Magic Kingdom One Day Itinerary [2024]

Welcome to our Magic Kingdom One Day Itinerary post. In this post we walk through a day at Magic Kingdom, from waking up early to make your Lightning Lane reservations (if you’re going that route), to arriving at the park, rope drop, meals, fun things that aren’t rides, parades and cavalcades, the nighttime show, some late night strategy, and everything in between! Let’s get to planning the most Magical day possible!

Related Posts

This is one of our core pieces of Magic Kingdom content. Our Magic Kingdom Lightning Lane Strategy discusses how to use Lightning Lanes to “skip the lines” at Magic Kingdom. Our Magic Kingdom Early Entry and Rope Drop Strategy post focuses on how to start your day at the most magical place on earth. And our Magic Kingdom Rides and Entertainment Guide discusses what you can expect from the different rides we’ll mention in this post.

TRON Lightcycle Run Update

As of September 9, TRON no longer uses a virtual queue—it has switched to a traditional standby queue. This means you no longer have to worry about joining the TRON virtual queue, but you do have to figure out when to fit it into your day, including whether or not it makes sense to visit it at rope drop.

When this change was made, TRON did not immediately join Early Entry. We expect that to change in the near future. Until TRON joins Early Entry, we’ve got separate post where we address how this change impacts Magic Kingdom touring.

The simplest way to handle this, and the approach taken by the sample itinerary in this post, is just to buy the Lightning Lane Single Pass for TRON.

Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Update

Tiana’s Bayou Adventure is now open. As of its debut, it has no standby line. It uses a virtual queue (with 7AM and 1PM drops) and has a Lightning Lane that is a part of Multi Pass. Unsurprisingly, it continues to be one of the most popular Lightning Lanes in the park.

As the virtual queue also runs out almost instantly, there’s no “right” answer about whether you should pick Tiana’s with your initial Tier 1 Multi Pass pick or not. On balance, I think if you must ride it, you want to grab it on Multi Pass ASAP.

If you’re at all flexible, though, I’d try for the virtual queue and then keep an eye on its Multi Pass availability throughout the day—it does usually have some limited availability pop up as the day goes on.

Finally, keep in mind that if you get into the virtual queue, you can only ride if you boarding group gets called. If you book a Lightning Lane, the ride might break down during your window, but you’d be given a “select Experiences pass” allowing you to return later. This is a subtle but important decision between the two options. A virtual queue user must hope the ride has good enough operations—not slowed by weather or mechanical issues—to get to their boarding group. The Lightning Lane user just needs the ride to be open during their Lightning Lane window or, if not, any time later in the day.

We’re hoping Tiana’s Bayou Adventure moves to a regular standby queue soon (Disney has implied this would happen sooner rather than later), but until then we’re going to confine our discussion of the ride to this section. Once it has a standby queue, we’ll update both our Rope Drop and Lightning Lane strategies, and this post in turn.

 

About This Post and Our Recommendations

Putting together a single, perfect, do-everything day at Magic Kingdom is…probably impossible. It’s at least very challenging. There’s too much in the park to easily do in a single day. It’s probably more of a one-and-a-half or two-day park. That said, this is a one day itinerary post, and there are a few approaches you can take to have one very good nearly perfect day at Magic Kingdom.

 

You can open your wallet to buy Multi Pass and maybe a Single Pass Lightning Lane (or two). Purchasing these paid extras keeps the park closer to a one-and-a-half-day park, and if crowds are low to moderate, you might even feel like you’ve seen it all in a single day.

 

You can skip Lightning Lanes and take it easy, accepting that you won’t do everything, setting a list of a dozen or so “must-dos” and building a strategy around that. Or you could still go go go all day long to try and have a very good, or at least exhausting, day.

 

This post keeps these approaches in mind throughout, and you’ll hopefully get a sense of how your approach—whatever it is—can work at Magic Kingdom.

