When & Why Disney World Will Likely Add New Summer to Late 2026 Discounts

Walt Disney World recently released a new wave of special offers, which for the most part cover travel dates from July through October 2026, and some all the way until Christmas. There’s a lot of excitement about these deals, but many questions about missing deals on tickets, hotels, and vacation packages for the general public, Disney+ subscribers, Visa cardholders, etc.

This post aims to allay fears that Walt Disney World is “done” discounting for Summer & Fall 2026, as we offer our best predictions about which special offers are still going to be released based on a mixture of long-term past precedent, speculation, and recent trends.

Before we dig into the predictions, let’s start with what’s already available–because there are a lot of good options for the general public, Annual Passholders, Floridians, and more. For a rundown of what’s not new and still available for bookings pre-summer, see All Current Walt Disney World Discounts for 2026.

As far as big recent releases go, the marquee special offer right now is the popular 2026 Free Dining deal. This is back for select dates from June through December 2026, meaning it runs longer than most other special offers that are currently available.

We strongly encourage doing the math and comparison shopping, before being lured by the siren song of free food. Remember, there’s no such thing as a free lunch! (See Free Dining Deal for Summer to Christmas 2026 Expands to Everyone for more info & analysis.)

The other big “new” general public special offer is the Stay Longer & Save More Room-Only Deal. Stays of 5+ nights at Walt Disney World resort hotels can save up to 30% from July through October 2026. Shorter stays are available with lesser savings, too. (See Stay Longer & Save More: 30% Off Disney World Resorts in Summer & Fall 2026 for more.)

This is actually the ‘third wave’ of the Stay Longer & Save More special offer for 2026, which was first released in January and covered all of the current dates…and more! It was then scaled back for the ‘second wave’ and now mostly restored.

Suffice to say, if it looks familiar but slightly worse than before, that’s why. It’s still a very good discount by historical standards, and there’s not really much sense in comparing it to what was released (and removed) in winter. If you’re booking now, this is a good option–and better for many guests than Free Dining due to being stackable.

A similar, but better, room only discount is also available for Florida Residents and Annual Passholders. As always, the best deals are reserved for Floridians (up to 35% off) and APs (up to 40% off), with the same July to October window above, and with its own sliding scale on tiers. (See Up to 40% Off Disney World FL & AP Resort Room Deals for Summer to Fall 2026 for more.)

Then there’s the return of the 4-Day, 4-Park Magic Ticket, which is back for a fourth consecutive year and better than last year. This starts at $99/day for visits from May through October 2026. It comes with caveats, but for guests who fit squarely within the parameters of this ticket, it’s an incredible deal.

See Walt Disney World’s Biggest Ticket Deal for Everyone is Back & Better, Including Magic Kingdom in 2026 for full details, as well as advice on hacking this deal, pros & cons, etc. Even if it’s not a perfect match for you, it might be workable with a bit of strategy. You can save $150 or more per ticket, so it’s definitely figuring out the ins and outs of this deal. Most notably, you can combine this with any of the room-only discounts above.

Speaking of stacking, you can also pair any of the room-only discounts and the ticket deals with Kids Eat FREE All Year in 2026 at Walt Disney World special offer. With this, kids ages 3 to 9 get the DDP for free as part of their package for the other members of their party (ages 10 and up at the time of travel). Kids get whatever the adults buy.

This sweetens the deal on every special offer for 2026 for young families, making the DDP pretty much a no-brainer for parents with kids ages 3-9. It’s a fantastic option for doing character meals and other non-Signature table service restaurants (we recommend the standard tier over the quick-service level).

Kids Eat Free is also what tips the scales in favor of a room-only discount for young families who can advantage of it. The 4-Park Magic Ticket or future admission deals are what could tip the scales in favor of a room-only discount for everyone else. Because, as a reminder, Free Dining requires the purchase of a non-discounted package that includes Park Hopper tickets.

Next Wide Discount Release

Let’s start with the sure thing, as we know with complete certainty that more special offers will be released for October 4 and beyond 2026 travel dates. That will be the next wide release, following the ones in early January and mid-March.

When it comes to the 4 annual wide special offer releases, what’s past is prologue. That expression holds true with Walt Disney World discounts, which play out in predictable patterns every year. There’s usually one in early January, then spring, then summer, and finally, fall.

