Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Disneyland: Opening Date & Annual Passholder Preview Details

Disney has announced the opening date for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Disneyland just in time for the Christmas 2024 season! This shares the latest official news & details, plus Annual Passholder preview predictions, soft opening speculation, virtual queue vs. standby line, Lightning Lane status, and more! (Updated October 10, 2024.)

In case you’re unfamiliar with it, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is a reimagining of Splash Mountain. The new-look attraction uses the same ride system and is a log flume with an outdoor section, interior show scenes featuring Audio Animatronics critters, and several smaller drops culminating in one big drop. Same idea, different story and substance.

Tiana’s Bayou Adventure picks up the story of The Princess and the Frog after the final kiss, joining Tiana and Louis on a musical adventure as they prepare for their first-ever Mardi Gras performance. During this celebration, guests hear original music inspired by songs from the film. Tiana is leading the way and guests encounter old friends and make new ones along the way as well.

This opening date of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Disneyland was announced during the “Horizons: Disney Experiences Showcase” or Parks Panel presentation during the 2024 D23 Expo at the Honda Center in Anaheim, California. Disney Parks Chairman Josh D’Amaro offered a sneak peek at concept art for the future in addition and teased what was to come in a few years. He also shared more near-term news, like this.

In fact, there was so much news during the D23 Parks Panel that Josh called in friends Darren Criss and Skylar Astin for I guess what you’d call a rapid-fire montage song of smaller-scale updates before continuing on with the show. The duo splashed through a singing medley of news, including the opening date of the reimagined ride at Disneyland this holiday season.

From that, we now know that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opens on November 15, 2024 at Disneyland.

Simultaneous with the debut of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Critter Country will be renamed Bayou Country.

Bayou Country is situated on the edge of New Orleans Square with shady trees, mesmerizing music and a vast collection of enchanting surprises. Guests will discover a land filled with friendly woodland animals, from a trumpet-playing gator and an adorable bear who craves honey to a musical cast of bears, frogs, and other critters.

In addition to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Bayou Country will be the home to The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh and the Davy Crockett’s Explorer Canoes, as well as the newly reimagined Hungry Bear Barbecue Jamboree, which has one of the most scenic dining areas in all of Disneyland. And don’t forget to grab your favorite merchandise from Ray’s Berets, and Louis’ Critter Club, and sweet treats from Pooh Corner.

While some areas of this reimagined land may open earlier, Disneyland will officially welcome you to Bayou Country when Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opens on November 15, 2024. (Meaning that the renaming is effective on that date.)

Disneyland has announced that Cast Member previews for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will be held from October 22 through November 12, 2024. This is a lengthy timeframe, especially considering that Disneyland doesn’t have nearly as many Cast Members as Walt Disney World.

Accordingly, it’s our expectation that Cast Member previews for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Disneyland will not be all-day, every day during that stretch. We now know that for certain, as Disneyland has announced AP previews–and they overlap with CM previews…

Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Magic Key Passholder Preview Dates & Details

As a special thank you for being a Magic Key holder, you have a chance to experience Tiana’s Bayou Adventure before the attraction opens to the general public on November 15, 2024! Get ready to join Princess Tiana and her gator pal Louis for a thrilling journey and grand celebration in the bayou. Offer may be limited in availability.

Preview Dates for Magic Key Holders
Magic Key previews will take place at Disneyland Park on the following days and times (times are targeted virtual queue windows and are subject to change):

  • Monday, October 21, 2024, from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM
  • Tuesday, October 22, 2024, from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM
  • Wednesday, October 23, 2024, from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM
  • Friday, October 25, 2024, from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM
  • Saturday, October 26, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
  • Sunday, October 27, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
  • Tuesday, October 29, 2024, from 3:00 PM to 9:00 PM
  • Friday, November 1, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
  • Sunday, November 3, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM
  • Tuesday, November 5, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM
  • Wednesday, November 6, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM
  • Friday, November 8, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM
  • Saturday, November 9, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
  • Sunday, November 10, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM
  • Tuesday, November 12, 2024, from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM

Park Reservations & Virtual Queue Required
- A virtual queue will be in place for Magic Key previews of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. Magic Key holders will need to join the virtual queue in the Disneyland app.