Main Street in the morning

In the past we gave a single example day at the backbone of our itinerary post. With the variety of options you’ll have—Early Entry or not, Multi Pass or not, Lightning Lane Single Pass(es) or not—that’s a little unfeasible, particularly at Magic Kingdom.

 

Instead, we’ll give some examples of how days might look in different scenarios, but mostly this post is about acclimating you with the more general aspects of touring Magic Kingdom (of course, it “generally” does that in about 3000 words, so there’s still some detail I suppose).

I get into some weeds on some specific decisions from my example day(s). That’s not necessarily because I think you’re likely to run into these exact issues, but because I think it’s helpful to see how someone who does this professionally thinks through some of the issues you’ll encounter in the park.

 

At Magic Kingdom, we highly recommend buying Multi Pass. We still visit the park occasionally without it, but having it removes a handful of stressors.

 

Finally, the times and strategies given in this post reflect park hours of 9AM to 9PM with Happily Ever After playing at 8PM and Early Entry beginning at 8:30AM. If I say “9:30AM”, usually I mean “30 minutes after the park opens.” If the park is open until 11PM when you visit, you’ll have much more time for rides after Happily Ever After than I did. If it opens at 8AM, you’ll get more done before lunch, or maybe you’ll take an extra mid-morning break. And so on.

Cinderella Castle from the east

Magic Kingdom Overview

This post covers five categories of things to do at Magic Kingdom—rides, other attractions, entertainment, characters, and dining. Dining is pretty straightforward and generally not a major topic on this site, so let’s talk about the other four categories.

Reminder: Magic Kingdom is still in an awkward transition phase, with Tiana’s still using a virtual queue, and TRON using a standby queue but not a part of Early Entry. We address those rides in separate blocks above. Once they join the more typical flow of park operations, we’ll update our core posts more completely.

First, there are just over twenty rides. I’m not going to list them all here, but in this post I’ll refer a few times to “major” rides, and when I do that I’m talking about Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Peter Pan’s Flight, Jungle Cruise, and Space Mountain (again, we’re still handling TRON with a special analysis). These tend to have some of the longest waits in the park.

 

Second, there are nine other attractions we’re calling “gap-fillers”: Carousel of Progress, Monsters, Inc. Laugh Floor, Enchanted Tiki Room, Swiss Family Treehouse, Country Bear Musical Jamboree, Tom Sawyer Island, Liberty Square Riverboat, The Hall of Presidents, Mickey’s PhilharMagic.

Hall of Presidents

These are attractions that usually have no or low wait—or a wait that just depends on how long the show takes or when the boat will be back—and that are good for filling midday time when waits for all the rides are high. We love several of these and consider them must-dos, so don’t think just because they’re filling gaps between rides that they’re less worthy than the rides themselves.

 

Third, there are five major character greetingsMickey at Town Square Theater, princesses (two greetings of two princesses each) at Fairtytale Hall, Ariel at her Grotto, and Enchanted Tales with Belle. These waits can be among the highest in the park—don’t expect to just wander in to say “hello” without any planning. There are other character greetings throughout the park, too.

 

Finally, there’s the entertainment. Check the app for today’s listings, but generally you’ll have the Festival of Fantasy parade, the Royal Friendship Faire stage show, streetmosphere (like the Dapper Dans), and the nighttime spectacular, Happily Ever After.

Before Going to Magic Kingdom

The items in this section are discussed in more detail in our Magic Kingdom Lightning Lane Strategy.

If you want Lightning Lane Multi Pass, you’ll be purchasing it somewhere between 3 and 21 days in advance of your visit. We recommend Multi Pass at Magic Kingdom.

Our specific Lightning Lane recommendations vary, but for the purposes of this post let’s simplify it to:

  • Tier 1 — Any one of Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Peter Pan’s Flight, or Jungle Cruise

  • Tier 2 — Haunted Mansion and The Many Adventures of Winnie The Pooh

You generally want all your picks to be as early as possible, but we are willing to depart from our recommendations to ensure we have two Lightning Lanes that start in the first three hours of the day.

