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HOW DISNEY SHOULD DRAW MICKEY

So you want to go to Disney World...might want to consider taking out a second mortgage on your house. 
There's a reason that for the 12 months ending March 29, 2025 Disney's annual revenue was $94.04 BILLION.

The last time I was there a bottle of water cost $6 and a Dole Whip (mostly whipped cream) cost $14.

But there's some strategies I'll give you that will enable you to keep your money in YOUR pockets if you're planning a trip to WDW.

TICKETS

Ordering your WDW tickets can be a rather complex affair due to all the different configurations of ticketing.

A base ticket for a 1 day visit to the park currently runs $119 for a guest 10+ years of age. 
Most days of the year are priced 

​at $134 or higher; only 39 days are priced lower than this. Tickets are slightly discounted (typically $5 cheaper) for children ages 3-9.

But there are add on's you can add to your base ticket for an additional price, such as the Hopper Pass and the Hopper Plus Pass.

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The Hopper Option allows Guests to visit more than one theme park per day. The Hopper Plus Option allows Guests to visit more than one theme park per day. Plus, enjoy a certain number of visits to a water park or other Walt Disney World sports-related fun.


Personally, I wouldn't purchase either option. If you plan your WDW visit right, there's plenty to see and do in one park without having to hop to another on the same day.

As for the waterparks under the Hopper Plus option, we'd planned to visit a waterpark but ran out of time to do so. So you're better off buying your waterpark tickets right at the waterparks themselves - provided the weather cooperates.

 

There's a separate ticket option for Florida residents and an annual ticket option.
What used to be called "Fastpass" and was free are now called Lightning Lane passes and aren't free. ​With the new Lightning Lane passes, skip the standby line and join a shorter line for select attractions and experiences instead. ​​

It's best you just visit WDW Theme Park Tickets and carefully read through all of the different ticketing options before you purchase your tickets. You want to purchase your tickets before your trip.

Because theme park capacity will be limited, the Disneyland® Resort will manage attendance through a new theme park reservation system that will require all Guests to obtain a reservation for park entry in advance. Tickets will be required to access the theme park reservation system. Theme park reservations are subject to availability.

Your best option is to purchase your discounted WDW tickets here from Get Away Today. Be sure you read their entire page! In the past, this ticket agent would handle planning the frustrating parts of a WDW trip for you...like making dining reservations and other services that must be done before you go to the Disney parks.

BEFORE YOU GO TO DISNEY WORLD

Apart from the cost of our tickets, my sister and I used a few simple tricks to keep our money in our pockets and allowed us to spend a minimum amount of money within the Disney parks themselves.

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Get yourself an insulated lunch bag and a good FILTERED water bottle. I recommend Kleen Kanteen even though it's more expensive. I contracted C dif while at WDW and the price of a good filtered water bottle will be far less than your hospital bills will be...trust me. Been there, done that.

​Carry a bottle of hand sanitizer with you as well and use it often. My C dif medication for one round of treatment cost over $1500.

More on this lunch bag and water bottle when we get to Accommodations.

Next you want to go to sites that offer discounts on dining like restaurant.com, Entertainment, Groupon, etc. and look for discounts available for the dates of your trip to WDW.

You aren't looking for deals at restaurants within the WDW parks because you won't find any. You're looking for dining discounts in close walking vicinity to the parks (like Rainforest Cafe right outside the Animal Kingdom park gates) and/or restaurants in Disney Springs, for example.

Through restaurant.com before our trip I bought a bunch of $40 off dining coupons for $10 each during one of their promotions. These coupons totally paid for many of our meals except for the servers tips.

Also go to the restaurant's own website and if they have a loyalty program, sign up for it. (FREE) I got $150 of savings from Rainforest Cafe just for signing up and because it was my birthday that month. Rather than pay $100 for lunch inside the Animal Kingdom park, we had a free lunch by walking just outside the park gates, plus priority seating.

I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

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Consider getting yourself a Chase Disney VISA credit card that awards you Disney Dollars for purchases you make.

I used mine for several months before going to WDW and earned enough Disney Dollars to totally pay for dinner at the park's most expensive restaurant, Les Chefs du France plus purchase a few souvenirs. 


It's a no fee card and I paid the balance in full each month so I wasn't paying any interest fees or accruing debt.

