Spring Break Cooldown

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The Spring Break Cooldown: How 3 Days Erase 6 Weeks of Peak Crowds

On March 29, 2025, the average midday wait at Walt Disney World was 31.3 minutes. Three days later, on April 1, it was 22.6. That’s a 28% drop in 72 hours — with no change in park hours, no weather event, no special circumstance. Spring break just… ended. Except it didn’t end for everyone. Understanding exactly how this annual cooldown works — and when the last districts go home — is the key to finding some of the best-value days of the entire year.

Methodology

We analyzed over 3.5 million wait time records from Walt Disney World across the spring break windows of 2025 and 2026, covering all four theme parks and more than 125 attractions. We tracked daily average posted standby waits, midday peak waits (11 AM–3 PM), and evening waits (7–10 PM) to identify the exact shape of the spring break taper. We also cross-referenced 2026 park operating hours from Disney’s published schedules and school calendar data from major feeder districts nationwide.

The Stagger: Why Spring Break Doesn’t Have a Single End Date

Disney World’s spring break crowd season isn’t one wave — it’s a rolling series of overlapping surges driven by hundreds of school districts breaking at different times. Based on school calendar data from the largest feeder markets, these breaks cluster into three distinct windows:

Wave Typical Dates (2025) Key Markets
Early Wave March 3–15 Texas (Dallas, Houston), Midwest, some Southern states
Core Wave March 17–29 Florida districts, Northeast, most large metro areas
Late Wave / Easter April 7–19 California (LAUSD), Georgia, Louisiana, NYC (tied to Easter/Passover)

The timing of Easter is the single biggest variable. In 2025, Easter fell on April 20, pushing the late wave into mid-April and creating a brief valley between the core spring break and Easter week. In 2026, Easter fell on April 5, which compressed the entire season — core spring break and Easter overlapped, creating one sustained peak from late March through April 10.

The Taper Is Sudden, Not Gradual

Here’s what surprised us most: when spring break ends, it doesn’t fade. It falls off a cliff.

In 2025, the transition from peak to trough took exactly two days:

Date (2025) Day Overall Avg Wait Midday Avg Wait
March 28 Friday 28.6 min 29.9 min
March 29 Saturday 29.7 min 31.3 min
March 30 Sunday 23.9 min 26.3 min
March 31 Monday 22.6 min 24.7 min
April 1 Tuesday 21.6 min 22.6 min
April 2 Wednesday 21.6 min 23.0 min

The pattern repeated in 2026, albeit with different dates tied to Easter:

Date (2026) Day Overall Avg Wait Midday Avg Wait
April 9 Thursday 31.2 min 37.2 min
April 10 Friday 29.7 min 34.5 min
April 11 Saturday 27.2 min 27.5 min
April 12 Sunday 21.0 min 21.9 min
April 13 Monday 21.9 min 21.9 min
April 14 Tuesday 20.7 min 20.3 min

In both years, the cooldown followed the same pattern: one “transition day” with a partial drop (about 10%), followed by one or two days where waits plummeted to their lowest levels. The entire taper — from peak spring break to normal operations — took just 2–3 days.

Which Rides Drop the Most?

Not all attractions taper equally. High-capacity headliners with broad appeal see the steepest declines, while perennial-favorite dark rides barely budge. Here’s how the top attractions at Walt Disney World performed during the 2025 spring break peak (March 17–29) versus the taper window (March 30–April 3):

Attraction Park Peak Avg Taper Avg % Drop
Avatar Flight of Passage AK 84 min 46 min 45%
Tower of Terror HS 56 min 32 min 43%
Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster HS 66 min 40 min 40%
Space Mountain MK 52 min 34 min 35%
Cosmic Rewind EP 92 min 63 min 32%
TRON Lightcycle / Run MK 85 min 58 min 32%
Rise of the Resistance HS 67 min 44 min 33%
Slinky Dog Dash HS 80 min 57 min 29%
Seven Dwarfs Mine Train MK 64 min 54 min 16%
Peter Pan’s Flight MK 49 min 42 min 14%

The pattern is consistent across both years. Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom see the largest drops — likely because these parks attract the highest percentage of multi-day ticket holders and resort guests who leave when their trips end. Rides like Seven Dwarfs Mine Train and Peter Pan’s Flight, which carry constant demand from day visitors and first-timers year-round, barely respond to the spring break taper.

