Spaceship Earth Reopens After Multi-Day Unplanned Closure

Spaceship Earth has been closed for the last several days, with the EPCOT icon not operating since before the weekend and did not open with the park on Monday, March 23, 2026. Here’s the latest on what’s happening with the aging attraction, and our take on this precipitating a lengthier ride refurbishment.

As background, Spaceship Earth temporarily closed for a routine refurbishment last year, beginning on August 25th. At that time, Walt Disney World declined to share a specific return date, but did indicate that Spaceship Earth would reopen in late 2025. The reopening date was later announced as October 25th, and then Spaceship Earth actually soft opened on October 18th, a full week ahead of schedule.

Spaceship Earth received routine work during the closure, meaning maintenance and generalized upkeep as opposed to a fully-fledged reimagining or any material changes. This should come as no surprise, as Walt Disney World repeatedly referred to the project as a “routine” refurbishment and did not state or suggest that there would be any enhancements, story changes, etc.

Fast forward a few months, and Spaceship Earth has now been closed since at least Friday, March 20, 2026.

The attraction did not operate at all on Saturday or Sunday, and remains closed as of Morning morning at 10:00 am. It wasn’t open for Early Entry or regular rope drop today, and My Disney Experience still lists Spaceship Earth as “Temporarily Closed.”

Walt Disney World has not announced a refurbishment of Spaceship Earth, meaning this is an unplanned closure and the attraction could reopen at any time. In fact, I’m going to keep this brief, because it could be back by the time I’m done writing this.

UPDATE: Spaceship Earth has reopened as of 10:45 am. Alas, no repeat of the “Infamous Iago Incident” (see below) is happening here. At least…not yet?!

Over the weekend, rumors swirled on social media about the cause of the closure. I saw a couple of (unconfirmed/uncorroborated) reports that show scenes flooded and there was extensive clean-up that would need to be done.

I haven’t done much digging to verify the veracity of these reports, but they strike me as plausible. Spaceship Earth has had a lot of issues with drainage over the last several years, so this wouldn’t be the first or second time there’s been an extended closure due to water inside the attraction. To the best of my recollection, there have been a couple of multi-day closures, but I don’t recall any that have stretched into a third day.

Regardless, if this is “only” a bit of water inside the attraction along with the requisite clean-up in the aftermath, we wouldn’t expect the closure to last too much longer. If something worse happened that gave rise to this extended downtime, such as the “Infamous Iago Incident” at that gave rise to Magic Kingdom’s Enchanted Tiki Room – Under New Management evicting said New Management (seriously, look it up if you don’t believe me!), this could end up being noteworthy…and the start of a multi-month closure for the reasons discussed below.

Just a heads up in case you’re on the ground–you might want/need to update your itineraries accordingly, checking on Spaceship Earth later today or this week. It’s going to be a busy one, so hopefully Walt Disney World is able to get the attraction back up and running soon!

The other main reason we’re publishing this (unplanned downtime is not something we normally cover) is because we’re on Spaceship Earth Reimagining Watch…and have been since ~2021.

The attraction has been basically held together with duct tape and a prayer for several years now, and at some point, something is going to be the knockout punch that necessitates a lengthy refurbishment. This could very well end up being it. Fingers crossed that this is a repeat of the aforementioned Infamous Iago Incident and yields a new and improved Spaceship Earth!

What follows is a recap of the most recent refurbishment, cancelled reimagining, and we will still expect a lengthier closure that pulls from the playbook of Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster’s ongoing reimagining. If you’re a regular reader, you’ve probably heard this all before…

Spaceship Earth Refurbishment & Reimagining Background

As for the last refurbishment, the show scenes saw no material changes, the interactive features and screens on the ride vehicles appear unchanged, and there aren’t any effects that were fixed or otherwise changed.

In other words, there are no changes to Audio Animatronics or the substance of the attraction, and certainly no “Story Light” or new show scenes. This was exactly as expected, both due to the tight timeframe and its routine nature, which was Disneyspeak for saying it won’t encompass major substantive changes.

One slight surprise is that Spaceship Earth’s refurbishment did not entail the restoration of broken effects, an improved descent, upgraded cameras, or show scene lighting. There were rumors swirling that Disney would swap out the screens on the ride vehicles for OLED, which had previously occurred with a test vehicle. It doesn’t sound like that happened, either.

With that said, we do know that something happened during the refurbishment beyond just basic TLC because Walt Disney World filed construction permits.

One of those was assigned to Engineering Design Services, a firm that “specializes in the technical backbone of themed attractions.” That suggests Spaceship Earth received infrastructure work on its underlying ride system.

Even though it’s disappointing that there were seemingly no visible improvements or enhancements to Spaceship Earth, the attraction badly needed the invisible kind of maintenance, too. So that’s good news!