DISNEY DINING PLAN

WDW does offer guests a Disney Dining Plan but it involved a whole lot of hassle in my opinion - and of course, at top dollar. Note the Disney Dining Plan is only available to guests staying at the in-park WDW resorts! There are also other dining experiences that include fireworks shows or other entertainment.

You can read about the Disney Dining Plan here.

Even if you're not going to add on the Disney Dining Plan you will have to make reservations at WDW restaurants that are sit down dining and have waitstaff. Which I discovered meant getting up at all hours of the day and night to do because all of the different restaurants have different time slots at which you can make reservations. However, if you purchase your admission ticket through Get Away Today I believe they'll still handle making your dining reservations for you.

ACCOMMODATIONS

While it may be tempting to stay inside the parks at one of their resorts, there's a far better alternative even though WDW advertises "budget" resorts.

Look for a Disnney affiliate resort near the parks. A Disney affiliate resort undergoes an annual inspecting by a WDW inspector to ensure it is up to Disney standards. Once it's declared an affiliate resort, it can offer amenities normally reserved for only Disney park resorts.

For example, we booked at Buena Vista Palace directly across the street from Disney Springs - very handy considering we ate most evening dinners there. We paid a little over $100 per night for a beautiful tower room with balcony from which we could watch Disney parks fireworks.

Our reservations included a free breakfast buffet and there was a handy in-hotel convenience store as well. There was a Disney merchandise store, Sunday morning Disney character breakfasts that cost far less than in the parks, the hotel had a large beautiful pool and gym, a full service spa, tennis courts, kids playground and there was even a car rental office at which we could return our rental car. We rode a free shuttle to the Disney parks, only 5 minutes away.

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We'd eat our breakfast and take some items from the buffet for our lunch and we could purchase some items if we wanted to from the convenience store. But most of our lunches were free items from the breakfast buffet.

We'd fill our water bottles at the same time. If we needed to refill them in the parks, we'd go to one of the 'fast food' type restaurants and fill them at the water dispense at the soda machines.

We saved at least $50 on lunch per day by doing this. That's a $500 savings over 10 days.

And by staying at an affiliate hotel outside of the park, we could escape the crowds when we needed or wanted to.

We also had a 30 minute early entry to the parks by staying at a Disney affiliate hotel.

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GUESTS WITH DISABILITIES

Luckily, I'd had the smarts to talk to one of the Disney bigwigs before making our trip. She asked me to phone her when I returned from WDW and give me her input. Boy, did that poor woman get an earful!

However, she must have taken me seriously because they've since changed things up to be more accommodating to their disabled guests after I told her everything that had happened to me. WDW was anything BUT friendly and helpful to their disabled guests. I told her I'd go to Universal if in Orlando again but never to WDW again.

Their disability passes for those of us who had physical conditions that prevented us from waiting in long lines in the sun (I guess they don't realize many of us have mobility issues besides) were WDW's best kept secret.
Nowhere did they appear on the WDW website. I only found out about them by stumbling on a blog that mentioned them! This Disney exec clued me in to how to go about getting one, assuring me I would have no problem getting one but to phone her if I did run into any problems.

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I don't mind providing proof of my disability...but I had to bring a letter from my doctor stating I was unable to wait in long lines and was disabled, I had to bring proof from SSI that I was receiving disability and there was a third form I had to bring that I can't remember at the moment. 

You pick up these passes at the Visitor Centers located just past the entrance to the park.

I presented all my proof of disability and told the kid manning the Visitor Center that I needed a disability pass. He replied "You don't need one of those. If they see you're on a mobility scooter, they'll know you're disabled."
I'm just not that stupid. I said "No, I'd like a disability pass please."
He continued to argue until I told him "Go pick up that phone over there, dial this number and ask for {Disney bigwig exec) and tell her Pat Jackson needs to speak with her to get this issue cleared up."

 

He gave me a pass without another word. And it's a good thing I was persistent because half of the Disney employees we encountered at the rides and what not didn't even know what to do when presented with the disability pass. I don't think most of them even knew Disney HAD disability passes! But we never waited in line for a single ride.

Now I guess you don't have to present proof of disability to get a pass and they're no longer WDW's best kept secret. How to get a WDW diability pass. If you're going to need a disability pass then you need to get that all squared away before you even get to the park. The link above will tell you how to do that.

MOBILITY SCOOTERS

I don't know if WDW has made the necessary changes to their mobility scooter problem for disabled guests or not. Their policy at the time I visited was $50 per day to rent a mobility scooter with a refundable deposit of between $20 and $100. You could not reserve a scooter ahead of your visit to the park. You had to cross your fingers and hope they had enough scooters to go around that you'd get one. Nor could you take your scooter from park to park. You had to go through the rental rigamarole at each different park all over again.

I got smart and we rented mobility scooters from 
Mobility Plus. $100 each for 10 day rental, they delivered the scooters to our hotel and picked them up when we were finished with them. Because we got 2 brand new scooters we briefly had a problem with one of them starting. Less than 5 minutes on the phone with Mobility Plus and he had us running again and the problem was fixed for the rest of our rental period. And yes, the Disney shuttles are equipped to take mobility scooters on board but you have to load and unload them yourself.

 

Excellent service with Mobility Plus at a much greater savings than dealing with WDW, not to mention the frustration with Disney in dealing with their scooter issue.

PLAN YOUR ITINERARY AHEAD OF TIME

There are 4 WDW parks:

  • Magic Kingdom

  • Animal Kingdom

  • Hollywood Studios

  • Epcot
     

There are also two water parks: Typhoon Lagoon and Blizzard Beach.

In order to see and do everything you want to, plan two days in each park if you've never been to WDW before. WDW spans a total of 43 square miles or 25,000 acres total to give you some idea of the ground you'd be covering. So it's very helpful to have some kind of itinerary planned out ahead of time.
You can always make changes last minute if you need or want to and you won't waste valuable time discussing what should we see or do next with multiple people wanting to go in different directions.

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The Magic Kingdom is divided into different sections:

  • Main Street USA that leads to Cinderella's Castle

  • Tomorrowland

  • Mickey's Toontown Fair

  • Fantasyland

  • Liberty Square

  • Frontierland

  • ​Adventureland
     

The monorail runs all around the park from section to section of the park and riding it is included in the price of your admission.

What I would advise you to do is make a list of the most popular rides you want to ride, be there when the park opens and make a beeline for those rides before long lines form of visitors waiting to ride them. Disney has done away with the FastPass system so that's no longer an option to escape waiting in long lines.

After you've ridden those rides, then just begin working your way around the park section by section, keeping your itinerary in mind so you don't miss anything you wanted to see and do.

WHEN TO GO TO DISNEY WORLD
  • ​1. Go During Off-Season

  • 2. Head Into the Park that Had Extra Magic Hours or a Special Ticketed Event The Previous Night ...

  • 3. Go During a Special Hard-Ticketed Event ...

  • 4. Go When the Crowd Calendars Show Low Levels ...

  • 5. Go When It’s Raining ...

  • 6. Go When the Park Opens/Closes ...

  • 7. Go During Extra Magic Hours ...

2025 Best & Worst Months to Visit Disney World

Now we get to the good part - Magic Kingdom's Rides & Attractions. These were my favorites since I can't possibly show you all of the rides and attractions. But here's a complete park walk through for you.

MY #1 PICK - PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN

The animatronics are fantastic. I could've easily done this swashbuckling adventure ride more than once. Step aboard a barge and get ready to journey back to a long-forgotten time when pirates ruled the high seas with this classic ride. The pirate ship ride takes you along a treacherous voyage through ransacked seaport towns, past the haunted Dead Man’s Cove, and amidst booming cannons between a Caribbean fort and a 12-gun galleon.

The only downside to Pirates was that the real live Johnny Depp wasn't there. (Although there is a figure of him that appears during the ride.)
No age or height requirements on this ride, great for kids of all ages.

IT'S A SMALL WORLD

This is a really cute ride appropriate for all ages and heights, showcasing world cultures. The only drawback to this attraction is that you will have its theme song stuck in your head, looping over and over and over again all day!

BIG THUNDER MOUNTAIN

Some call this the wildest ride at WDW but I didn't think it was wild at all. Big thunder Mountain reminds me of the old roller coasters from days of yore with a kind of mining theme to it. 

The ride is set in the 1850s-era Gold Rush ghost town of Tumbleweed. You will enter the abandoned mine shaft and willingly step aboard a train that has lost its marbles.

The train speeds along rickety old tracks, catapults you through tunnels, swoops around turns, and drops into canyons. All the while, you will narrowly miss falling boulders and escape exploding dynamite.

Overall, the theming is fantastic, and this attraction really shines at night. It is a bumpy ride with some dark sections, but it’s one of those classic Disney World attractions that stands the test of time.

JUNGLE CRUISE

The Jungle Cruise is a 10-minute boat tour of scenic riverways across Africa, Asia, and South America. Guests board a canopied steamer and set sail through some of the globe’s most treacherous waterways.

Your boat cruises through South America’s lush, tropical foliage, passing by picturesque waterfalls. Then you encounter an abandoned camp along the banks of the African Congo and bathing elephants and angry hippos along the Nile. Keep alert because there’s a tribe of headhunters on the loose!

The Jungle Cruise continues through Asia and down the Mekong River, where you’ll come into close contact with cobras, baboons, and other exotic creatures.

Nice relaxing ride but beware: the boat skippers have corny senses of humor.

HAUNTED MANSION

Just what it says - a haunted mansion. Not scary at all but kind of cute and clever and suitable for little kids. 

Located in Liberty Square, guests will climb aboard a Doom Buggy and embark on an eerie adventure through a maze of haunted chambers.

The Ghost Host serves as your private guide throughout the tour of this haunted estate. Here, you will encounter ghosts, ghouls, and supernatural phenomena as you skate by a conservatory of caskets, Madame Leota’s séance room of horrors, and a spooky graveyard of singing ghosts.

TIANA'S BAYOU ADVENTURE

This is the ride that replaced Splash Mountain log flume ride. You do get the feeling of being in a bayou. This low-key, relaxing musical cruise concludes with an exciting surprise as you drop 5-stories down a waterfall! Be warned: riders can expect to get wet, especially those seated in the front of the ride. Lockers are available to store your personal items while you are on the ride.

SPACE MOUNTAIN

Loved this roller coaster as you were in the dark much of the time so didn't know if you were up, down, sideways or what. Apparently a lot of visitors liked this coaster too - you can see how long the waiting line was!

TRON LIGHTCYCLE RUN

The best coaster at the Magic Kingdom! It's the newest attraction at WDW. 

Board your Lightcycle and be instantly launched into the Grid on this roller-coaster ride through the world of Disney’s TRON movies. Along the way, race a rival (digital) team to see which of you can pass through all the energy points first. Try not to get derezzed!

The ride offers much more than typical Magic Kingdom roller coasters, thanks to high-resolution animated graphics that really make you feel like you’ve jumped straight into these popular films. In addition, part of the launch sequence is outdoors under a canopy; at night, it’s bathed in vibrant animated lights. For this reason, I suggest a nighttime ride if possible.

CAROUSEL OF PROGRESS

Did this one surprise you? This exhibit was created totally by Walt himself and premiered at the 1964 World's Fair - where I saw it for the first time as a 9 year old. 
I like it because it's a look back at where we've been and where we may be going. It's nostalgic and obviously it's stood the test of time as a WDW exhibit.

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MAGIC KINGDOM DINING

LIBERTY TREE TAVERN

We celebrated my birthday with a meal at Liberty Tree Tavern. It really is a typical Thanksgiving meal and they hadn't yet done away with their ala carte menu, which was nice.

The food items were good to so-so. The service was good but the place rather noisy.


What I disliked was that one had to walk down the street from the Tavern to use a restroom.
I don't mind "authentic" within limits...but REALLY?!! A lack of restrooms in the establishment itself does not make things easy for disabled guests.

Liberty Tree Tavern wouldn't rate a return visit in my personal opinion.

O'HANA POLYNESIAN RESTAURANT

Hands down the best restaurant within Disney. Everything about it was excellent - the food, the coconut races for the kids, the service and being able to watch them cook your food.

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The dinner was all you can eat and included: Wood Fire-grilled Black Pepper-Mirin-Teriyaki Beef*, Peel-n-Eat Shrimp coated with 'Ohana Seasoning, Grilled Chicken with Guava-Pineapple Glaze, 'Ohana Noodles with Mirin-Teriyaki, Stir-fried Vegetables.

 

They'd bring big skewers of different meats to your table and carve the meat right onto your plate. Even the dishes containing the sides never went empty without being refilled.
The current pricing for this meal is $65 for adults, $42 for children aged 3-9. That's a bargain by WDW standards!

We were so full we skipped the next activity we had planned and just rode the monorail around the park for awhile. LOL

I give O'Hana 5 out of 5 stars!

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