCA the waits have lately been far below what they once were, and even once both theaters were reopened, both times I’ve done it they’ve opted not to load one of the three sets of seating in the theater.
Perhaps this will pave the way for a Tokyo Disneyland Country Bear Jamboree-esque rotation in the future?
If you want a city to celebrate the 250th birthday of the US, it must be Philadelphia, where the declaration of independence was written and read. This is where The country was born. Not Washington nor New York nor San Francisco nor Seattle. If Soarin across America has a flyover city, it must be over Philadelphia and independence hall. The historical buildings willl be historic but not dated.
Tom, have you experienced a Flyover theater or show? They have them in Chicago, Vegas, Mall of America (MN), and elsewhere. It’s basically an upgraded version of Soarin’ tech, and the shows are longer (also very expensive). I haven’t gone yet, but hope to soon.
I would guess that this new Soarin’ film will have similarities to Wonders of the American West (natural landscapes) and Flyover Chicago (cityscapes). Here’s a preview of the former: https://youtu.be/HCO2v8pqkfo?si=52rEgNVm6f_PSLps
Mentioned this in another reply, but Flyover locations often let you choose your experience – Vegas offers four films right now. https://www.experienceflyover.com/lasvegas/
That could easily serve as a model for a future Epcot/DCA change that lets guests choose their film.
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Oops, sorry Tom I re-read your post and had missed that you mentioned Flyover Canada. But my point about choosing your own adventure (post-2026 celebration) stands, even if it’s just choosing between “World” and “America” at WDW and “World” and “California” at DCA. It makes more sense than having a random showing (like Star Tours with its dozens/hundreds of possible unique combinations). And it would significantly increase re-rideability. There would be some logistics involved but they’re already herding folks into different theater queues based on some crowd flow process and I don’t think it would create a huge impact (maybe just having different wait times posted for different shows…and Disney could certainly calibrate the number of showings of each film to create an “equilibrium” of sorts).
So I’m a little confused (because of the Veteran’s day mention)-when we go to DL/DCA in March-my biggest must-do was to FINALLY catch the Soarin over CA. That’s still going to be there right?
As a Native Californian, I am biased and love the OG SOC, as I feel it showcased the geographic diversity “from the desert to the sea” so well. Additionally, the CA theme fit in perfectly with DCA and besides the CGI, cheesy animals, and distortion that has also worn on me over time as well, the update felt shoehorned there (worked in Epcot better with the theme).
The America theme has potential to be great and hope they get it right, not relying on CGI kitsch and those dumb transitions (I prefer the choppy cuts to the elephant sand shot) and hoping they can do a better job overall with this.
I fee like I am on a roller coaster! Ooo maybe it will be open when we visit WDW the first week of June! Oh no, will Soarin’ be closed when we go in the first week of June?! Could they open it Memorial Day weekend, leaning into patriotism?
I just hope you do not have to close the comments and people do see this for the patriotism over politics as I did. What a little surprising jolt of excitement! And I would not hate it if they kept America with Epcot and California with DCA or rotated all three at all parks.
“I’m already making a mental list of which U.S. National Parks deserve to be featured in Soarin’ Across America, and might even turn that into a post.”
Definitely! That’s really hard because so many deserving ones wouldn’t make it. I’m thinking Arches, Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Volcanoes, Yellowstone, and Bryce. Think we can safely rule out Carlsbad, Mammoth, and Wind Cave!
I have very mixed feelings on Disney and corporate expressions of Patriotism. On the one hand I think it is important and good for a place so central and unique to entertainment on a singularly massive scale that reminds Americans about common ideals that transcend politics. I was surprised how effective I found Hall of Presidents message about having a president for example.
BUT, the same company extolling the virtues of representive democracy at home is eager to make money working with countries that deny those rights to their citizens; no elections, no free expression, jailing of politocal dissidents.
Within certain ethical limits, I have no problem with a corporation doing business in undemocratic countries, but I do think it calls I to question their commitment to American values at the heart of Patriotism.
They need to sort the meal plan out first. If you only have main meals left you can no longer use it for snacks. This means if your limited 1/day snacks have run out, you have to pay for your snacks when you have plenty of main meal vouchers left. The system will not take a main meal voucher for a snack. Unlike before when you could exchange 1x main for 3x snacks. We were forced to buy a coffee/drink with a main meal and throw the meal away in order to use our vouchers for a drink. That or end up with main vouchers over at the end of our trip. Totally against a better environment.
DCA has rotated both existing films back and forth a few times now. How long does Soarin need to shut down out there to replace one film with the other?
(I ask because if the logistics don’t work out for different films in different theaters, maybe a seasonal/festival related rotation would work. I could go for a patriotic Summer festival, with regional food booths and the best chance of having EPCOT bring back add-on seminars.)
No downtime is needed for the switchover itself.
A brief closure for TLC would be great, though. It could even happen in mid-May 2026 or whenever if Walt Disney World wants to time it to reduce the impact. Doesn’t need to happen with the film change.
Do you think it will bring more lines at Soarin’?
Yes, this absolutely will.
Demand for spiked when OG Soarin’ Over California returned during Disney100. This will be a heightened version of that, probably more akin to the reimagined Test Track.
So excited about this! I’m oddly emotional about this news. Perfection.
i’ve always thought, they probably have enough footage for multiple films, they should pull a page from Star Tours and have each flight be different.
I love this idea!
I was going to say something similar… and given that there are multiple theaters, it’s theoretically possible that they could do a “choose your own adventure” for guests to decide which film they want to queue up for. The company Flyover operates theaters with the same (or better) tech and they can change the film between showings (like any movie theater).
I have been suggesting this idea – and its not just a fixed set of films. What makes Star Tours re-ridable is that its more like the wheels of a slot machine, there are a set of films that can be chosen from for each segment of the ride. There is a complex set of rules to ensure the timelines don’t get crossed.
Soaring could take the same approach – say there was a snippet for each state, with finale for DCA and Epcot, each flight could be made up of a route across the country showing approx 10 segments finishing with the appropriate ending for each park. Some of those segments could have scents.
Technology has come along way since soaring was first created, in terms of recording (drones), editing (distortion mapping) and projection (digital).
I was surprised to see that they are still using a helicopter to capture footage. Commercial drones would be cheaper and still able to carry high resolution image capture, especially as the shots are pretty wide angle which means you don’t need as much glass as telephoto work. You can much closer with a drone , for example flying under the St. Louis arch, up the national mall, down 5th Ave, across/under/along the golden gate bridge, along a nascar race, along side a spaceX rocket launch etc.
I had no idea Soarin’ around the world was CGI!
Just to be clear, it’s not entirely CGI.
It’s more like a Marvel movie, where large portions actually were filmed, but way too much was done in post–way, way more than was necessary.