Our hope is that the fully-fledged Spaceship Earth ride reimagining is still on the horizon. Last fall’s 2-month refurbishment doesn’t close the door on a reimagining in the medium-term. If anything, it increases the odds.

While we have no insider information, our suspicion (and hope) is that this is similar to the Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster refurbishments over the last couple of the years. Those occurred in two phases and addressed the underlying ride system without reimagining the roller coaster.

That laid the groundwork for the switch from ‘Starring Aerosmith’ to ‘Starring the Muppets’ to occur in a more condensed timeframe; that project can now focus on the thematic window-dressing as opposed to the underlying infrastructure. That’s precisely why there’s a chance that Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring the Muppets will reopen by Memorial Day 2026.

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 last summer.

Test Track 3.0 is a smash success, averaging the highest wait time at Walt Disney World since it returned. The increased popularity of Test Track could bode well for the prospects of other ride reimaginings, as it proves that investing in attractions–even ones devoid of IP–is “worth it.”

We’ve been hammering on this point since even before the Spaceship Earth refurbishment was announced. Following that, Walt Disney World completed upgrades to both Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Frozen Ever After.

That reinforces the animating idea behind that ‘pieces of a puzzle’ approach, which was similar to what was done at Magic Kingdom before the year-plus Big Thunder Mountain Railroad closure.

Our hope is that Walt Disney World is taking a phased approach to an overhaul of Spaceship Earth as was done with Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster. Start by accomplishing infrastructure work during the off-season, then bring the ride back online during peak season dates, knock out other quick-hit projects that won’t take as long, and then close Spaceship Earth for the year-plus reimagining sometime in 2026.

It’s probably wishful thinking, but we sincerely hope that’s what’s happening with Spaceship Earth. That Walt Disney World recognizes that Spaceship Earth badly needs more than just routine maintenance, and did last fall’s refurbishment to lay the groundwork for a fully-fledged reimagining.

Alternatively, the plan might be to accomplish a ‘duct tape’ refurbishment of Spaceship Earth to keep it coasting through 2026 and 2027, during which time Journey into Imagination finally gets the year-plus ride reimagining treatment. Now that is the best-case scenario. (Worst case: the plan was to do JII first, but Spaceship Earth ends up needing more urgent work as a result of this unplanned closure, derailing yet another Imagination overhaul.)

As you might recall, Spaceship Earth’s “Story Light” reimagining was announced at the 2019 D23 Expo after over a year of rumors. Before that closure could happen, all of Walt Disney World closed due to COVID and remained closed until mid-July. When EPCOT reopened, Spaceship Earth returned with it.

Along with that, Walt Disney World quietly removed concept art and scenes from the Epcot Experience overview video and released this statement: “As with most businesses during this period, we are further evaluating long-term project plans. The decision was made to postpone development of the Mary Poppins-inspired attraction and Spaceship Earth at this time.”

That was the last official update on the Spaceship Earth reimagining. Obviously, a lot has changed in the last ~6 years.

The concept for the eventual reimagining of Spaceship Earth will surely ‘evolve’ from what was previously announced. It’s been over 6 years since the Spaceship Earth reimagining concept was developed, and a lot has changed since then–from Disney’s CEO and Parks Chair to budgets to technology.

While there could be elements of the Spaceship Earth: Our Shared Story project that come to fruition, it’s also likely that there are major changes to what’s planned. About the only thing we can be certain of is that the descent will be overhauled.

Hopefully, Spaceship Earth’s descent actually has show scenes again, rather than resting on the crutch of screen-based interactivity. I’d be fine if Disney didn’t even touch the first three-quarters of the ride aside from swapping out the narration, screens, and maybe updating the woolly mammoth hunt scene. It’s really just the ending that needs help…and a lot of it.

Ultimately, we’re still left wondering when the seemingly inevitable Spaceship Earth reimagining project will happen. As noted, Test Track is proving to be a smash success and the two World Showcase headliners have now gotten their TLC. There’s nothing else on deck for EPCOT between mid-2026 and 2028, but the park could use a couple of singles & doubles.

The reimagining of Spaceship Earth could then be part of a second phase of the EPCOT overhaul, joining Journey into Imagination and [insert whatever else is on your personal wishlist here]. Maybe we’ll get an announcement at the 2026 D23 Expo…or perhaps this flooding (or whatever it actually is) will be the knockout punch and the timeline on a potential Spaceship Earth project will be accelerated. Either way, we’ll keep you posted.

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Your Thoughts

Thoughts on the unplanned Spaceship Earth closure? Has this impacted your trip? Any on-the-ground intel? Hoping this leads to a longer refurbishment? Do you agree or disagree with our thoughts here? 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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24 Comments

  1. The worst part about it being closed this past weekend is that the beacons of light were off Sunday night. Of course it was the night I was trying to get a picture.