 

You’ll also need to book your Single Pass Lightning Lanes at the time of booking Multi Pass. Magic Kingdom has two such Lightning Lanes—TRON and Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, priced in accordance with popularity (TRON more popular and more expensive).

Our most recent recommendations (updated after TRON switched to standby) is that guests with Early Entry should buy the Lightning Lane Single Pass for Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, and guests without Early Entry should buy the Lightning Lane Single Pass for TRON.

Timing Your Lightning Lane Single Passes

If you buy a Single Pass Lightning Lane, you can pick your time slot. Times generally run out from earlier to later, which we think is fine because we prefer later times anyways.

Our recommendation for a Seven Dwarfs Mine Train single pass is to pick a time between noon and 4PM. This is when waits in the park are highest. Just make sure you leave yourself a window to watch the Festival of Fantasy parade, which runs once or twice a day.

Our two preferences for TRON are after sunset and between noon and 4PM.

The outdoor portion of TRON, which to be fair is not very long, is a much better experience at night. We think it’s generally worth riding at night if possible. We would not risk missing Happily Ever After just to ride TRON at night though. This approach works best if the park is open after Happily Ever After.

View from the monorail

Arriving at Magic Kingdom

It’s necessary to take a few minutes to talk about how you’ll arrive at Magic Kingdom. Guests who travel from their Disney hotel by bus, monorail, resort boat, or walking path will arrive directly at the park gates. These guests may want to research how long their travel time will be, but arrival is otherwise straightforward.

In general, you can expect the first Magic Kingdom bus pickup at your resort to be timed to drop you off at Magic Kingdom about an hour before the start of Early Entry. In the past, I’ve even been on buses that simply had to wait outside the Magic Kingdom bus depot until that time arrived, though operations always vary.

 

Other guests have a longer journey. Guests who drive their own car will have to park and (unless the trams are running again), walk to Transportation and Ticket Center. From there, they’ll take the monorail or ferryboat to the front of the park.

Guests who are dropped off by Uber/Lyft or a bus from a non-Disney hotel will be dropped off at Transportation and Ticket Center and again, have to take the monorail or ferryboat to the front of the park.

Minnie Vans—Disney’s rideshare service—can pick you up from Disney property and bring you to the entrance of Magic Kingdom. Because they have this advantage over Uber/Lyft, Minnie Vans can be worth their extra cost if you need to get to Magic Kingdom.

 

Exact travel times when arriving via the TTC will vary, but here’s an example morning:

  • 8:07AM – Arrive at parking booths

  • 8:09AM – Park car

  • 8:18AM – At TTC

  • 8:30AM – Inside Magic Kingdom (via Monorail)

  • 8:34AM – Inside Magic Kingdom (via Ferryboat)

The ferryboat can take a little longer than the monorail (as seen in this example), particularly if you just miss one. I actually just missed the monorail this day (Emily was taking the ferryboat), and I still made it to the park faster than the ferryboat. That said, we’ve always been comfortable taking the ferryboat, and it’s actually our preferred way to get to the park because of the nice views along the way.

Welcome to Magic Kingdom

Rope Drop at Magic Kingdom

Magic Kingdom has the most complicated rope drop of the four parks, but with some help you should be able to see it as more opportunity.

All guests, even those without Early Entry, are allowed onto Main Street and into the park’s hub once the gates open. If you don’t have Early Entry and want to get some photos, drink some Starbucks (Main Street Bakery), or shop, this is a good time.

Guests who have Early Entry will begin their park touring 30 minutes before the park opens to other guests.

 

Rope Drop Part 1 – Early Entry at Magic Kingdom

As of this update, guests with Early Entry have access to Fantasyland and Tomorrowland as part of Early Entry. If you have Early Entry, you’ll probably want to start with Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Peter Pan’s Flight, or Space Mountain.

We discuss the details of these rope drops in more detail in our dedicated Magic Kingdom Early Entry and Rope Drop post. As you’ll read in that post, your rope drop strategy will depend on what combination of Lightning Lanes you’ve purchased and booked (including the option to purchase none at all).

 

A good example of how Early Entry might go on a perfect day is:

  • 7:30 Arrive

  • 8:30 Early Entry begins

  • 8:36 Seven Dwarfs Mine Train

  • 8:59 Peter Pan’s Flight

  • 9AM Park Opens

Realistically, just getting one of these two rides done during Early Entry is going to be fine, too. It’s very rare to get two popular rides done during Early Entry, which is why we sometimes recommend Peter Pan’s Flight for our first Multi Pass pick even for guests with Early Entry.

Follow the signs for Early Entry

Rope Drop Part 2 – Park Opening at Magic Kingdom

The opening of Magic Kingdom is celebrated with a short welcome show, “Let The Magic Begin,” in front of the castle, five minutes before the park is scheduled to open.

 

If you’re heading into Tomorrowland or Fantasyland you should feel fine grabbing a good spot for the welcome show because most of the people who will be in line in front of you on rides are already there (they’re the Early Entry guests). If you’re heading elsewhere (Frontierland, Adventureland, Liberty Square), securing a better spot to watch the welcome show might add 5-10 minutes or so to your first ride wait on busier days.

 

The welcome show is only 2-3 minutes long, so the park opening will start just before the scheduled opening time (though it’s common that you’ll then be held outside some lands or attractions until the exact opening time).

Watching Let the Magic Begin

Park opening time means two things:

  1. Fantasyland and Tomorrowland will open to non-Early Entry guests

  2. The rest of the park will open to all guests

If you have Early Entry, you want to beat the crowds heading into the lands other than Fantasyland or Tomorrowland, essentially doing a second, regular park opening, rope drop once you’re done with your Early Entry rope drop.

 

If you don’t have Early Entry, you can get in line for a major ride (Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Peter Pan’s Flight, Space Mountain) behind the Early Entry guests, but that’s only really going to be beneficial in the sense that you’ll have the satisfaction of checking off that box. It will likely cost you time in the long run as waits for other rides in the park go up.

 

We don’t advise that, instead recommending you take advantage of the low waits that rope drop has to offer.

Again, our dedicated Magic Kingdom Early Entry and Rope Drop post offers the full analysis here, but our preference is the following ride order: Jungle Cruise, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Haunted Mansion. On a good morning, this looks like:

  • 9:15 Jungle Cruise

  • 9:37 Pirates of the Caribbean 

  • 10:02 Haunted Mansion

You might squeeze Big Thunder Mountain Railroad into that second or third slot. Since that ride is located in a far corner of the park (nothing else there now that Splash Mountain is closed), it can be preferable to take care of it early while you’re in the area, before heading back to the middle of the park.

Late Morning at Magic Kingdom

Late morning is when your day will really start to take shape. While rope drop was about going in with a plan and taking care of business, late morning is a bit more flexible and requires you to figure out what’s best for your family. There’s a few different approaches you can take…

First, if there are still short standby waits to be found, you’ll probably want to take advantage of them. This might be true even if you have Lightning Lane Multi Pass. A 5-minute wait for most rides is basically the same as using a Lightning Lane, and if you can free your afternoon Multi Pass planning to focus on Peter Pan’s Flight, Jungle Cruise, and anything you want to ride twice (only once via Multi Pass, though), then you’ll have a more enjoyable day.

 

Typically, if these short waits exist, you’ll see them in Fantasyland where rides like Barnstormer, Dumbo, Mad Tea Party, and Under the Sea can carry 5-minute waits into the late morning even on busier days. These are also convenient because they’re relatively close together.

 

Second, if you’ve started using your Multi Pass bookings, you can keep packing in quick Multi Pass return times, if available. You can do one or two more popular rides OR closer to four of the lower priority rides. Exactly which of these options you go with will probably depend on your personal priorities for the day.

Third, if you’ve got a few major rides left on your list—Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Peter Pan’s Flight, Space Mountain, or Jungle Cruise—you might want to buckle down and wait in line for one of them. Are you catching it at the shortest wait of the day? Probably not, but the longer your list of major rides is, the more pressure you’re under to start getting them done.

 

Fourth, you can slow down. If you have Multi Pass, this is definitely a fine option. You can take this time to visit Starbucks or Joffrey’s, view the first runs of the cavalcades, or start visiting some of your gap-fillers.

Mad Tea Party

Lately I’ve had success in Fantasyland, and I have a toddler, so that’s my favorite option. A good late morning looks like (this can be with or without Multi Pass, depending on how long waits are):

  • 10:19 Under the Sea

  • 10:36 Mad Tea Party

  • 10:46 Dumbo

  • 10:55 Barnstormer

But you might also save these specific rides for later if you feel like Multi Pass availability is good today. In that case, you might still focus on few, but higher-priority Lightning Lanes during this block, as in this example:

  • 10:10 - Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (15 via LL)

  • 10:30 - Adventure Friends Cavalcade

  • 11:08 - Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin (3 via LL vs. 35 posted)

  • 11:28 - Space Mountain (12 via LL vs. 65 posted)

Next, it’s about the time to start thinking about lunch, but you can often get one or two more rides in before lunch, maybe even a major ride. We generally like to push lunch as late as possible, dealing with rides only gets harder as the day goes on.

If you’re in Fantasyland/Tomorrowland, there’s a wide range of options nearby—Space Mountain and Seven Dwarfs Mine Train are major ones, even Peter Pan’s Flight isn’t too far.

 

But Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin, The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, Tomorrowland Speedway, PeopleMover, and Astro Orbiter are all fine options too. If you’ve got Multi Pass, you might be able to use Lightning Lanes to get through more than one of these before lunch.

 

Lunch at Magic Kingdom

We generally don’t recommend table service for lunch at the parks because we like the flexibility of a quick service meal. At Magic Kingdom we have a semi-exception—if you can have a late lunch, about 2PM, then your table service lunch basically serves as a way to pass the high waits and high temperatures, although it means you’ll likely cut something else from your day, particularly if you don’t have Multi Pass.

Zoe watching Sonny Eclipse at Cosmic Ray’s

We wind up at Cosmic Ray’s a lot. You can see above that our morning touring typically ends in Fantasyland or Tomorrowland (where you’ll have the best pickins for short waits or Lightning Lane return times), our toddler loves Sonny Eclipse. they have a water bottle refill station.

Overall, I think Magic Kingdom has the worst quick service food of the four Disney World theme parks, so I don’t put much thought into this. I’ll usually put together my mobile order while I’m in line earlier in the day.

 

Only thing I’d add is that while Casey’s is an iconic / good option, you might want to save that for the evening since it’s located on Main Street, where you’re likely to try and watch the fireworks.

If at all possible, I recommend someone in your group spend a few minutes looking at showtimes / attraction closure times / etc. in the app and start planning your afternoon.

 

Afternoon at Magic Kingdom

The six-hour period from 12PM to 6PM is when waits at Magic Kingdom tend to plateau. This is tough because it means if you need to get things done, you’ll be looking at the longest waits of the day.

With waits at their peak, your strategy shifts from finding the lowest waits to mix-and-matching a few rides with “gap-filler”, entertainment, and whatever else in the afternoon. You can basically assume the waits you see at 1PM are similar to the waits you’ll see at 4PM, though from 4PM to 6PM you’ll start to see some rides—particularly those geared at the youngest kids—drop a bit.

Mickey Mouse

The most important thing in the afternoon (schedule dependent) is the Festival of Fantasy Parade. The parade occurs once or twice a day and times vary (check the app). The parade is 10 minutes long and takes about 20 minutes to get from Frontierland, through the hub, down Main Street, and to Town Square at the front of the park.

 

The other major thing you’ll probably want to fit in is Mickey’s Royal Friendship Faire, the stage show held at scheduled times in front of the castle. It will sometimes make sense to watch the show and then stay in the hub for the parade.

If it’s a hot day, the character greetings, Carousel of Progress, Monsters, Inc. Laugh Floor, Enchanted Tiki Room, Swiss Family Treehouse, Country Bear Musical Jamboree, The Hall of Presidents, and Mickey's PhilharMagic are good escapes from the sun.

 

This is also the time when you need to start noting when things close or when the last runnings of any entertainment (like cavalcades) are. For example, on one recent visit here are some notable times:

  • 4PM / 5PM hours — Last show of some entertainment

  • 5PM — Tom Sawyer Island closes

  • 7PM — Liberty Square Riverboat closes

  • 8PM — Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor closes

As always, times on your day will vary. If you have Multi Pass, these times are going to be really important because you’re probably trying to enjoy several of the activities with your spare time. You’d (maybe) hate to get to 5PM having finished all the rides but missed the cavalcades and Tom Sawyer Island when you could have just planned to do a few rides a little later.

 

If you have Multi Pass, you’re basically still balancing sooner return times for less popular rides with later return times for more popular rides. You’ve got three Lightning Lane slots to work with, so I’ll usually say at least one of them can be as late a return time as necessary. The other two you probably want to keep a bit flexible. It’s probably too early to lock yourself into 3X Lightning Lanes with 7PM and later returns.

It’ll somewhat depend on luck and crowds—if all your return times are 3 hours in the future, your afternoon might still be a little slow. If you can find returns 30-90 minutes in the future, though, you’ll basically loop these three steps:

  1. Book Lightning Lane for 45 minutes away

  2. Wait in a line / watch a show / etc.

  3. Use Lightning Lane

And if you can find immediate return times (usually on a batch of Fantasyland rides, if possible), you’ll be able to get on and off these in quick succession.

 

Here’s an example afternoon with Multi Pass:

  • 12:21PM - Jungle Cruise (4 via LL vs. 50 posted)

  • 12:49PM - Mad Tea Party (6 via LL vs. 20 posted)

  • 1:04PM - Under the Sea (4 via LL vs. 15 posted)

  • 1:23PM - Barnstormer (5 via LL vs. 35 posted)

  • 1:41PM - Dumbo (15 via LL vs. 30 posted)

  • 2:08PM - TRON (12 via LL)

  • 2:28PM - Tomorrowland Speedway (8 via LL vs. 35 posted)

  • 3PM Dole Whip and Festival of Fantasy Parade

  • 3:31PM - Liberty Square Riverboat

  • 4:02PM - 'it's a small world' (8 via LL vs. 40 posted)

You can see I batched the easier Fantasyland rides on Multi Pass, with the TRON Single Pass Lightning Lane filling a gap before a later Tomorrowland Speedway Time, and the Festival of Fantasy Parade and Liberty Square Riverboat filling a gap before a later time for ‘it’s a small world.’

Since you’re in Florida, this is also a good time for a cold treat, be it snacking on a Dole Whip or a Mickey Bar. Notably, this itinerary doesn’t include the Mickey’s Royal Friendship Faire stage show.

The Tinkerbell cavalcade

If you don’t have Multi Pass, you’ll start making decisions about what you have to do and what you’ll probably miss out on. If you have to watch Enchanted Tiki Room, now is as good a time as any because ride waits will only go down as the day goes on. Same with any “gap-fillers” or entertainment.

 

I don’t like to leave more than one major ride for the evening, so if you haven’t gotten through three of those, you’ll probably want to prioritize them. Here’s an example from an afternoon without Multi Pass (but with a Lightning Lane for Mine Train):

  • 12:13 Meet Mickey (posted 15, actual 12)

  • 12:32 PeopleMover (posted 15, actual 9)

  • 12:45 Carousel of Progress

  • 1:24 Seven Dwarfs Mine Train (posted 80, 10 via LL)

  • 1:40 Enchanted Tiki Room

  • 2PM-3:15 Coffee, Royal Friendship Faire, Festival of Fantasy

  • 4:57 Peter Pan’s Flight (posted 70, actual 102)

  • 5:04 Prince Charming Regal Carrousel (posted 5, actual 3)

  • 5:21 “It’s a small world” (posted 15, actual 8)

  • 5:52 Dinner

 

You can see that, except for my paid Lightning Lane for Mine Train, I had no rides between 12:32 and 4:57, instead watching two indoor animatronic shows (Tiki Room and Carousel of Progress) and the parade and stage show, and waiting in line 102 minutes for Peter Pan’s Flight.

 

Obviously, waiting 102 minutes for a ride is never something I want to do. It’s definitely not something I want you to do. This is partly why I recommend Multi Pass at this park. The 70-minute wait for Peter Pan’s Flight—which spent most of this day at or over 50 minutes—actually wasn’t a bad decision for a “must do” ride. You could do two rides with shorter waits (this wouldn’t “save” time—those waits are also still higher than they’ll be later in the day), but here’s one last thing to keep in mind.

 

Once you get into the later part of the day, you have to make sure you’ll building around the must-dos. In particular, on this day I had to build my night around the firework show, Happily Ever After.

On this particular example day, I already was saving Jungle Cruise for the very end of the day. If I’d gotten to 7PM without Peter Pan’s Flight done and the wait was 50 minutes the rest of the day, I’d have a problem since Happily Ever After starts at 8PM and ends at 8:15PM.

By contrast, if I had two shorter waits, I could do them on either side of Happily Ever After. This is the reason I’m willing to suffer through one long wait at 3PM and save shorter waits for later, when I need flexibility.

Cinderella Castle near sunset

Dinner and Evening at Magic Kingdom

On 9AM to 9PM days, we typically don’t budget time for a table service dinner. If we have until 10PM or later, then it might be more worth it (we’re fans of Jungle Navigation Co. Ltd Skipper Canteen). But we’re always fans of the flexibility a quick service meal affords.

 

On hardcore touring days, we’ll order mobile order from Casey’s on Main Street and eat hot dogs during the fireworks. You have to place this mobile early a little early and arrive early because the restaurant will be particularly busy during this time, but likely you’re grabbing your spot on Main Street for Happily Ever After 30 minutes early anyways.

 

The key to your evening is Happily Ever After, which is the can’t-miss nighttime show in the park. We like to watch from about halfway down Main Street, as the show now includes projections onto the Main Street buildings. We’re assuming an 8PM showtime and 9PM park close for this post, but sometimes the show runs at the time the park closes, so plan accordingly.

 

Happily Ever After can fill Main Street shoulder to shoulder on busier days. I’ve found solo space that would be tight / awkward for a family as late as 5 minutes before the show, but realistically you’ll want to be there at 30 minutes before or no later than 15 minutes before. Some people will arrive much earlier, and crowds can impact these times.

As for touring strategy, you’ve hopefully got very few rides left (or none left, if you used Multi Pass). The downside is they might be scattered a bit, meaning you’ll spend some time walking, maybe back and forth. You’re also dealing with an awkward schedule, where you have to be at Happily Ever After early and will have limited time after Happily Ever After (or no time at all, some days). We discussed this already in reference to my Peter Pan’s Flight experience.

 

Generally you can plan to save one ride for the time the park closes, provided three conditions are met:

  1. The park doesn’t close at the same time as Happily Ever After, since you want to watch Happily Ever After

  2. The ride close time is the same as park close time (not earlier)

  3. You understand and accept the risk of the ride experiencing unexpected downtime and not being open

The third is the one you can’t plan for, but if a ride breaks at 8:45PM and they don’t have it running by 9PM (believe me, they will often try, I’ve seen rides start running again a minute before close), you just won’t get on it. This is rare, but it happens.

 

A fourth condition—you have to be at the ride before the time it closes. There’s absolutely no grace period here. The ride closes when it closes and you have all day to get on it. Will you see me sometimes do risky things squeezing rides in? Yes, including in the sample schedule I’m about to share. But you should be much more careful if something is important to you.

 

Besides that last ride, you can try and fit in one ride between Happily Ever After and the end of the day, but keep in mind that when you look at your phone at 8:15PM (when Happily Ever After ends) those waits are all about to go up. Find something with a 5 minute / 10 minute wait. It’ll be 15-20 by the time you get there, but that should leave you enough time to get to your last ride.

Here’s an example evening schedule (without Multi Pass, if you have Multi Pass this time should be more free / flexible):

  • 6:19 Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin (posted 35, actual 10)

  • 6:40 Hall of Presidents

  • 7:29 Winnie the Pooh (posted 20, actual 21)

  • 8PM Happily Ever After

  • 8:36 Tomorrowland Speedway (posted 5, actual 15)

  • 8:52 Magic Carpets of Aladdin (posted 5, actual 3)

  • 8:59 In line for Big Thunder Mountain Railroad

  • 9PM Park Close

You shouldn’t plan to do anything once the park closes. Attractions etc. are all closed. In the past, the “Kiss Goodnight” played periodically, but that hasn’t returned as far as I know. You might see a few Photopass Photographers on Main Street and in the hub, and Emporium may remain open, but I’d never count on these.

 

Conclusions

If I could say one thing about Magic Kingdom touring, it’s “wow, those afternoons are brutal.” Having Multi Pass or a Lightning Lane Single Pass will help, but the park is hot, crowded, and whether it’s walking between rides with long waits or air-conditioned shows on opposite sides of the park while waiting on your Lightning Lane return time, it’s just a tough time to get through.

That point aside, the park remains a good place to spend a day with or without Multi Pass as long as you have a plan and you’re willing to make compromises. There’s just so much to do that you shouldn’t struggle to fill a full day and (mostly) stay out of long lines.

That “mostly” is where Multi Pass comes in. Do you really want to wait in line over an hour midday for one or two rides and plan to be in line for a ride right as the park closes? Are you willing to skip these rides entirely? Or do you want to ride them earlier and risk missing something else in the park?

There’s no right answers to these questions, but for us it seems straightforward that Multi Pass is the way to go at this park. In any case, good planning will get you a Magical day, and that’s what’s most important!

All Your Other Disney World Planning Questions Answered

Don't be overwhelmed by Disney World planning! Take a second to check out our most important content and you'll not only be an expert, but you'll save big $$$ along the way.

Just starting out? Check out our Walt Disney World planning guide! If you're still picking dates, we've got everything you need to know about Disney World crowd calendars. For picking your hotel, check out our Walt Disney World hotels guide.

When it comes time to book we’ll help you find discount Disney World tickets. Decide whether you need a dining plan in our Complete Guide to Disney World Dining Plans! And don't forget to book those Disney World Advance Dining Reservations!

Don't forget to master your Disney World Lightning Lane Guide and Strategy a few months in advance. We'll keep you out of long lines so you can maximize the magical time in the parks! We've got park-specific guides as well: Magic Kingdom Lightning Lane Strategy, Epcot Lightning Lane Strategy, Animal Kingdom Lightning Lane Strategy, and Hollywood Studios Lightning Lane Strategy.

Know what to ride with our guides to: Magic Kingdom rides, Hollywood Studios rides, Epcot rides, and Animal Kingdom rides! Plus learn about the water parks with our guide to Blizzard Beach and our guide to Typhoon Lagoon! And for some some fun prep, check out our Ranking of Every Ride at Walt Disney World.

Finally, before you head out, be sure to check out our to-the-point packing list, 10 essentials you forget to pack for every Disney trip. And if you're interested in saving, there's no better list than our 53 Ways to Save on your Disney trip from start to finish.