Lately, Walt Disney World has been trying to incentivize planners to book early and save more. That has typically meant that discounts are often released earlier–and end earlier–than in the past. And often, discounts that have ended earlier are subsequently brought back, but that mostly applies to ones released in fall or winter.

The next wave of special offers is typically the trickiest, both in terms of release and travel dates.

Last year, 5 deals dropped on July 10th. These offers were mostly valid for stays most Sunday to Thursday nights from October 12 to November 20, 2025; and most nights from November 23 to December 25, 2025.

The highlight was a general public room-only up to 20% off discount that included a gift card per stay (not day/night). These also included a typical Annual Passholder room-only discount, as well as two atypical set rates (e.g. $299 Per Night for The Lion King Family Suites at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort and $429 Per Night for Savanna View Rooms at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge) for Florida and Georgia residents (only valid at a subset of resorts and for a subset of dates).

The year before that, 3 discounts were released on June 27th.

These were much more straightforward and typical, with room-only discounts of up to 30% off for the general public, 40% for APs, and 35% off for Floridians. Eligible travel dates were most nights October 6th to December 25th. There was a bit of tiering, early booking benefit, and a few days blocked out around Thanksgiving, but nothing too out of the ordinary.

It was a very similar story the previous year, with discounts releasing on June 15th. Much of the same as described above, albeit for travel dates from October 2nd through December 25th and with a 35% off Disney+ subscriber deal that more or less matched the Florida resident rate.

From this, you could surmise that the established trajectory is worse discounts for October through December that are released later. That is more or less the trend.

However, there are other variables at play. Last year, just about everything was released later than normal during this timeframe, which we attributed to Starlight night parade’s delay. Disney has a cadence to announcements, and that disruption had a cascading effect.

Not only that, but for a couple of previous years, there were actually a limited number of holiday discounts released earlier. The prime example last year was the spring AP discount including an ‘early booking’ incentive for dates during the holiday season. There were instances for the general public prior to that. Once Disney hits certain occupancy targets, there’s not as much urgency to release the next wave of special offers.

We already know there’s more pressure this year than there was last year, because Disney suggested as much on the last earnings call. Disney’s CFO indicated that their forecast revealed a looming slowdown, and they warned of international visitation “headwinds” in the forward guidance.

As a result of this, Walt Disney World has pivoted its marketing and sales efforts to focus on more of a domestic audience in order to keep attendance and occupancy rates high. At the same time, they indicated that forward bookings in the second half of the fiscal year (ending in September) were up year over year.

For the longest time, this hadn’t been evident in Orlando International Airport traffic data, which continued to show strong growth. Last year, international passengers increased by 8.2%, which extended a streak of 58 months (and counting) of international traffic gains.

That will likely soon come to an end, if it already hasn’t, as recently-released January data showed only a 0.3% gain. It’s only a matter of time before that number turns negative, suggesting a lag in the international slowdown due to bookings being locked in far in advance.

That was also before the Iran war drove up oil prices. If that’s prolonged and translates to prolonged pain at the pump, it’ll have an adverse impact on Walt Disney World. The last time gas prices spiked, there was a noticeable slowdown at Walt Disney World.

If the nationwide average is over $4 per gallon for an extended stretch, that will cause people to rethink Disney trips, trade down on summer travel, and stay closer to home. Already, the cost of airfare is up 15-20% in the last month, and is forecast to continue increasing. I don’t want to fixate on this too much as it’s a subject we recently covered at length in Why the Iran War Could Cut Crowds at Walt Disney World & Negatively Impact Your 2026 Travel Plans.

Suffice to say, these two factors alone–the international slowdown and Iran war–could force Walt Disney World to open the spigot on last-minute deep discounts. Especially the conflict in the Middle East, which will not have been accounted for when Disney previously projected attendance and occupancy when releasing the last wave of discounts.

In fact, Walt Disney World might want to get ahead of any future uncertainty by locking in reservations ASAP. That feels like what we just witnessed with the July through October discounts being released 2-3 weeks earlier than in the past few years.

Accordingly, our prediction is that the next wave of discounts for early October through December 25, 2026 is released in mid-to-late June. The earliest release date is probably June 9, 2026; the latest is likely July 7, 2026. The ‘sweet spot’ range is June 16-23, 2026. I would bet on the earlier end of that range in light of the above.