  2. We were there on Sunday when it closed. Test track was down pretty often also, as was ratatouille and soarin’ only had half of the theaters operating. It was a spring break crowd meltdown and one of the worst park days we’ve ever had for attractions. The beautiful weather and flower and garden sort of made for it, but lines for food stands were insane.

  3. We had a tough day at EPCOT just last Wednesday, 3/18. We were in town to visit grandparents and only did the one park day, from early entry until past closing. Starship Earth was down several times. My guess is they continued to have trouble and that led to the multi day closure. Test Track and Frozen were down at the start of the day and it felt like all attractions were playing catch up from the LL back up the rest of the day.

    On the upside, thanks to your advice Tom, we rode guardians for the first time that morning and my teens got a second ride in just before closing. It redeemed the day. Thank you for all you (three) do!

  4. I forget the exact day, but I think on Friday SSE was closed for much of the day before reopening briefly. (I was lucky with the timing and walked on, getting one ride in this trip, which is only 20% of my usual quota!).

  5. From my perspective, the recent refurbishment was a success. The ride system seems less jerky and noisy, and several effects appear to have been updated/fixed (i.e. – rocking boat, outdoor sign, clearer mammoth screen, etc.) You have to look closely, but I think there were a number of positive changes in that refurbishment.

  6. Are the lack of corporate sponsors affecting Disney’s ability to refurbish rides?

    I’m not sure how the Test Track refurbishment was a smash success? Add some twinkling lights and keep some of the same props?

    1. Ability? Absolutely not. They have plenty of money for refurbishments. The corporate sponsor model is not necessary for refurbs.

      Appetite is a totally different story. Test Track was a smash success because it has (objectively) increased interest in the attraction. I think the outcome is generally an upgrade, too. Not a colossal one, but definitely a nice plussing.

    2. I obviously don’t know what “Sponsored by” gets for the corporation or Disney. What drove my question was reading about the Wonders of Life building from years ago. Met Life was the sponsor and supposedly gave Disney a boat load of money. Met Life stopped being a sponsor and the building has been closed for years now. Is there a correlation? I don’t know.

  7. It certainly needs an update. The last couple of years the smell of the diesel in the attraction has been just awful and prevents me from riding it. Whatever they do, hopefully they will eliminate this.

  8. Post has been updated, but in case you missed that, Spaceship Earth reopened at approximately 10:45 am. Currently a 30 minute posted wait. Good luck if you’re visiting this week!

  9. This is probably my favorite Disney omnimover, so I hope any future changes are done well.

    BTw, looks like you are over in France for the DAW relaunch. Have a great time!

    1. “BTw, looks like you are over in France for the DAW relaunch. Have a great time!”

      Thanks! Probably should do a separate post seeing if there’s any coverage people want to see. In the city now, but have 3 separate hotel stays at DLP, so we’ll be making the rounds while there!

    2. You have a lot of reviews for hotels at/near the US resorts and Tokyo. Seeing that for Paris will be nice and it sounds like it’s in the works. (We’ve been to DLP three times, but have stayed in Serris.) I’d certainly like to see reviews of the “new stuff” in DAW – the rides, lake show, general park upgrades. I’m curious about the new nighttime show inthe castle park as well. You’ve seen pretty much every nighttime spectacular Disney has in the world and I wonder where you would rank this one.

  10. I know you and others keep hoping for a reimagining, but that would make me extremely nervous! We love it the way it is (along with Judy’s narration!) and would be so afraid of an IP injection. I’m not against adding scenes to the descent and getting rid of the current interactive screen portion which is pretty dumb, but I’d hope the theme and the rest of it would be left alone! Quite frankly, I don’t trust Disney not to ruin it. Here’s hoping it’s open when we’re there in a little over a month.

    1. Future potential narrators is always a fun/hot topic. If we’re going to recycle a narrator, my personal preference would be Jeremy Irons (while he’s still alive). I wouldn’t be averse to Judy Dench again, though.

      My guess is it’ll be someone different. A new narrator is an easy way to ‘signal’ that the ride has been redone, and presumably, show scene changes will necessitate it.

  11. Sad to hear this, but very hopeful they’re going to restore it quickly. I’m thinking they have to pull resources from other projects, assess the situation down to the nut-and-screw level, order parts, make repairs, re-paint and re-costume if there’s damage, test, and only then re-open. My biggest fear, for a future lengthy rehab, would be if Disney were to re-theme with more IP. I like the grandeur of this edutainment offering in its entirety. I am disappointed that they didn’t have Pee-Wee Herman do the narration. Or Gilbert Godfrey. JUST KIDDING! 🙂

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