The 2026 data confirmed the same hierarchy. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run dropped 53% from Easter week peak to the post-break trough. Rise of the Resistance fell 42%. The thrill rides clear out; the classics hold steady.


Lightning Brain tracks these crowd transitions in real time, showing you exactly which rides are dropping and when — so you can catch the taper before everyone else does. Available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.


The Sweet Spot: Low Crowds, Long Hours

Here’s where this analysis turns into a trip-planning weapon. Disney doesn’t cut park hours the instant crowds drop. There’s a lag — sometimes 1–2 days, sometimes longer — where operating hours still reflect the peak schedule but wait times have already cratered. These are the sweet-spot days.

In 2026, we can see this clearly. Magic Kingdom kept its 8 AM–11 PM schedule through April 11, even as average waits fell 33% from the prior week. The hours didn’t contract to 9 AM–10 PM until April 13. That means April 11 and 12 offered peak-season operating hours with off-season crowd levels.

Date (2026) MK Hours MK Avg Wait HS Hours HS Avg Wait AK Hours AK Avg Wait
Apr 8 (peak) 8AM–11PM 33.1 min 9AM–9:30PM 56.8 min 8AM–7PM 38.7 min
Apr 9 9AM–11PM 35.0 min 9AM–9:30PM 52.8 min 8AM–7PM 37.2 min
Apr 11 8AM–11PM 25.3 min 8:30AM–9:30PM 38.9 min 8AM–8PM 33.5 min
Apr 12 9AM–11PM 21.4 min 9AM–9:30PM 28.5 min 8AM–7PM 30.8 min
Apr 13 9AM–10PM 21.1 min 9AM–9PM 26.2 min 8AM–6PM 26.2 min
Apr 14 9AM–10PM 23.0 min 9AM–9PM 25.8 min 8AM–6PM 23.4 min

April 11–12, 2026 (highlighted above) represent the platonic ideal: crowds had dropped to post-spring-break levels, but Disney was still running a spring-break schedule. Hollywood Studios wait times fell from nearly 57 minutes to under 29 minutes while keeping the same 9:30 PM close. That’s half the crowds with the same number of riding hours.

The 2025 Exception: When Easter Creates a Second Peak

In years when Easter falls later — like 2025, when it landed on April 20 — something unusual happens. Spring break ends, crowds drop, and then Easter week pushes them back up above spring break levels.

In 2025, the data shows two distinct peaks with a valley between them:

Period (2025) Midday Avg Wait Evening Avg Wait
Spring Break Peak (Mar 17–29) 31.7 min 25.3 min
The Valley (Mar 30–Apr 3) 24.0 min 19.9 min
Easter Week (Apr 14–19) 33.7 min 25.8 min
Post-Easter (Apr 21–30) 26.9 min 21.0 min

That valley — March 30 through April 3, 2025 — was a hidden gem. Midday waits dropped 24% from the spring break peak. Evening waits fell 21%. And because parks were still operating on a robust schedule (MK data shows rides posting waits through 11 PM), these were essentially off-season crowd levels with peak-season park hours.

Easter week then surged to the highest midday waits of the entire spring window — 33.7 minutes, topping even core spring break. The real end of the spring crowd season in 2025 didn’t come until after Easter, around April 21.

The Park-by-Park Breakdown

Not every park cools down at the same rate. During the 2025 taper (March 30–April 3 vs. peak), here’s how each park performed:

Park Peak Avg (Mar 24–29) Taper Avg (Mar 30–Apr 3) Drop
EPCOT 29.7 min 22.7 min 24%
Hollywood Studios 34.8 min 24.6 min 29%
Animal Kingdom 35.9 min 26.2 min 27%
Magic Kingdom 27.1 min 21.3 min 21%

Hollywood Studios sheds crowds fastest, dropping nearly 30% in the first taper days. This makes sense — it’s the park most dependent on multi-day resort guests (Rise of the Resistance and Slinky Dog Dash are bucket-list rides that departing families prioritize early in their trips). Magic Kingdom, as the park every guest visits regardless of trip length, is the most resilient.

When Does Spring Break Actually End?

Based on two years of data, the answer depends on Easter:

  • When Easter is early (before April 10): Spring break and Easter merge into one sustained peak. The cooldown begins the Monday after Easter and takes 2–3 days to complete. In 2026, this meant April 11–13 was the transition window, with “normal” levels reached by April 12.
  • When Easter is late (after April 15): The core spring break taper happens in late March (around March 30), but a second Easter peak follows in mid-April. The true end of the spring crowd season is the Monday after Easter — in 2025, that was April 21.

In both scenarios, the taper itself is remarkably fast: 2–3 days from peak crowds to normal operations. There’s no slow fade. Schools go back, families leave, and wait times drop by a quarter to a third overnight.

Practical Implications: How to Use This

If you can pick your dates freely: Target the first Monday through Wednesday after the final spring break wave ends. In a late-Easter year, that means the week after Easter. In an early-Easter year, it’s the Monday after Easter weekend. You’ll get the largest single-week drop in wait times of the entire spring season.

If you’re locked into spring break: Go in the first week of March, before the core wave arrives. In both 2025 and 2026, the first week of March averaged 23–25 minute waits — roughly the same as post-spring-break trough levels. The peak doesn’t hit until mid-March.

If you want the sweet spot: Watch for the 1–2 day window after crowds drop but before park hours contract. In 2026, April 11–12 delivered half the crowds with the same operating schedule. These days aren’t published anywhere — you have to track the transition in real time.

In a late-Easter year, exploit the valley: In 2025, March 30–April 3 offered 24% lower midday waits than the surrounding weeks. If Easter falls after April 15, this mid-spring lull is one of the best-kept secrets on the calendar. Crowds vanish, hours stay long, and prices haven’t adjusted yet.

Prioritize Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom during the taper. These parks see the steepest crowd drops — 27–30% in the first taper days. Magic Kingdom stays crowded longer. If you’re arriving as spring break ends, hit HS and AK first, save MK for later in the week.

Limitations

Our analysis covers two spring break seasons (2025 and 2026). While the patterns are consistent across both years, Easter’s date changes annually and can shift the entire spring crowd calendar by 2–3 weeks. We also lack 2024 spring data (March–June were not available in our dataset), which limits our ability to confirm patterns across a wider range of Easter dates. Posted wait times are Disney’s estimates, not actual ride times — though they serve as a reliable proxy for relative crowd levels. Finally, park hours for 2025 were not available in our scheduling database, so direct hours-vs-crowds analysis was only possible for 2026.

The Bottom Line

Spring break at Disney World doesn’t end — it breaks. The transition from peak crowds to normal levels is one of the sharpest seasonal drops on the calendar: a 25–35% decline in wait times compressed into just 2–3 days. The exact date shifts with Easter, but the mechanics are the same every year. Schools reopen in waves, the last wave departs, and within 72 hours the parks transform.

The guests who benefit most aren’t the ones who avoid spring break entirely — they’re the ones who arrive the day after it ends. Low crowds, long hours, warm weather, and a park infrastructure still scaled for peak capacity. That’s the spring break cooldown, and it’s one of the best windows of the year.

Plan smarter: lightningbrain.app · App Store

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