We would largely expect a return to the normal types of room-only discounts for the general public, APs and Florida residents, along with the possibility of one big marquee deal (e.g. Buy 4, Get 2 Free). Since that release will cover the holiday season, don’t expect anything too good unless the war worsens or the domestic economy deteriorates.

More Potential Summer & Fall Deals

Walt Disney World has already released a “full” lineup of discounts all the way through October 2026. In the more distant past, that would mean no more discounts being released between now and mid-June 2026, and nothing else for summer or fall travel dates.

In the last couple of years, Walt Disney World has switched things up and staggered smaller releases between the 4 big waves of special offers. Last summer, we saw aggressive last-minute special offers that far surpassed the earlier releases, and we’re expecting a repeat of that this year.

Just be advised that availability is likely to be limited, and not all travel dates will be covered. We highly recommend booking a backup deal now, so you don’t get left empty handed.

Here’s a rundown of what was released for last summer, and when:

  • 50% Off on Kids Tickets: 3-day or longer kids (ages 3-9) standard ticket for 50% off. This deal was available for visits beginning May 27 through September 20, 2025. This special offer was announced March 25th.
  • Deep Disney+ Room Deal: Disney+ subscribers could enjoy summer savings with great rates on rooms at select Walt Disney World Resort Collection hotels, starting from $99 per night. This offer was valid on 2-night stays or longer, most nights from June 29 to July 31, 2025. This special offer was released April 10th.
  • Florida Resident Ticket Deal: Florida Residents could purchase a 4-Day Summer Magic Ticket for just $60 per day, plus tax (total: $240 plus tax). Specially priced 2-day and 3-day tickets will also be available. The Summer Magic Ticket was valid for use from May 18, 2025 through September 27, 2025 (no blockout dates), with an advance park reservation. Announced May 2nd, and available for purchase starting May 6th.
  • Priceline “Happiest Sale on Earth” Deal: Priceline had discounts for travel dates from August 1 through October 11, 2025. Some of these were unremarkable, some were spectacular. Definitely a YMMV deal. This was available July 8-11, coinciding with Amazon Prime Day.

Forecasting future last minute deals is probably a fool’s errand because there’s not great precedent.

What I will predict is the return of a Florida resident ticket deal, because that one happens every year. It’s a no-brainer. I’d go a step further and speculate that it’ll encompass more dates than last year since there’s now a gap left by the 4-Park Magic Ticket starting so much later. That’s far from a sure thing, though. (The safer bet would be it likewise beginning after Memorial Day.)

At the risk of disappointing some of you, I would bet against the 50% off kids’ ticket deal. The context here is that was offered last year as an indirect ‘response’ to the WSJ’s piece on Disney being worried about high prices, and was part of the push to lure back middle class families.

That deal was announced alongside Cool Kid Summer, as well as last year’s 3-Park Ticket Deal. My gut is that if this were returning, it would’ve been announced in the latest release. I’d hazard a guess that Disney views the aforementioned Kids Eat Free promo as a sufficient alternative.

On a positive note, I would bet on another targeted deep discount for…someone. Maybe Disney+ subscribers like last year, or perhaps Disney Visa Cardholders as we saw back in December. Actually, I’d go a step further and predict something for both affinity groups. I don’t know what, but another ticket deal might be savvy to backfill shoulder season.

It also wouldn’t be a huge surprise to see whatever is released to be part of the “Disney Celebrates America” marketing campaign, assuming there is one. Cool Kids’ Summer has already been announced, but we’re still expecting something more about the United States Semiquincentennial.

It doesn’t seem like Walt Disney World has been caught quite as flat-footed by summer being slow in 2026 (remember, the back half of the fiscal year that was discussed on the last earnings call is basically June through September), so I wouldn’t be surprised if whatever’s released isn’t as good as last year.

The real wildcard is once again the Iran war. People like to project their political and economic opinions on the parks’ performance, but the one thing that’s actually and consistently been a difference-maker is the price of gas.

I was actually surprised by the pushback to this in our recent article on the conflict in the Middle East and impact on Walt Disney World crowds. Multiple readers argued that it would “only” add $100 or so to the cost of a trip, which isn’t outcome-determinative for most families.