  • Magic Key holders with a Disneyland Park reservation for that day will have the opportunity to join the virtual queue starting at 7:00 AM.
  • Magic Key holders who have already entered either Disneyland Park or Disney California Adventure Park that day will have the opportunity to join the virtual queue starting at noon (for previews later that day).

Here’s how to request to join the virtual queue:

  1. In the Disneyland app, find the virtual queue section of the home screen and select “Join Virtual Queue”.
  2. Select “Join Virtual Queue” for the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Magic Key Preview.
  3. If your boarding group is called, you’ll receive a notification via the Disneyland app. Then, head to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and check in at the standby queue entrance within your designated return window—and enjoy your preview!

Virtual queues are limited and subject to availability; joining a virtual queue does not guarantee participation in this offering. Boarding groups for a virtual queue are limited, subject to availability and are not guaranteed. Not all boarding groups may be called to return, based on availability of the attraction. Offer may be modified and limited in availability and is subject to restrictions and change or cancellation without notice or liability.

Limit one virtual queue entry to the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Magic Key Preview per Magic Key holder, per preview day. Magic Key holder must be present at time of virtual queue redemption. Both a park reservation and valid admission are required for park entry. Applicable Magic Key blockout dates apply. Park reservations are limited and subject to availability.

It should probably go without saying, but the Tiana’s Bayou Adventure previews are going to be very competitive. Accordingly, we would recommend making reservations for multiple park days ASAP (if you didn’t already when we gave you the heads up about this) during the preview period. Those will fill up fast, so even this is going to be competitive if you don’t move quickly.

The reservation for multiple reservations is because joining the virtual queue is also going to be very competitive. That would be true regardless, but especially since these are not full-day previews (for the most part) and due to the possibility that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will have reliability and downtime woes similar to its Florida counterpart.

Basically, think back to the early days of Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance in Winter 2020. The specifics have changed a bit, but the bottom line is that there will be a lot of Magic Keyholders shut out of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure previews every single day. Quite possibly, more people will come up empty (either due to a lack of reservations or a lack of virtual queue space–or both!) than are able to experience the attraction. Good luck!

Let’s hope that this isn’t a repeat of the AP previews for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Magic Kingdom, which were–bluntly–an unmitigated disaster. With Disneyland having way more Annual Passholders than Walt Disney World, they really need to have the ride in a semi-functional state before starting these. Here’s hoping that a lot of lessons have been learned from the Florida version of the attraction!

Finally, a very brief soft opening is still possible, but it’d basically just be November 14, 2024. This is frequently used for seasonal attractions like Haunted Mansion Holiday, restaurants, entertainment or seasonal food booths. These usually function as a release valve to pull forward some demand, so influencers, vloggers, bloggers, and diehard Magic Key APs don’t descend on the park all on the same day.

Turning to commentary, work on Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has been moving fast in the last few months, which is a good thing. That bodes well for the reimagined ride making its November 15, 2024 opening date.

On a negative note, the version of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Walt Disney World is now operating–but has been plagued by problems. The ride suffers from extensive daily downtime that often is several hours. On top of that, it has a bunch of little issues with staging, set design, and more. (See our Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Ride Review: Failure, Flawed or Fantastic?)

Even beyond the reliability and downtime woes, we’ve been hoping that Imagineers would be given more time to fix the obvious issues with the substance of the attraction. I’m not sure November 15 gives them the necessary time to do that, but maybe it does. Either way, it beats a race-against-the-clock opening to debut by fall break in October.

It’s worth noting that, due to Disneyland being more of a local’s park, opening dates typically aren’t announced as far in advance as they are for Walt Disney World. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is actually a big exception to that, as its opening date is getting more lead time at Disneyland than it did at Magic Kingdom.

This is likely due to a desire to share the news at D23 Expo while also setting a date that coincided with the start of the Christmas season. Regardless, the reason is immaterial. Rather, it’s the fact that Disneyland set the opening date of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure so early that’s noteworthy.

This means one of two things. First, that Imagineering knows ‘what went wrong’ with Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Walt Disney World and is confident the problem won’t repeat at Disneyland.

The second possibility is that Disneyland doesn’t really know when Tiana’s Bayou Adventure be ready and are just erring on the side of caution and setting a conservative opening date. One that coincides with Christmas does make sense from an operational perspective. They’ll need the capacity.

My bet–and hope–is the former. I don’t think it makes a whole lot of sense to set a date until potential reliability woes have been addressed. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure has received so much negative attention and word of mouth that it’s probably generated way more badwill than buzz at this point. (And it cost a lot of money, to boot!)

On top of all this, there’s a two-week gap between the end of the Halloween season and start of the holidays. During that time, which includes the highly popular Veterans Day holiday weekend, it might also make sense to to have the extra capacity and pull forward some demand. All a long-winded way of saying that I think Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is the rare case where a week or two of soft openings actually might happen at Disneyland.

Again, part of this is what I’m hoping happens. I’ve already “lived through” one opening of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and it was not pretty. The problems with the Walt Disney World version haven’t even been fully addressed, but that’s in large part because it’s already operational, so it’s not as if crews can work around the clock on it. More than anything, I don’t want a repeat of that at Disneyland. So I’m really hoping the problem has been preemptively addressed at Disneyland, or was an issue exclusive to Florida. But me hoping something doesn’t make it so.

In any case, we’ll keep readers posted if/when previews of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure are announced or soft openings quietly begin. You can subscribe to our free email newsletter for instant alerts.

Next up, whether Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will be part of Lightning Lane Multi-Pass or Single Pass at Disneyland. For reference, it’s part of Lightning Lane Multi-Pass (LLMP) at Magic Kingdom, which is the same status that Splash Mountain had on both coasts. However, it’s not necessarily a foregone conclusion that Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will be LLMP at Disneyland. After all, Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway wasn’t, even though it was at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

Nevertheless, it’s really hard to imagine Disneyland giving a different status to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure than LLMP. The additional arguments against Tiana’s Bayou Adventure getting Lightning Lane Single Pass status are that it’s a reimagining rather than a brand-new ride and the fact that water rides simply are not as popular at night or when the weather is colder. And California is colder from November through March.

There are almost no good arguments for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opening with Lightning Lane Single Pass status save for Disney wanting more money…so don’t rule it out! Still, we’d say there’s at least a 75% chance that it’s LLMP. Really hard to imagine the same ride opening in the same year on both coasts and having a different status. But never bet against Disney’s greed…hence the 25% possibility.

Another big question is whether Tiana’s Bayou Adventure will use a virtual queue. Ugh. We hope not.

If Tiana’s Bayou Adventure uses a virtual queue at Disneyland beyond its opening weekend, it’ll be because the ride is unreliable. Even with holiday season crowds, there’s no other reason for that move. Again, California’s cold winter weather always made Splash Mountain less popular this time of year, so crowd control isn’t a compelling reason.

Despite Disney indicating that the virtual queue for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Magic Kingdom would only be used in the initial opening period, it’s still using a VQ over a month later during the early fall off-season because of downtime. The virtual queue makes it easier to pulse demand and not have frustrated guests who wait in a physical line for hours on end while enduring breakdowns.

The bottom line is that I could see a virtual queue for Tiana’s Bayou Adventure for that first weekend and maybe through Thanksgiving regardless of whether it has problems or is operating smoothly, but it will not use one indefinitely unless it’s unreliable. And I can’t predict whether that’s the case. Again, I hope it isn’t!

Finally, our expectation is that Country Bear Barbecue Jamboree will open before November 15, 2024.

Although we’ve heard reports that bookings are “surprisingly” soft this year, October has been the busiest month at Disneyland in recent years, and that should remain true in 2024. A soft October is probably still busier than this summer has been–but we could see September catching people by surprise due to Halloween being pulled forward and ticket deals drawing to a close.

The point is that these closures have mostly occurred due to the offerings not being necessary from an operational perspective, and that’ll likely change by late September. As such, I would hope that Disneyland will have at least the ride and restaurant open by then. Hungry Bear’s reimagining is not that involved, so there’s really no reason to delay beyond then. It wouldn’t surprise me if they’re open less than a month from now, in fact.

Ultimately, we’re looking forward to experiencing Tiana’s Bayou Adventure opening on November 15, 2024 at Disneyland. The reimagined ride will be one of the top 3 most popular attractions in the park–even in colder weather since it’s new and Disneyland diehards love all things new–and help soak up crowds. Regardless of how anyone might feel about the reimagining of Splash Mountain, that’s fairly undeniable. The ride was popular before and it’ll be even more popular thanks to marketing and it being new. That always happens, so it’s crazy to expect anything different here.

That’s really the core of the apple. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is likely to be a crowd-pleasing attraction and one that’s popular because 1) anything new is popular for a period, and 2) it features a princess from a more modern movie than what it replaced. Before we even arrive at whether it ends up being a “better” or “worse” ride, those factors alone will make it a must-do attraction for many guests. It’ll likely rival Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance and Radiator Springs Racers as the most popular attractions in all of Disneyland Resort…at least until a real cold front rolls into Southern California!

Planning a Southern California vacation? For park admission deals, read Tips for Saving Money on Disneyland Tickets. Learn about on-site and off-site hotels in our Anaheim Hotel Reviews & Rankings. For where to eat, check out our Disneyland Restaurant Reviews. For unique ideas of things that’ll improve your trip, check out What to Pack for Disney. For comprehensive advice, consult our Disneyland Vacation Planning Guide. Finally, for guides beyond Disney, check out our Southern California Itineraries for day trips to Los Angeles, Laguna Beach, and many other SoCal cities!

Your Thoughts

Are you excited for the grand opening of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at Disneyland on November 15, 2024? Think it’ll have a virtual queue or standby line right at opening? What about soft openings? Expect the ride reliability problems to persist, or will Disney fix the issues found in the Florida version before opening in California? Do you agree or disagree with our advice? 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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14 Comments

  1. Nothing for Dvc? That sucks. I just missed previews at wdw and apparently I will miss *everything* at Disneyland (going election week) this year. No Christmas and no bayou! Hopefully less crowds!

  2. At this point I am going to assume a virtual queue will be used Thanksgiving week until told otherwise. How competitive do you think that will be, Tom? I don’t want to miss out and am a bit nervous.

    I have experience with the Rise of the Resistance virtual queue in Florida from the pre-pandemic days and had a pretty good success rate, but it made for a very stressful few minutes at the beginning of the day!

    1. I’m not even remotely comfortable offering any sort of prediction yet since it’ll depend so much on reliability, which is presently an unknown. Let’s circle back to this after previews start.

      Being good at virtual queues is half the battle—just make sure to do the early one, as competing with DLR locals in the afternoon is much tougher!

    2. I’ll be on East Coast time so the early one shouldn’t be quite so difficult to wake up for haha

  3. Since the word “mountain” is no longer in the name, does Tiana’s Bayou Adventure still count as one of the mountains in the Disney Mountain Range?

    1. That’s debatable, but it does to me. If it looks like a mountain, it’s a mountain IMO. Same reason Seven Dwarfs Mine Train is part of the Magic Kingdom Mountain Range.

  4. Thanks so much Tom! Really hoping that you’re right and Winnie the Pooh will reopen by mid-September. We’re taking our daughter for the first time starting on September 20 and she LOVES Pooh and the gang. I already had to break it to her that there wouldn’t be a parade during our trip, which is a real bummer.

  5. I was bummed about the opening of Christmas season being pushed back until 11/15. Now assuming that the opening of the ride is the reason? Sad there will be less time for the holidays.

  6. When we say cold, how cold are we talking? I have also heard the DL version of Splash got people significantly wetter than the Florida version, is that true?

    Basically I want to know if I should plan on making a trip back to the hotel to change into dry/warm clothes when I’m there Thanksgiving week 🙂

    1. “I have also heard the DL version of Splash got people significantly wetter than the Florida version, is that true?”

      Yes, that’s true. One of the biggest reasons for rope dropping Splash Mountain was to beat the crowd and hope you got a partially-filled log so the weight didn’t make the soak-factor worse.

      It gets cold enough and you could get soaked enough that most locals I know don’t do that or Grizzly River Run between November and March (give or take). The wait times usually reflect this, though.

  7. Looking forward to this. Naming the entire land “Bayou Country” might be overdoing it, though. (I always thought the Hundred Acre Wood was in England…) I’m hoping this one also has Single Rider.

    1. Eh, I don’t have a problem with Bayou Country. Even though it has animals, TBA centers around humans–I think it might raise eyebrows to have an attraction featuring Disney’s first (only?) black princess in a land called Critter Country. Neither name would be a perfect fit, and the Winnie the Pooh stuff definitely didn’t have an England vibe anyway–since it was originally all for the Country Bears.

    2. Yeah, the old name probably had to go. I’m just not sure Disney knows what a “Bayou” is. But I can’t think of a name that would be a perfect fit for everything in the land, so I guess it’s fine.

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