But keep in mind that trip costs do not exist in a vacuum, and when gas goes up, that cuts into household budgets and exacerbates inflation (it won’t just be higher prices at the pump–it’ll be across the board since so much is reliant upon oil). Consumers will have less disposable income, and that is the bigger factor when it comes to travel plans.

If gas is still expensive in another month, I would fully expect Disney to start projecting fewer driving distance visitors for summer (airfare is largely booked) and respond accordingly with discounts. Whether that’ll come via another wide release, targeted deals, or offloading inventory onto third party sites is anyone’s guess.

I don’t purport to have any particular expertise in geopolitics, so I’ll refrain from making forecasts into the outcome of the war. However, I have a high degree of confidence that, if the conflict does drag on, it will have an impact on Walt Disney World crowds and special offers. As always, we’ll be keeping an eye out and will notify subscribers of our free email newsletter when any Walt Disney World discounts are released or rumored!

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?

Expect to see more last-minute Walt Disney World deals for Summer 2026? Is more aggressive discounting likely due to the international slowdown, Iran war, or other factors? What about special offers for Fall 2026 and beyond? Agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions about these deals that 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!

You might also like...

16 Comments

  1. Just read this post (mostly) and maybe I missed it but you mention that to get the free dining you must get a room and ticket package. I was able to call them and you can get the free dining with just a room. I was able to stack the free dining (2 kids) with the Florida resident summer room package. When doing it online you are not able to book without adding tickets but you can if you call and book!! We plan to add the tickets once (if) the summer magic ticket drops. Also it works if you are annual pass holders as well.

    1. I assume you’re talking about Kids Eat Free? If so, yes–that is absolutely stackable with the room-only discount and (separate) ticket deals. I mention that in the post, but then refer to Free Dining (a different deal) as not being stackable immediately thereafter.

  2. This was very insightful; unfortunately not surprised at the pushback your comments about gas prices got, Tom! Something most people don’t realize about the increase in the price of oil is that *almost everything in America* relies on gas-powered transportation to move it or uses oil in its production in some way!

    It’s not just increasing the direct cost-per-refill for consumer gas-powered vehicles when oil prices increase, but instead increases the cost of almost everything we buy (consumer goods, groceries, flights) along with it. With how oil-dependent our (and the world’s) economy is, any worldwide spikes in oil prices like the ones we’re seeing will be very much felt in almost all aspects.

    On a somewhat-related note, these kinds of ‘economic events’ have impacted Disney’s expansion plans in the past (see: the Asian resort from the 70’s oil crisis, and the Legendary Years section of Pop after 9/11) and, though there are no new resorts or resort expansions announced for WDW after the Lakeshore Lodge, I’d be very surprised if any new hotels/DVC resorts are announced or started anytime soon.

    …Then again, maybe this time might be different and there might be continued demand/occupancy during the economic future! Who knows.

  3. I haven’t been able to apply anything yet to a stay at the Cabins in the week leading up to Christmas, including a bounceback. Here’s to hoping!

  4. Where does bounce back offers show up on this list? Is bounce back the best of any deal that you’ve listed in this article? Or are there some that you’ve listed in this article that are better?

    1. Dear TT,
      You are only given the chance to use bounce back during your Disney vacation and 7 days from the end of that same vacation. After that your opportunity is over.
      Bounceback offers are usually very good. Just a bit lower than Annual Pass (which tend to be the best). But always more than the general public offers.
      The big thing about bb is that you can book several different stays way out into the future. Then sit back and wait to see if something better comes along.
      *Little side note, use a Disney gift card then the money you lay out for each stay you book isn’t accumulating interest. Of course if you pay it off right away you have no worries. If something better comes along and you change to that, the money you applied when you booked the bb can be applied to the new booking. Naturally if you cancel all together you get a refund.
      Another nice thing about bb is later on you can make some changes like extend your stay or change the resort if they have the availability.
      BB is a win win.

  5. Disney always comes out with discounts so yes there’ll be discounts. How good they are depends on the numbers they are seeing. In that way, the Iran war and every other factor plays a role.
    I work with a group that helps people on welfare get into jobs and turn their lives around.
    So before we answer your question whether the Iran war or other factors will result in more aggressive
    discounting we have to think about what a Disney vacation costs.
    I don’t count someone staying at a relative’s house in Florida, and doing one or two days at WDW a Disney family vacation.
    Looking for the least expensive possible WDW trip I began with one of the lowest priced weeks.
    I’m thinking a family of four, so not the Costanzas’.
    This is the Barones. Ray, Debra and the twins.
    They’re driving down from my neck of the woods and staying at the Fort Wilderness campsites. They may be pitching a tent or sleeping in their car. They slept in it on the way down.
    They’re arriving Mon, August 24th (Sundays too expensive) and they’ll utilize the free water Park day. They have the 4 parks 4 days ticket, which they’ll use Tuesday thru Friday. They leave Saturday.
    Four 4 day tix $1,699.76, 1 tent campsite $368.30 total $2,068.06.
    Debra being the smart one has used Disney Gift cards from Target Saving $103. She learned this from reading DTB! (YAY!)
    She’s also brought along the blue snack bag, which she’ll use later in her second sitcom marriage, thus saving on snacks at the Park.
    Driving down in a 2003 Toyota Corolla that still gets over 30+ mpg despite being 23 years old and never needing anything more than a muffler and a starter which just went this week. Yeah you read that right. That’s why I only buy Toyota. Anyway, gas cost $150, which is up $38 because the Iran war has shot gas up $1 as of today.
    Despite the fact they’re going in August, when I predict gas will be way cheaper, I’m using today’s gas prices to show how the high price of gas affects the cheapest trip to WDW.
    Adding $300 round trip (stupid Iran war costing Ray $76) to the Barone’s total makes the cheapest Disney trip possible $2,265.06.
    Oh yeah, food…well remember that blue snack bag? It also has 2 loaves of bread and a couple of jars of PB and J.
    BTW Ray having started out as a sports writer in the 90’s nowadays has a sports and TRAVEL blog (Roaming with Ray). The entire trip is written off on his schedule C.
    Pretty, pretty good as Ray’s neighbor Larry likes to say.
    Here’s the point.
    30 % of the population participates in one of our society’s safety nets. In 2025 40% of the population paid no taxes.
    It’s safe to say that 40% of the country can’t even think about a Disney family vacation. Every client I’ve worked with says one day they’d like to go to Disney. Without looking into it they know they can’t afford it.
    But that other 60%, we find a way. We read the blogs, search the internet and find ways that work for us.
    Disney will offer discounts because when people think they got a deal they pull the trigger.
    Are you quicker to buy something marked $400 for $400 or that same item marked $500 but now for a limited time of $399?
    I know Ray, really, and he’s a bargain hunter.
    I don’t think Disney has to be more aggressive at all but they do have to offer discounts.
    Iran war and other factors be damned.
    I’m not worried, I have Tom!
    I for one am waiting on his every blog.

  6. Very happy we bought our tickets for June in November for $250 RT with direct flights between LAX and MCO. We have visited WDW every year using our DCV points for the past 6 years. We have been fortunate to find airfare deals the past two years but before that we never paid more than $400 RT and I think that is our cutoff. If that is the case, we will either bank our points or look to stay local at one point, using our DVC points randomly at DGC when we can.

  7. Any thoughts on that discounted annual pass that Disney was doing a survey on with guests earlier this year? I think it was like a $600 ticket or discount?

  8. Pretty satisfied to be attending in July and August with my 7 year old, paying less than $1k total on round trip airfares for both of us, using our annual passes for park access and 40% off Pop and POFQ (plus a handful of nights at OKW on MMB BOGO points), and of course the kids free DDP. Helps make it more affordable to actually *use* our Sorcerer Passes (hey, more discounted stuff!) as out of state visitors.

  9. A prolonged WTI price over 90 has sweeping effects on our economy. People forget how intertwined oil prices are in basically everything they purchase (all intermodal transportation are heavily weighted by oil prices). I agree with your take, I think we see a significant slowdown and some pretty healthy discounts for late in the year. A new CEO will want to have as many positive attendance/booking numbers as possible in the first couple of quarterly prints. Will be interesting. Glad we took our Paris trip a few weeks ago! Thanks as always, Tom!

  10. I am about to buy my tickets for this summer from MWR where I’d get the 20% discount. I was waiting to see if the 50% off kids deal would return since that was the only offer that would make a difference for me. Do you foresee any offer coming for summer that would mean a better than 20% discount on regular park tickets or should I just buy now?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *