Author: dan

  • Breakdown Patterns

    Test Track Goes Down 13% of the Time: What 12,664 Breakdowns Reveal About Disney World Reliability

    Test Track spends 13.14% of its operating hours in a DOWN state. That means for roughly every seven hours the ride is supposed to be running, nearly a full hour is lost to breakdowns. And it’s not alone: across Walt Disney World’s four theme parks, we tracked 12,664 distinct breakdown incidents throughout all of 2025 — an average of nearly 35 per day. Some of those are five-minute blips. Others stretch past 90 minutes. And the patterns behind when and why rides go down are more revealing than you might expect.

    How We Analyzed This

    We examined every status record from all four Walt Disney World parks across the full 2025 calendar year — over 54 million data points sampled at five-minute intervals. Each record captures whether an attraction was OPERATING, DOWN, CLOSED, or in REFURBISHMENT. We isolated 126,296 individual DOWN records across WDW attractions and identified 12,664 distinct breakdown incidents by tracking transitions from operating to down and back. Queue time data from the same period allowed us to analyze what happens to wait times after a ride comes back online.

    The Peak Failure Hours: Morning Startup and Afternoon Heat

    Breakdowns don’t happen evenly throughout the day. The data reveals two distinct peaks — and one surprising safe zone in between.

    At 8 AM, 3.1% of all attraction status checks come back as DOWN. By 9 AM, that figure is still elevated at 2.84%. This is the startup effect: rides coming online for the day encounter issues that weren’t apparent during overnight maintenance. Sensors trip, ride vehicles don’t cycle correctly, show systems fail to initialize.

    Then something interesting happens. From 10 AM through 2 PM, the failure rate drops steadily, bottoming out at just 1.8% around noon. This is the smoothest window of the operating day — everything that was going to break at startup has already broken and been fixed, and the afternoon stress hasn’t set in yet.

    Starting around 3 PM, breakdowns climb again. By 4 PM, the failure rate hits 2.65%, and it stays elevated through the evening. The 4–5 PM window is the second-worst period of the day, behind only early morning.

    Hour DOWN % Notes
    8 AM 3.10% Startup issues peak
    9 AM 2.84% Still elevated from open
    10 AM 2.10% Settling in
    11 AM 1.97% Approaching daily low
    12 PM 1.80% Most reliable hour
    1 PM 1.89% Still strong
    2 PM 1.86% Calm before the storm
    3 PM 2.22% Afternoon climb begins
    4 PM 2.65% Afternoon peak
    5 PM 2.62% Still elevated
    6 PM 2.48% Gradual decline
    7 PM 2.65% Evening plateau
    8 PM 2.60% Holding steady
    9 PM 2.34% Winding down

    The afternoon surge likely reflects cumulative mechanical stress. After six or more hours of continuous operation under Florida heat, ride systems accumulate wear. Hydraulic fluid heats up. Sensors drift. Braking systems get stressed. Add thunderstorm-related shutdowns — which peak in the afternoon during summer months — and you get a measurable uptick in downtime.

    Summer Is the Season of Breakdowns

    The seasonal pattern is stark. August is the worst month for ride reliability, with a 3.17% failure rate — more than double March’s 1.42%. The summer months (May through August) all exceed 2.2%, while the cooler months from February through April stay below 1.6%.

    Month DOWN %
    January 1.86%
    February 1.58%
    March 1.42%
    April 1.59%
    May 2.22%
    June 2.25%
    July 2.69%
    August 3.17%
    September 1.93%
    October 1.93%
    November 1.81%
    December 1.69%

    This tracks with two factors: heat and thunderstorms. Central Florida’s afternoon thunderstorm season runs from roughly May through September, and many outdoor and partially outdoor attractions shut down during lightning warnings. But even indoor attractions show higher failure rates in summer, suggesting that heat stress on electronics and mechanical systems is a real contributor beyond weather closures alone.

    Day of the week, by contrast, barely matters. Sunday is the worst day at 2.22% and Saturday the best at 1.89%, but the spread is so narrow it’s functionally irrelevant for planning purposes.

    Which Parks and Rides Break Down Most?

    The park-level comparison isn’t even close. Magic Kingdom has the worst ride reliability of any WDW park, and Animal Kingdom has the best.

    Park DOWN % Incidents (2025)
    Magic Kingdom 3.18% 7,258
    Hollywood Studios 2.82% 1,891
    EPCOT 1.19% 3,110
    Animal Kingdom 0.98% 1,018

    Magic Kingdom’s numbers reflect its age and complexity. It operates the most attractions of any WDW park (41 active), many of which date to the 1970s and 1980s. Older ride systems require more frequent mechanical intervention. Hollywood Studios, despite having just 15 attractions, runs a disproportionate share of the park’s most technologically complex rides — Rise of the Resistance, Slinky Dog Dash, Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster — which drives its high failure rate.

    Animal Kingdom’s 0.98% is remarkable. Avatar Flight of Passage, one of Disney’s most sophisticated ride systems, goes down only 0.34% of the time. Kilimanjaro Safaris — a 20-minute ride with live animals and off-road vehicles — manages an astonishing 0.22% failure rate.

    The 10 Least Reliable Rides

    Attraction Park DOWN %
    Test Track EPCOT 13.14%
    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure MK 9.57%
    Kali River Rapids AK 8.93%
    Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance HS 7.91%
    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure EPCOT 7.69%
    Seven Dwarfs Mine Train MK 7.48%
    Slinky Dog Dash HS 7.42%
    Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster HS 7.18%
    Space Mountain MK 6.92%
    Expedition Everest AK 6.88%

    A pattern emerges in this list. High-speed coasters (Test Track, Space Mountain, Slinky Dog), complex trackless systems (Rise of the Resistance, Remy’s), water rides (Kali River Rapids, Tiana’s), and brand-new attractions still being debugged (Tiana’s, which opened in 2024) dominate the bottom of the reliability chart. The more complex the ride system, the more failure points exist.

    The 10 Most Reliable Major Rides

    Attraction Park DOWN %
    Kilimanjaro Safaris AK 0.22%
    Avatar Flight of Passage AK 0.34%
    Soarin’ Around the World EPCOT 0.41%
    Star Tours HS 0.45%
    Na’vi River Journey AK 0.58%
    Toy Story Mania! HS 0.76%*
    Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin MK 1.14%*
    Gran Fiesta Tour EPCOT 1.27%*
    Haunted Mansion MK 1.47%*
    it’s a small world MK 1.63%*

    *Approximate from full dataset; rides with limited operating records excluded.

    Theater-style attractions (Soarin’, Star Tours) and slow-moving dark rides (Na’vi River Journey, Gran Fiesta Tour) consistently outperform thrill rides. Simpler mechanical systems have fewer failure points.

    When a Ride Comes Back: The Queue Recovery Window

    Here’s the finding that matters most for your day-to-day touring: when a ride comes back from a breakdown, the queue is temporarily shorter than normal.

    Across 961 recovery events in January 2025, we tracked what happened to wait times after a ride flipped from DOWN to OPERATING:

    Time After Recovery Wait as % of Normal
    0–15 minutes 87%
    15–30 minutes 97%
    30–60 minutes 104%
    60–90 minutes 104%

    In the first 15 minutes after a ride restarts, wait times run about 13% below normal. The queue cleared out during the downtime, and it takes a few minutes for guests to realize the ride is back and start lining up again. By 15–30 minutes, the effect has nearly vanished. And by the 30-minute mark, there’s actually a slight overshoot — waits run about 4% above normal as pent-up demand fills the queue.

    That 15-minute window is real, and it’s actionable. If you’re near a headliner that just came back online, get in line immediately. Waiting even 20 minutes eliminates the advantage entirely.


    Lightning Brain sends real-time ride status alerts, so you know the moment an attraction comes back online — giving you a head start on that 15-minute recovery window. Available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.


    Looking at specific headliners tells a similar story. Rise of the Resistance posts an average 59.5-minute wait in the 30 minutes after recovery versus its normal 62-minute average — a modest 4% discount. But Space Mountain shows a much larger effect, dropping 13–17% below its normal average after coming back up. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, which goes down frequently enough to be almost routine, sees waits drop as much as 22% post-recovery.

    How Long Do Breakdowns Last?

    Across all 12,664 breakdown incidents in 2025, the median downtime was 30 minutes. The average was 46 minutes, pulled up by a long tail of extended outages.

    • 25th percentile: 15 minutes (a quick reset)
    • Median: 30 minutes (the typical breakdown)
    • 75th percentile: 60 minutes (a more serious issue)
    • 90th percentile: 105 minutes (you’re probably not riding this today)

    Some rides tend toward longer outages when they do go down. Space Mountain averages 90 minutes per incident (with a 95-minute median, suggesting consistently long repairs). Seven Dwarfs Mine Train averages 68 minutes. Rise of the Resistance averages 55 minutes. At the shorter end, many flat rides and spinning attractions recover in under 20 minutes.

    The Magic Kingdom Problem

    Magic Kingdom deserves a closer look because its hourly pattern is the most dramatic of any park. At 9 AM, its DOWN rate is 3.82% — the highest of any park at any hour. It never dips below 2.4% even at its midday low, and by evening it climbs to 4.13% at 7–8 PM. That means during evening hours, roughly 1 in 25 attraction-checks at Magic Kingdom comes back as DOWN.

    Compare that to Animal Kingdom, which peaks at just 2.38% during its 5 PM high and sits below 1% for most of the morning. EPCOT stays remarkably flat, hovering between 1.3% and 1.6% from 11 AM through 8 PM.

    Hollywood Studios runs hot all day. Its 9 AM failure rate of 4.31% is the worst park-hour combination in the dataset, reflecting the startup challenges of its complex attractions. But unlike Magic Kingdom, it trends downward through the day rather than spiking again in the evening.

    What This Means for Your Touring Strategy

    Ride headliners between 11 AM and 2 PM for the best reliability. This is the lowest-breakdown window across all four parks. Yes, wait times are higher during this stretch, but you’re less likely to reach the front of a line only to have the ride go down.

    Plan for breakdowns at Magic Kingdom more than anywhere else. With a 3.18% failure rate and 7,258 incidents in 2025, breakdowns are a near-certainty during any full-day visit. Build buffer time into your MK touring plan.

    If a ride goes down near you, don’t leave — hover. The 15-minute post-recovery window offers a genuine advantage. When you see a ride flip from DOWN to OPERATING, that’s your cue to walk over and join the queue before it rebuilds.

    Visit in March or February for the most reliable ride experience. The difference between March (1.42% failure rate) and August (3.17%) is more than double. Summer visitors should expect more breakdowns as a baseline reality.

    Don’t count on Test Track, Tiana’s, or Rise of the Resistance operating all day. All three go down more than 7% of the time. If these are must-dos, ride them early and have a backup plan.

    Trust the workhorses. Kilimanjaro Safaris, Flight of Passage, Soarin’, and Star Tours are among the most reliable rides in all of Disney World. If you need a guaranteed experience, these deliver.

    Limitations

    Our data captures status every five minutes, so very brief outages (under five minutes) may not appear. We can’t distinguish between weather-related closures and mechanical failures within the DOWN status — Disney uses the same code for both. We also lack internal data on the nature of repairs, so we can’t determine root causes. The queue recovery analysis relies on posted wait times, which Disney sometimes adjusts strategically and may not perfectly reflect actual queue length immediately after a restart.

    The Bottom Line

    Disney World ride breakdowns follow predictable patterns: they peak at park open and again in the afternoon, surge during summer months, and hit hardest at Magic Kingdom. The median outage lasts 30 minutes, and when a ride comes back online, there’s a brief 15-minute window where waits dip below normal before pent-up demand pushes them slightly above. Complex thrill rides fail at 5–13x the rate of simple dark rides and theater attractions.

    None of this means you should avoid headliners — it means you should plan around the reality that they go down. Build flexibility into your touring day, keep an eye on real-time ride status, and when a ride comes back from a breakdown, move fast. That 15-minute window won’t last.

    Plan smarter: lightningbrain.app · App Store

  • Daily Park Report: April 7, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Hit 10/10 While Animal Kingdom Sat Nearly Empty

    Three out of four Walt Disney World parks were slammed on Tuesday, April 7 — but the fourth told a completely different story. Hollywood Studios posted a 57.5-minute median wait, nearly 28% above its already-high 30-day average, earning a rare 10/10 Extreme crowd level. Magic Kingdom ran at 9/10. EPCOT clocked in at 8/10. And then there was Animal Kingdom, sitting at a quiet 3/10 with a 24.4-minute median — 39% below its 30-day average. Same resort, same day, wildly different experiences depending on which park you walked into.

    The driving force behind Tuesday’s crush was the convergence of multiple spring break calendars. NYC Public Schools, several New Jersey districts, and Atlanta Public Schools were all on recess simultaneously, putting the resort squarely in the April 6-10 peak overlap window. Layer on a rainy 68-degree day with 0.67 inches of precipitation and 88% humidity, and you get exactly what the data showed: guests packing into the parks with the most indoor ride capacity while largely skipping the one built around outdoor experiences.

    Hollywood Studios: A Ceiling Day

    A 10/10 is as high as it goes, and Hollywood Studios earned it. The 57.5-minute median means even mid-tier attractions were posting significant waits all day. The peak hit at 4:00 PM with a staggering 77.5-minute median — late afternoon on a rainy day when guests had nowhere else to go. Star Tours averaged 25 minutes, five times its usual 5-minute walk-on, which tells you how thoroughly every queue in the park was absorbing demand. Tower of Terror going down for nearly an hour during peak afternoon only compressed the available ride capacity further. When Toy Story Mania closed for 43 minutes around 1:00 PM, that removed another high-capacity absorber from the equation. On a 10/10 day, every closure compounds the pressure on everything else.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed but Survivable

    A 9/10 crowd level with a 24.1-minute median represents a genuinely packed Magic Kingdom — about a fifth above the 30-day norm. Peak hour landed at 2:00 PM with 35-minute medians, the classic mid-afternoon crush. The Barnstormer averaged 33 minutes, well above its typical 20, signaling that Fantasyland was absorbing heavy family traffic. “it’s a small world” ran at 25 minutes, roughly double its baseline — another indoor ride benefiting from the rainy-day effect.

    Space Mountain had a rough day operationally. It went down from 3:21 to 5:16 PM, came back for under two hours, then closed again at 6:58 PM and never reopened. That’s the park’s flagship thrill ride unavailable for most of the afternoon and the entire evening. Pirates of the Caribbean also closed for over an hour in the early evening. On a 9/10 day, losing headliner capacity in back-to-back windows is painful — though the data suggests crowds were already so distributed across the park that no single closure created an obvious spillover spike.

    EPCOT: Test Track’s Three-Strike Day

    EPCOT’s 8/10 crowd level and 27.7-minute median were elevated but not extreme — until you look at what guests actually dealt with on individual attractions. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure averaged 95 minutes, nearly 60% above its typical 60. Soarin’ ran at 85 minutes. The Seas with Nemo and Friends doubled to 30 minutes. Mission: SPACE hit 25 minutes. The Flower and Garden Festival likely contributed foot traffic, but these wait times reflect genuine ride demand from spring break crowds seeking indoor experiences on a wet day.

    Test Track was the operational headache of the day — three separate closures totaling over six and a half hours. It went down from 10:20 AM to 12:27 PM, again from 2:48 to 4:42 PM, and a third time from 5:03 to 7:46 PM. For practical purposes, it was unavailable for most of the operating day. Spaceship Earth added its own troubles with a nearly two-and-a-half-hour morning closure and another 31-minute outage in the late afternoon. Losing two of EPCOT’s highest-capacity attractions simultaneously during the morning hours pushed demand onto everything else, which helps explain why even Nemo doubled its typical wait. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind also had a brief 22-minute closure in the evening.

    Animal Kingdom: The Outlier

    While three parks ran hot, Animal Kingdom posted a 3/10 — genuinely light by any standard. The 24.4-minute median was 39% below its 30-day average. Rain was the obvious factor. On a day with persistent precipitation, a park built around outdoor experiences like Kilimanjaro Safaris (which averaged just 25 minutes, about half its norm) and Kali River Rapids (15 minutes, well below its typical 40) simply doesn’t draw the same way. Zootopia: Better Zoogether averaged just 10 minutes. Expedition Everest closed for 45 minutes in the early evening. The spring break crowds were clearly in the resort — they just chose parks with more shelter.

    Downtime Report

    Beyond the Test Track saga at EPCOT and Space Mountain’s rough afternoon at Magic Kingdom, the morning hours saw a cluster of early closures. The Barnstormer, Mad Tea Party, and Under the Sea at Magic Kingdom all went down before 8:00 AM and came back within an hour — likely startup issues rather than sustained mechanical problems. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure had two separate closures totaling nearly two hours, which partially explains its 95-minute average wait: reduced throughput on a high-demand day inflates the posted times significantly. Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress closed at 7:26 PM and didn’t reopen, joining Space Mountain as an attraction that called it a night early.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, April 8

    Yesterday’s prediction landed well — we nailed Magic Kingdom (predicted 7-9, got 9), EPCOT (predicted 6-8, got 8), and came close on Hollywood Studios (predicted 7-9, got 10). The miss was Animal Kingdom, where we predicted 5-7 and it came in at 3. The rain-driven avoidance of outdoor parks was sharper than expected.

    Today looks similar in structure: same spring break crowds, a forecast calling for drizzle-to-rain throughout the day, and temperatures warming slightly to 73 degrees. The same school districts remain on break, and we’re still inside the April 6-10 peak overlap. Expect Hollywood Studios to remain the hottest park in the resort, likely in the 8-10/10 range again — it’s the default choice for spring breakers in wet weather. Magic Kingdom should run 7-9/10, and EPCOT 6-8/10 with Flower and Garden continuing to draw foot traffic. Animal Kingdom is the wildcard: if rain persists, it could run below the floor again in practice, but the spring break pressure keeps our call at 5-6/10.

    Strategy: If you have flexibility, Animal Kingdom remains your best bet for manageable waits. Rope-drop Hollywood Studios if it’s your must-do — afternoon waits there have been brutal. At EPCOT, check Test Track’s status before building your plan around it.

    Yesterday’s rain created a stark divide — three parks overwhelmed, one nearly empty. That kind of split-park dynamic is exactly what Lightning Brain detects, so you never waste touring hours at the crowded half. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 6, 2026

    Three Parks Hit the Ceiling on Post-Easter Monday

    Magic Kingdom, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom all pushed into 9/10 or 10/10 territory yesterday — the kind of resort-wide surge that even seasoned visitors rarely see on a Monday. Hollywood Studios posted a 55-minute median wait, nearly a quarter above its already-elevated 30-day average. Magic Kingdom wasn’t far behind at 10/10 with a 25.6-minute median. And while EPCOT technically registered as the “light” park at 7/10, a 22-minute median is still a Heavy day by any normal standard. The day after Easter, with NYC, New Jersey, and Atlanta public schools all on spring break simultaneously, simply overwhelmed the resort.

    Conditions didn’t help cool things off — 85 degrees and 81% humidity made for a sticky day, and a rain band rolled through around 5:00 PM that temporarily shut down eight outdoor attractions across the resort. But the crowds had already done their damage by then.

    Hollywood Studios: A 10/10 Day with Nowhere to Hide

    Hollywood Studios bore the brunt of the spring break crush. A 55-minute median wait is Extreme by any measure, and the park hit its stride early — peaking at 11:00 AM with a staggering 70-minute median across reporting attractions. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run averaged 95 minutes, well above its typical 60, while Star Tours tripled its usual 5-minute wait to 15 — a sign that even secondary attractions were absorbing significant overflow. Tower of Terror added insult to injury by going down for 47 minutes in the evening, removing one of the park’s higher-capacity rides right when guests needed it most.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed From Open to Storm

    Magic Kingdom matched Hollywood Studios at 10/10 with a 25.6-minute median — roughly 28% above its 30-day norm. The park peaked at noon with a 40-minute median, and the pressure was visible even in attractions that normally function as walk-ons. “it’s a small world” averaged 30 minutes, double its typical wait. Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room hit 25 minutes — a sit-down show that usually clears in 10. Tomorrowland Speedway sat at 25 minutes. When the low-demand attractions are running those numbers, you know every inch of the park is feeling the squeeze.

    Pirates of the Caribbean was offline for 95 minutes starting at 9:00 AM, removing one of the park’s best crowd-absorbing rides during rope drop. And Haunted Mansion went down at 5:22 PM and never reopened, compounding the impact of the 5 PM weather closures that also took out Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Jungle Cruise, and the Railroad for about an hour.

    Animal Kingdom: Everest’s Morning Outage Rippled Through Pandora

    Animal Kingdom hit 9/10 with a 48.8-minute median, peaking at 1:00 PM with an 80-minute median — a punishing midday for anyone touring without Lightning Lane. Kali River Rapids averaged 80 minutes, double its typical wait. In an interesting twist, the warm weather that usually boosts water ride demand combined with spring break volume to create genuinely long waits on an attraction guests often walk onto in cooler months.

    Expedition Everest was offline for nearly three hours starting at 10:54 AM — a mechanical closure right during the late-morning push. With one of the park’s two headliner coasters unavailable, demand concentrated on Flight of Passage and Na’vi River Journey, likely contributing to that brutal 1:00 PM peak.

    EPCOT: The Relative Refuge

    EPCOT was the clear best-park play yesterday at 7/10, actually dipping about 11% below its 30-day average. The Flower and Garden Festival may have contributed foot traffic, but festival-goers tend to eat and drink their way around World Showcase rather than queue for rides. The Seas with Nemo and Friends averaged 25 minutes — well above its typical 15 — suggesting guests were seeking air-conditioned shelter on a humid day. Test Track’s late-afternoon outage (4:26 PM onward, never reopened) removed EPCOT’s top-demand attraction for the evening, though by that point the weather closures were already reshaping the park’s dynamics. Frozen Ever After also went down for 78 minutes during the same window.

    The 5 PM Storm Cluster

    A rain band swept across property between 5:00 and 6:00 PM, triggering weather-protocol closures on eight outdoor attractions spanning all four parks — Slinky Dog Dash, both Railroad stations, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Jungle Cruise, Expedition Everest, Kali River Rapids, and Journey of Water. Most reopened within the hour, but the timing overlapped with mechanical closures on Haunted Mansion, Carousel of Progress, and Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor at Magic Kingdom. For guests in the park at 5:30 PM, the combination left a thin menu of operating attractions and pushed indoor ride waits higher through the evening.

    Tuesday Prediction: Rain Reshapes but Doesn’t Erase Spring Break

    A quick note on yesterday’s forecast: we predicted 7-8/10 across the board, and while we nailed EPCOT’s 7/10, we underestimated Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios by two full levels each. The post-Easter Monday crush was bigger than our model expected — lesson learned about the compounding effect of multiple large school districts on break simultaneously.

    Today brings a dramatically different weather picture: rain is likely throughout the day, with precipitation chances above 67% across every time block and a high of only 69°F — a 16-degree drop from yesterday. But those spring breaks haven’t ended. NYC, New Jersey, and Atlanta schools are still out, and we’re in the April 6-10 peak overlap window.

    Expect crowds to moderate from yesterday’s extremes but stay well above baseline. Rain typically shifts demand toward indoor-heavy parks — Hollywood Studios and EPCOT benefit from more covered queue space, while Animal Kingdom’s outdoor-heavy lineup sees the biggest drop. Predict Magic Kingdom at 7-9/10, Hollywood Studios at 7-9/10, EPCOT at 6-8/10, and Animal Kingdom at 5-7/10. If you’re heading out, EPCOT’s festival booths plus indoor rides make it the best rainy-day option. Bring ponchos and target outdoor attractions during heavier downpours when other guests head for cover.

    See the Crowds Before They See You

    Yesterday’s three-park surge caught a lot of families off guard — but it didn’t have to. Lightning Brain tracks crowd pressure across all four parks in real time, so you can pivot to the lighter park before wasting hours in a packed queue. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 5, 2026

    Easter Sunday at Disney World: Heavy Crowds, but Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom Stayed Surprisingly Manageable

    Easter Sunday brought 87-degree heat and tens of thousands of guests to Walt Disney World — and yet two of the four parks posted wait times below their 30-day averages. Hollywood Studios came in at a 6/10 with a 38.7-minute median, 14% under its recent norm. Animal Kingdom told the same story at 6/10 with a 36.9-minute median. For the single biggest holiday of spring, that’s a notable miss from what many guests probably expected walking through the turnstiles.

    Magic Kingdom and EPCOT absorbed the lion’s share of Easter demand, both landing at 7/10 — heavy but not crushing. Conditions were near-ideal for a park day: mostly clear skies, minimal rain, and warm enough to make every water ride look appealing. The heat pushed Kali River Rapids to a 65-minute average at Animal Kingdom, well above its typical 40 minutes — guests were clearly seeking relief.

    Magic Kingdom — 7/10 (Heavy)

    Magic Kingdom ran right at its 30-day average of 20 minutes median, which on Easter Sunday actually represents a win for guests who expected worse. The crowd build was gradual, peaking at 2:00 PM with a 30-minute median — a late peak that suggests families took their time after Easter morning activities before heading to the parks.

    The biggest disruption came from Seven Dwarfs Mine Train going down for 87 minutes starting just before 1:00 PM, right as the park hit its peak. Losing Fantasyland’s headliner during the busiest hour of the busiest day of the week is rough timing. Mad Tea Party also closed during that same afternoon window for 37 minutes, compounding the Fantasyland squeeze. Meanwhile, Walt Disney World Railroad posted just a 5-minute average — a fraction of its typical 20 — suggesting guests were prioritizing rides over transportation experiences on a day when every minute counted.

    Winnie the Pooh had a rough evening with two separate closures totaling nearly 90 minutes between 6:00 and 8:00 PM. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure also took a 24-minute morning hit but recovered early enough to avoid major guest impact.

    EPCOT — 7/10 (Heavy)

    EPCOT ran the heaviest relative to its own calibration, hitting 7/10 with a 22.7-minute median. The Flower and Garden Festival is in full swing, and Easter Sunday brought the kind of crowd that fills World Showcase by late morning. The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 35-minute median, then eased through the afternoon — a pattern consistent with festival guests arriving early to hit gardens and food booths before the heat set in.

    The morning was rough operationally. Frozen Ever After was offline for over an hour starting at 10:02 AM, Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure missed the first 42 minutes of its day, and Test Track took a 23-minute pause. That’s three of EPCOT’s top draws unavailable during the opening surge. Living with the Land posted just a 5-minute average despite the festival crowds — about a third of its usual wait — suggesting guests were focused on the headliners and outdoor booths rather than the gentle boat ride.

    Hollywood Studios — 6/10 (Busy)

    Hollywood Studios came in lighter than expected at 6/10, with its 38.7-minute median sitting well below the 30-day average of 45 minutes. Easter Sunday guests appear to have prioritized Magic Kingdom and EPCOT, leaving Studios more manageable than a typical recent weekday.

    Rise of the Resistance had a difficult day, going down twice: a 67-minute morning closure starting at 9:15 AM and a 43-minute evening closure at 7:22 PM from which it did not reopen. Losing Galaxy’s Edge’s anchor ride twice on Easter is significant, though the park’s lower-than-expected overall crowds may have softened the blow. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway also closed for 31 minutes in the early evening.

    Animal Kingdom — 6/10 (Busy)

    Animal Kingdom followed the same pattern as Studios — a 6/10 that came in slightly below its 30-day norm. The park peaked at noon with a striking 60-minute median, suggesting a concentrated midday rush rather than sustained all-day pressure. Kali River Rapids was the standout at 65 minutes average, but on an 87-degree Easter Sunday, a long wait for a water ride is simply guests making rational choices. Zootopia: Better Zoogether posted just 10 minutes against a typical 15, perhaps benefiting from guests gravitating toward thrill rides instead.

    Downtime Report

    Across the resort, 17 closures exceeded 15 minutes — a busy day for maintenance teams. The most impactful was Seven Dwarfs Mine Train’s 87-minute afternoon closure at Magic Kingdom during peak hour. Rise of the Resistance’s double failure at Hollywood Studios cost guests a combined 110 minutes of availability on Easter, with the ride never recovering from its evening closure. EPCOT’s morning was particularly bumpy, with Frozen Ever After, Remy’s, and Test Track all going down within the first 90 minutes of operation — though all three recovered before the 11:00 AM peak.

    Today’s Outlook: Monday, April 6

    Our Easter Sunday predictions landed well — nailing three of four parks and missing Hollywood Studios by just one level. We’ll take that on a holiday weekend.

    Today is Easter Monday, and while it’s not a federal holiday, the crowd pressure remains extreme. NYC public schools, New Jersey districts, and Atlanta Public Schools are all still on spring break, and many families extend Easter into a full resort week. Temperatures drop to a more comfortable 80-degree high under mostly cloudy skies, with a slight chance of afternoon showers — comfortable touring weather that keeps guests in the parks longer rather than driving them to the pool.

    Park Predicted Range Rationale
    Magic Kingdom 7-8/10 Easter-week families default to MK; expect sustained pressure all day
    EPCOT 7-8/10 Flower and Garden plus spring break families keep this heavy
    Hollywood Studios 7-8/10 Yesterday’s relative softness may not repeat — Monday park-hoppers often shift here
    Animal Kingdom 7-8/10 Cooler temps may redistribute some water-ride demand, but break crowds keep the floor high

    Strategy: With all four parks likely running heavy, your best move is an early morning rope drop at Hollywood Studios or Animal Kingdom — both ran lighter than the castle parks yesterday, and that pattern could hold even as overall levels rise. Get your headliners done before 11:00 AM, then consider hopping to EPCOT for a Flower and Garden afternoon when ride waits historically ease after 3:00 PM.

    These park-to-park crowd splits are exactly what Lightning Brain tracks in real time — so you can see which park is running lighter right now, not just in yesterday’s recap. Lightning Brain is available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Weekly Park Report: March 29 – April 4, 2026

    EPCOT Held the Line While the Rest of the Resort Buckled Under Spring Break

    Here’s what stood out this week: with Hollywood Studios and Magic Kingdom both hitting 9/10 crowd levels and Animal Kingdom surging to 7/10, EPCOT posted a 25-minute median — exactly its 6-week average. Zero change. The biggest spring break overlap of the season rolled through Walt Disney World from March 29 through April 4, and one park simply absorbed it without flinching. If you’re heading to the parks next week for Easter, that’s worth remembering.

    Week at a Glance

    This was the busiest week of 2026 so far, and it wasn’t close. The resort-wide median hit 30 minutes, up from 25 last week and well above the 20-minute baseline that held through most of February and early March. That 30-minute mark lands this week busier than 76% of all days measured this year. The driver was clear: overlapping spring breaks from New Jersey, Philadelphia, and — starting Thursday — New York City public schools created the kind of multi-district pileup that turns moderate weeks into heavy ones. Saturday’s pre-Easter positioning only added fuel. Hollywood Studios bore the brunt, spending six of seven days at a 50-minute median. EPCOT, remarkably, stayed flat.

    Park-by-Park Analysis

    Hollywood Studios

    Hollywood Studios was relentless this week. A 50-minute median puts it squarely at 9/10 — Packed — and 25% above its 6-week average of 40 minutes. Six of seven days landed at exactly 50 minutes, with only Saturday dipping slightly to 45. There was no light day. Rise of the Resistance averaged 94 minutes, more than 50% above its 30-day baseline of 63 minutes. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run climbed to 74 minutes, nearly 39% over typical. Even Star Tours — usually a reliable walk-on — doubled to 19 minutes. The 90th percentile hitting 105 minutes means the top-tier attractions were routinely posting waits north of 90 minutes, and the peak wait of 210 minutes suggests at least one afternoon where a headliner became essentially untouchable without Lightning Lane. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway didn’t help matters with 13 downtime incidents through the week, pushing already-stressed queues at other attractions even higher during those windows.

    Magic Kingdom

    Magic Kingdom also earned a 9/10, with a 25-minute median that’s 25% above the 6-week average of 20. But the crowd pressure here showed up in an unusual place: the kiddie rides. Barnstormer jumped 46% over baseline. Magic Carpets of Aladdin climbed 41%. Dumbo hit 24 minutes, up 36%. Mad Tea Party, Prince Charming Regal Carrousel — all running well above their norms. This is the fingerprint of spring break families. When the demographic skews young, these smaller-capacity attractions get hammered in ways the headline rides don’t always reflect. The bigger concern was reliability. Haunted Mansion logged 21 downtime incidents. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train had 13. Peter Pan’s Flight had 14. Space Mountain had 10. That’s four of the park’s top draws cycling through repeated interruptions, and on a week where the park was already at capacity pressure, each closure compressed demand onto whatever was still running.

    Animal Kingdom

    Animal Kingdom ran heavy at 7/10, with a 40-minute median representing a 33% jump over the 6-week average — the largest percentage increase of any park. Monday and Saturday both peaked at 50-minute medians, while midweek offered slight relief in the mid-30s. Flight of Passage averaged 92 minutes, a 34% climb over its baseline of 69. But the real outlier was Kali River Rapids at 60 minutes — nearly double its typical 32. Warming spring temperatures and spring break families made the water ride a target, and its relatively low hourly capacity couldn’t keep up. The 185-minute peak wait and 90-minute 90th percentile confirm that Animal Kingdom’s headliners were consistently strained all week.

    EPCOT

    And then there’s EPCOT. A 25-minute median, 7/10 crowd level, and exactly zero deviation from the 6-week average. How? The Flower & Garden Festival was in full swing all week, drawing foot traffic to the World Showcase booths, but festival crowds don’t necessarily translate to ride queues. Soarin’ was the one exception, averaging 57 minutes (31% above baseline), but most of the park’s attractions held steady. Canada Far and Wide posted a 13-minute average, a 32% jump, but that’s still just 13 minutes. The 240-minute peak wait is eye-catching — likely a Guardians of the Galaxy spike — but the median tells the real story: EPCOT’s capacity handled spring break without buckling. Thursday’s After Hours event had no impact on daytime numbers, as expected for a post-close event. Test Track’s 39 downtime incidents are a different story, though — that’s more than five per day, and guests who built their afternoon around that ride found themselves pivoting repeatedly.

    Daily Patterns

    Day Resort Avg Busiest Park Lightest Park Notes
    Sun 3/29 ~33 min HS (45) MK (20) NJ/Philly breaks not yet started
    Mon 3/30 ~38 min AK/HS (50) EP/MK (25) NJ + Philly breaks begin; peak overlap starts
    Tue 3/31 ~35 min HS (50) EP/MK (25) Peak overlap continues
    Wed 4/1 ~33 min HS (50) EP (20) Midweek slight EPCOT dip
    Thu 4/2 ~33 min HS (50) EP (20) NYC schools join; EPCOT After Hours
    Fri 4/3 ~35 min HS (50) MK (20) Full three-district overlap
    Sat 4/4 ~35 min AK (50) MK/EP (20-25) Easter Eve arrivals

    The striking thing about this week is how flat it was — not in overall level, but in day-to-day variance. Hollywood Studios barely budged from 50 minutes regardless of the day. There was no obvious “light day” to exploit. Monday’s peak came from the NJ and Philly spring break wave arriving in force, but even Sunday — before those breaks officially kicked in — was already elevated. By Thursday, when NYC public schools added to the mix, the resort was already saturated. The additional demand had nowhere to go. Saturday’s pre-Easter positioning brought Animal Kingdom to its weekly peak of 50, as families arriving for Easter Sunday stacked onto an already-heavy week.

    Reliability Report

    Test Track was the story of the week with 39 downtime incidents — averaging more than five interruptions per day. For guests who park-hopped to EPCOT expecting a smooth afternoon, that was a frustrating surprise, and it likely contributed to some of the queue pressure on Soarin’ and Guardians as guests reshuffled their plans. Over at Magic Kingdom, the combined weight of Haunted Mansion (21 incidents), Peter Pan’s Flight (14), Seven Dwarfs Mine Train (13), and Space Mountain (10) created a difficult week for anyone trying to tour Fantasyland or Tomorrowland systematically. Spaceship Earth at EPCOT added 27 incidents of its own. On a lighter week, these interruptions are manageable — you wait twenty minutes and try again. During a 9/10 week, each closure means longer waits at everything else.

    Next Week Outlook

    Easter Sunday kicks off next week, and if you think this week was busy, brace yourself. NYC spring break continues through the first half, and Easter weekend historically ranks among the top five busiest periods of the year at Walt Disney World. Expect Sunday and Monday to push Hollywood Studios and Magic Kingdom back to 9/10 or higher. Your best strategy: target EPCOT and Animal Kingdom early in the week, and lean on mornings aggressively — this week’s data showed that even during packed conditions, first-hour waits ran substantially below afternoon peaks. By Wednesday or Thursday, as school breaks wind down, conditions should ease noticeably. If you have any schedule flexibility, push your Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios days to the back half of the week.

    Plan Smarter This Spring

    This week proved that even during the busiest spring break overlap of the year, the right park choice makes an enormous difference — EPCOT held steady while Hollywood Studios ran at Packed levels every single day. Lightning Brain’s park-specific crowd modeling helps you find exactly these kinds of gaps before you commit to your plan. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 4, 2026

    Animal Kingdom Surged to Easter Eve’s Biggest Surprise

    Four parks, all running heavy, the day before Easter — no shock there. But the standout was Animal Kingdom posting a 25% jump above its 30-day average, hitting an 8/10 with a 43.8-minute median wait. That is firmly in “Very Heavy” territory for a park that often plays second fiddle on big weekends. With NYC schools and multiple New Jersey districts on spring recess, and Easter Sunday looming, Saturday became the day everyone tried to check Animal Kingdom off the list. The weather cooperated fully: 85 degrees, mostly clear skies, and zero rain. A textbook spring scorcher that sent guests flooding toward Pandora and — notably — the water rides.

    Animal Kingdom: The Hottest Park in Every Sense

    The 85-degree heat reshaped Animal Kingdom’s wait landscape. Kali River Rapids posted an 80-minute average — double its typical 40 minutes — as guests lined up to get soaked. Avatar Flight of Passage climbed to 110 minutes, well above its usual 70, and the park’s noon peak hour hit a 75-minute median. That noon spike tells you something: families arrived at rope drop, worked through the morning, and converged on headliners right around lunch. Flight of Passage also took a 28-minute mid-afternoon hit when it went down around 12:40 PM, which likely pushed some of that demand into an already-swelling Kali queue.

    Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance Had a Rough Morning

    On paper, Hollywood Studios landed at 8/10 with a 43.5-minute median — actually a hair below its 30-day average. But guests who arrived before noon faced a different park than those who showed up later. Rise of the Resistance was offline from 8:25 AM until noon, a nearly four-hour closure that removed the park’s top headliner during prime morning touring. When it finally reopened, pent-up demand pushed its average wait to 150 minutes — more than double its typical 65. Toy Story Mania added to the frustration with two separate closures totaling about 80 minutes in the afternoon. The saving grace: with demand distributed across remaining attractions, the overall median stayed manageable. Star Tours, usually a walk-on at 5 minutes, crept up to 10 — a small number, but it signals how displaced riders were hunting for alternatives.

    Magic Kingdom: Steady and Heavy

    Magic Kingdom ran at 8/10 with a 21.1-minute median, slightly above its recent baseline. The 11:00 AM peak aligns with the classic Easter-weekend pattern: resort guests using early entry, followed by a late-morning wave from off-site visitors. The bigger story was the mechanical gauntlet. Mad Tea Party was down from park open until 12:26 PM — nearly five hours. Space Mountain closed for 34 minutes in the early morning and then again for 84 minutes in the early afternoon. Haunted Mansion took a 58-minute hit in the evening. None of these individually reshaped the park’s crowd profile, but guests bouncing between Fantasyland and Tomorrowland kept finding headliners temporarily unavailable. Despite the disruptions, Magic Kingdom’s depth of attractions kept median waits from spiraling past the low 20s.

    EPCOT: The Relative Oasis

    EPCOT came in at 7/10 — still heavy, but the lightest park on property with a 23.5-minute median, slightly below its 30-day average. The curious data point: an 8:00 AM peak hour with a 45-minute median, driven by early entry guests rushing Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind and Test Track before standby crowds arrived. By midday, waits had settled considerably. Living with the Land posted just a 5-minute average, well below its usual 15 — surprising given the Flower and Garden Festival is in full swing. Festival guests appear to be spending their time on outdoor kitchen circuits rather than queuing for boat rides. Frozen Ever After had a rough day with two separate closures totaling nearly two and a half hours, and Spaceship Earth was down for 97 minutes in the morning.

    Downtime Report

    Saturday was an unusually rough day for ride reliability across the resort. The headline was Rise of the Resistance’s morning-long closure at Hollywood Studios, which compressed all of the park’s headliner demand into the afternoon and evening, inflating that 150-minute average. At Magic Kingdom, the combination of Mad Tea Party’s five-hour outage and Space Mountain’s two separate closures meant Fantasyland and Tomorrowland both had reduced capacity during the busiest stretch of the day. EPCOT’s Frozen Ever After went down twice, removing a key World Showcase anchor for much of the afternoon. In total, the four parks logged 20 significant downtime incidents — a volume that turns an 8/10 crowd day into something that felt heavier than the numbers suggest.

    Easter Sunday Outlook

    Our Saturday predictions landed well — nailing three of four parks and coming within one level on Hollywood Studios. That gives us confidence heading into today’s call.

    Easter Sunday at Walt Disney World follows its own rhythm. Morning attendance typically runs lighter as some families attend services, but by early afternoon the parks fill. With NYC and New Jersey school breaks still active, the guest pool isn’t shrinking. Clear skies and another 85-degree day mean no weather relief.

    Park Predicted Range Notes
    Magic Kingdom 7-9/10 Easter’s marquee park; expect a slow start and a packed afternoon
    Hollywood Studios 7-9/10 If Rise stays operational, demand concentrates hard on Galaxy’s Edge
    EPCOT 6-8/10 Flower and Garden plus Easter — World Showcase will be shoulder-to-shoulder
    Animal Kingdom 6-8/10 Heat pushes water ride demand again; early morning is your best window

    Strategy for today: If you can start at Animal Kingdom at rope drop and hit Flight of Passage before 10 AM, you will save yourself an hour-plus in queue time. EPCOT remains the best option for guests who want a full day without feeling crushed — but plan to be in World Showcase by 11 AM before the afternoon wave builds. At Magic Kingdom, the morning window before the post-church surge is golden. Avoid midday at any park if you can; 85 degrees and Easter Sunday crowds are a combination that rewards early risers and evening visitors.

    Track the Easter Crowds Live

    Twenty significant ride closures in a single day — that is exactly the kind of operational chaos that can wreck a touring plan built on static schedules. Lightning Brain tracks wait times and attraction status in real time so you can pivot the moment a headliner goes down, not after you have already walked across the park. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 3, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Slammed to 10/10 as Spring Break Peak Crests

    A 56-minute median wait. That is where Hollywood Studios landed yesterday, Friday, April 3 — the final day of the March 30-April 3 peak spring break overlap window. Every crowd level in the park maxed out at 10/10, with the morning peak hour pushing median waits to 70 minutes. And the pain was compounded by Rise of the Resistance going offline for nearly three hours right at rope drop, funneling all that pent-up demand onto Smugglers Run (85-minute average, roughly 55% above its norm) and Tower of Terror, which itself closed for almost an hour mid-morning.

    Conditions were near-perfect for a crowd surge: 85 degrees, partly cloudy, minimal rain. But weather was a supporting actor. The main driver was the simultaneous overlap of NYC Public Schools, Philadelphia, and multiple New Jersey districts all on spring recess — the biggest feeder markets Walt Disney World sees outside of Christmas week. Friday also brings fresh arrivals for the Easter weekend, layering new guests on top of those already mid-trip.

    Hollywood Studios — 10/10 (Extreme)

    There is no sugarcoating a 10/10 day. The 56-minute median was nearly 25% above the 30-day average, and the peak hour at 11:00 AM saw 70-minute medians across operating attractions. Rise of the Resistance was unavailable from 8:01 AM until 10:50 AM — essentially the entire Early Entry window and first two hours of regular operation. That is a gut punch on any day, but on a day this crowded, it forced thousands of guests to pivot. Smugglers Run absorbed the brunt, inflating to 85 minutes. Tower of Terror’s own 52-minute closure starting at 9:56 AM meant the park’s two biggest thrill rides were simultaneously unavailable for nearly an hour. Star Tours, normally a 5-minute walk-on, averaged 20 minutes all day — a sign that guests were grabbing anything with a short posted wait. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway also went down briefly after 1:30 PM, adding another 17-minute gap in ride capacity.

    Magic Kingdom — 9/10 (Packed)

    Magic Kingdom ran packed all day at a 22-minute median, about 12% above its 30-day average. The peak hit at 1:00 PM with 30-minute medians — later than the other parks, which suggests a wave of guests arriving after morning frustrations at Studios. Space Mountain’s two-hour closure from 2:12 PM to 4:12 PM coincided almost exactly with an 81-minute Haunted Mansion closure starting at 3:25 PM. For about 45 minutes in the mid-afternoon, two of the park’s top-four capacity rides were simultaneously unavailable. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel averaged 10 minutes — double its typical 5 — which tells you something about how saturated Fantasyland was when even a carousel builds a meaningful queue. Pirates of the Caribbean also lost 49 minutes to a morning closure, and Buzz Lightyear was down for 43 minutes at park open.

    Animal Kingdom — 7/10 (Heavy)

    Animal Kingdom came in at 41.6 minutes median, about 19% above its 30-day baseline. The standout was Kali River Rapids, which averaged 70 minutes — double its typical wait. On an 85-degree day, that tracks perfectly: guests flock to the water ride when the heat is on. Expedition Everest lost 43 minutes to an early-morning closure but was operational before most day guests arrived, limiting the impact. The 11:00 AM peak hour matched Hollywood Studios, suggesting that the morning crowd wave hit both parks simultaneously rather than one feeding the other.

    EPCOT — 7/10 (Heavy)

    EPCOT was the relative bright spot, though “bright” is doing heavy lifting when the crowd level still reads 7/10. The 23-minute median actually came in about 7% below its 30-day average, making it the only park to dip under its recent baseline. The Flower & Garden Festival likely spread foot traffic across outdoor kitchens and garden exhibits rather than concentrating it in ride queues. The Seas with Nemo & Friends averaged 25 minutes — well above its usual 15 — likely benefiting from guests seeking air conditioning in the afternoon heat. Living with the Land, oddly, went the other direction at just 5 minutes, about a third of its typical wait. Journey Into Imagination with Figment had a rough day, closing three separate times for a combined total of nearly 200 minutes. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure also lost over an hour in the early evening.

    Downtime Report

    The headline outage was Rise of the Resistance’s 169-minute morning closure at Hollywood Studios. On a 10/10 day, losing the park’s most popular ride for nearly three hours during the highest-demand period is significant. The downstream effect was visible in Star Tours’ inflated waits and the general compression of standby queues across the park. At Magic Kingdom, the overlapping Space Mountain and Haunted Mansion closures created a mid-afternoon capacity crunch during what was already the park’s peak hour. EPCOT’s Figment situation — three separate closures totaling over three hours — suggests a persistent operational issue rather than a one-off problem, though any given closure had limited guest impact given the ride’s modest capacity.

    Saturday Prediction: Easter Eve

    Yesterday’s prediction swept all four parks — we called MK at 8-10 (actual: 9), EPCOT at 5-7 (actual: 7), Studios at 8-10 (actual: 10), and AK at 5-7 (actual: 7). A clean 4-for-4.

    Today is the Saturday before Easter, and while some spring break districts head home, NYC schools remain on recess and Easter weekend arrivals will more than backfill any departures. The weather forecast is ideal for park touring — 85 degrees, mostly clear, zero rain chance all day. That removes the one factor that might have offered a pressure release valve.

    Park Predicted Range Rationale
    Hollywood Studios 9-10/10 Saturday momentum plus Easter weekend arrivals; no reason to expect relief
    Magic Kingdom 8-10/10 Easter Eve is a draw for families; expect packed Fantasyland
    EPCOT 6-8/10 Flower & Garden draws foot traffic but queues may stay manageable
    Animal Kingdom 6-8/10 Hot weather will push Kali waits high again; shorter park hours limit total capacity

    Strategy: If you have park hopper flexibility, start at EPCOT for the best ratio of ride access to crowd density, then hop to Magic Kingdom after 2:00 PM as the Easter-eve family crowd begins to thin for dinner reservations. Avoid Hollywood Studios before noon unless you have a Lightning Lane reservation for Rise of the Resistance.

    Spring break crowds are reshaping wait times hour by hour, and yesterday proved that a single ride closure can rearrange the entire park’s queue landscape. Lightning Brain tracks these shifts in real time so you can adjust your plan before the lines build. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 2, 2026

    Two Parks Packed, Two Parks Comfortable: Spring Break’s Uneven Squeeze

    Hollywood Studios posted a 49-minute resort-wide median yesterday — a 9/10, firmly in “packed” territory — while Animal Kingdom, just a few miles away, sat at a manageable 5/10. That kind of lopsided split doesn’t happen by accident. With NYC, Philadelphia, and New Jersey school districts all on spring break simultaneously, the resort is absorbing serious volume, but guests are clustering hard around Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios, leaving breathing room at the other two parks.

    Conditions were warm and mostly clear, with highs reaching 80°F before an afternoon rain band rolled through around 4 PM. The weather played a supporting role in the day’s story — more on that shortly.

    Hollywood Studios: The Headliner Crush

    A 49-minute median puts Hollywood Studios well into packed territory, running about 23% above its 30-day average. The peak hit at 2 PM with a 60-minute median across operating attractions. Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance was the headline number: 165-minute average waits, nearly triple its usual 60-minute baseline. That’s a commitment — families were dedicating almost three hours of their day to a single attraction. Even Star Tours, typically a 5-minute walk-on, averaged 20 minutes as overflow from Galaxy’s Edge spilled into neighboring queues.

    Slinky Dog Dash went down for about an hour during the late-afternoon weather closure, but the damage was already done by then. This park was running hot all day, and spring break families with kids gravitating toward Toy Story Land and Galaxy’s Edge were the primary driver.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed but Battered by Downtime

    Magic Kingdom also registered a 9/10, with a 22.5-minute median that ran above its 30-day average. The peak came at 11 AM with a 35-minute median — standard spring break morning behavior as rope-drop crowds flood the headliners. But the real guest experience story here was Tiana’s Bayou Adventure going down from 8:02 AM until nearly 1 PM. That five-hour morning closure removed a major capacity sponge right when the park needed it most. With Tiana unavailable, demand redistributed across Fantasyland and Adventureland: The Barnstormer averaged 35 minutes (normally 20), Magic Carpets of Aladdin hit 30 minutes (double its baseline), and even “it’s a small world” climbed to 25 minutes.

    Then Seven Dwarfs Mine Train went offline for just over an hour starting around 3:49 PM, and Space Mountain followed at 4:42 PM for 86 minutes. When you lose two headliners in the same afternoon at a 9/10 park, there’s nowhere for demand to go. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel averaging 15 minutes — three times its typical wait — tells you just how compressed the remaining capacity was.

    EPCOT: The Flower & Garden Buffer

    EPCOT came in at 6/10 with a 22-minute median, actually running about 12% below its 30-day average despite the Flower & Garden Festival. This continues a familiar festival pattern: foot traffic is elevated, but guests are spending time at outdoor kitchens and garden exhibits rather than queuing for rides. Mission: SPACE was the one outlier, averaging 30 minutes against a typical 15 — likely families looking for a thrill that doesn’t require a 90-minute commitment.

    Test Track had a rough afternoon. It went down for nearly two hours around midday (12:18 PM to 2:12 PM), came back, then went down again during the weather closure from 4:08 PM to 6:11 PM. That’s over three and a half hours of lost capacity on EPCOT’s biggest draw. Frozen Ever After also went down twice, totaling about 90 minutes of downtime. Despite those hits, EPCOT’s overall median stayed comfortable — a testament to how festival guests behave differently than pure ride-focused visitors.

    Animal Kingdom: Spring Break’s Hidden Gem

    Animal Kingdom posted a 5/10 with a 34-minute median, essentially flat against its 30-day average. On a day when two parks hit 9/10, that’s notable. The 11 AM peak (65-minute median) was sharp but brief, and the afternoon weather closure from roughly 4 to 5:45 PM took Expedition Everest, Kali River Rapids, and both walking trails offline for about an hour and a half. Those closures compressed demand onto indoor attractions, but by then the park was already trending quieter in the late afternoon.

    Downtime Report

    Beyond the individual ride issues, a rain band between 4:03 PM and 5:48 PM triggered weather-protocol closures across seven outdoor attractions spanning three parks. At Hollywood Studios, Slinky Dog Dash closed for about an hour. At Animal Kingdom, Everest, Kali River Rapids, and both trails all shut down for roughly 100 minutes. At EPCOT, Test Track (already having a bad day), Journey of Water, and others followed protocol. The timing was particularly painful — late afternoon on a packed day means guests had limited remaining park time, and indoor attractions like Haunted Mansion (which was also down for mechanical reasons until 6:03 PM) couldn’t absorb the displaced demand.

    The morning Tiana’s Bayou Adventure closure was the day’s most consequential single downtime. Five hours offline at a 9/10 park during spring break morning touring — that’s thousands of guests who had to reroute their plans entirely.

    Friday Forecast: Last Day of Peak Overlap

    Our prediction model went four-for-four yesterday, nailing all four parks within range. We’ll take it.

    Today is the final day of the March 30 – April 3 peak overlap window, with NYC, Philly, and New Jersey districts still on break. Friday adds a layer: resort guests checking out tomorrow often hit the parks hard on their last full day, and dry weather with highs near 84°F removes any rain-related hesitation. Expect conditions similar to yesterday but with slightly better afternoon stability — no repeat of that 4 PM rain band in the forecast.

    Park Predicted Range Rationale
    Magic Kingdom 8-10/10 Last-day-of-trip energy plus Friday arrivals; if Tiana operates normally, slightly better distribution than yesterday
    Hollywood Studios 8-10/10 Spring break families continue to cluster here; Rise of the Resistance will draw long commitments again
    EPCOT 5-7/10 Flower & Garden keeps foot traffic up but ride demand stays moderate; After Hours tonight is irrelevant to daytime
    Animal Kingdom 5-7/10 Continues to fly under the radar as the resort’s pressure valve

    Strategy for today: If you have flexibility, start your morning at Animal Kingdom for Everest and Flight of Passage before the 11 AM peak, then hop to EPCOT for a festival-paced afternoon. Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios will be packed from rope drop — if those are must-dos, commit to early entry and accept longer waits after 10 AM.

    Yesterday’s 9/10 split showed exactly where spring break pressure concentrates — and where it doesn’t. That kind of park-to-park imbalance is exactly what Lightning Brain tracks in real time, so you can make smarter hopping decisions before the crowds shift. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 1, 2026

    A Tale of Two Resorts: Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios Maxed Out While EPCOT and Animal Kingdom Stayed Comfortable

    Wednesday delivered one of the sharpest crowd splits we’ve seen this spring. Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios both registered 10/10 — extreme conditions by any measure — while EPCOT and Animal Kingdom sat at a relaxed 5/10. If you happened to pick the wrong park yesterday, your experience was radically different from the family one monorail stop away.

    The weather wasn’t the culprit or the cure. Skies were mostly clear, the high hit 85°F, and there was zero rain. This was pure demand distribution, driven by spring break families from the Northeast — New Jersey and Philadelphia districts are on break — gravitating hard toward the two parks with the most kid-friendly headliners.

    Hollywood Studios: Extreme Crowds, Compounded by Downtime

    A 53-minute median wait is as high as Hollywood Studios gets. That’s 33% above the 30-day average, and it pushed every major attraction into genuinely long waits. The peak hit at 2:00 PM with a 65-minute median — meaning half the rides in the park posted waits above an hour during the hottest part of the afternoon.

    Making matters worse, Slinky Dog Dash went down twice: once in the early morning for nearly an hour, and again from 12:10 PM to 2:48 PM — a 157-minute closure that overlapped almost perfectly with the park’s peak window. With Toy Story Land’s headliner unavailable for over two and a half hours during the busiest stretch of the day, those guests had to go somewhere. Star Tours, normally a 5-minute walk-on, averaged 15 minutes all day. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway and Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run also had brief morning closures, though neither lasted long enough to reshape the day.

    Magic Kingdom: A 10/10 with an Ugly Evening

    Magic Kingdom’s 25.7-minute median doesn’t sound catastrophic until you remember this park’s baseline sits around 15 minutes. That gap puts it firmly at extreme levels, and the experience on the ground reflected it. Fantasyland bore the brunt: Dumbo posted 35-minute averages (normally 15), The Barnstormer matched that, and Magic Carpets of Aladdin doubled to 30. Even the spinning flat rides that usually absorb overflow — Mad Tea Party, Astro Orbiter — were running well above normal.

    The peak came early at 10:00 AM with a 40-minute median, suggesting spring break families were arriving at rope drop and hitting the headliners immediately. But the bigger story was the evening. Starting around 4:00 PM, Magic Kingdom lost attractions in rapid succession: Space Mountain went down for nearly an hour, Haunted Mansion closed for 71 minutes, TRON was offline for 75 minutes starting at 6:03 PM, and Under the Sea had its second closure of the day. For guests who had planned an evening strategy around those rides, the options evaporated quickly.

    EPCOT and Animal Kingdom: The Smart Plays

    EPCOT turned in an 18.5-minute median — 26% below its 30-day average and solidly comfortable touring. The Flower & Garden Festival draws foot traffic, but festival guests tend to graze the outdoor kitchens rather than queue for rides. Living with the Land posted just 5-minute waits, a third of its usual. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure did go down for just over an hour in the afternoon, and Frozen Ever After had a 45-minute morning closure, but neither derailed what was otherwise a smooth day.

    Animal Kingdom was nearly identical to its 30-day norm at a 34-minute median. The one blemish: Expedition Everest closed for almost two hours starting at 11:02 AM, right as the park hit its peak. With Everest offline during the busiest hour, guests likely shifted toward Kilimanjaro Safaris and Flight of Passage, keeping the overall median stable but concentrating demand on fewer attractions.

    Downtime Report

    Yesterday was rough for ride reliability, particularly at Magic Kingdom. Seven attractions went down for more than 45 minutes each across the resort. The worst guest impact was the late-afternoon sequence at Magic Kingdom: losing Space Mountain, Haunted Mansion, and TRON within a two-hour window effectively removed three of the park’s top-tier attractions simultaneously on a 10/10 crowd day. Guests who stayed past 6:00 PM found themselves competing for a much smaller pool of operating headliners.

    At Hollywood Studios, Slinky Dog Dash’s combined 214 minutes of downtime across two incidents meant the ride was unavailable for roughly a quarter of the operating day. On any crowd level that’s painful — at 10/10, it’s the difference between a frustrating day and a miserable one.

    Today’s Outlook: Thursday, April 2

    Our predictions yesterday landed perfectly — 4-for-4, with every park falling within the projected range. We’ll take that credibility into today’s forecast, though Thursday adds a new variable: NYC Public Schools begin spring recess, layering the country’s largest school district on top of the already-active New Jersey and Philadelphia breaks.

    Weather won’t be a factor. Clear to partly cloudy skies, a high of 84°F, and zero rain chance means nothing suppresses demand. EPCOT hosts a Disney After Hours event tonight, but remember — that’s a late-night add-on starting after regular park close, so it won’t affect daytime crowds.

    Park Predicted Range Rationale
    Magic Kingdom 8-10/10 NYC arrivals compound existing spring break demand; yesterday’s pattern likely repeats
    Hollywood Studios 8-10/10 Spring break families continue to flock here; could ease slightly if NYC families explore other parks first
    EPCOT 5-7/10 After Hours event tonight won’t suppress daytime, but EPCOT continues to underperform relative to MK/HS during family-heavy periods
    Animal Kingdom 5-7/10 Remains the under-the-radar pick, though NYC arrivals could push it higher

    Strategy: If you have flexibility, EPCOT and Animal Kingdom remain the clear plays. EPCOT’s Flower & Garden Festival gives you plenty to do at low wait times, and Animal Kingdom consistently absorbs spring break pressure better than the other parks. If Magic Kingdom is a must-do, get there at rope drop and plan to leave by early afternoon — yesterday’s evening downtimes are a reminder that late-day MK can be unpredictable.

    See the Full Picture

    Yesterday’s 10/10-to-5/10 split across the resort is exactly the kind of pattern that separates a great park day from a regrettable one. Lightning Brain tracks these crowd imbalances in real time so you can make the right call before you tap into the gate. We’re now available on the App Store — download it today, or check us out at lightningbrain.app!

  • Daily Park Report: March 31, 2026

    Two Parks Hit 10/10 on a Tuesday — Spring Break Is Peaking

    A Tuesday in late March just produced two Extreme-level parks simultaneously. Hollywood Studios posted a 52.5-minute median wait — more than 30% above its 30-day average — while Magic Kingdom surged to a 27.1-minute median, up over 35% from its recent norm. Both registered 10/10 on our crowd scale. Meanwhile, EPCOT and Animal Kingdom absorbed the same spring break population and came in at 6/10 and 5/10 respectively. That gap between the top two and bottom two parks tells you everything about where spring break families are spending their days.

    Weather wasn’t a factor in the equation: 82 degrees, mostly clear skies, and zero precipitation made for a textbook spring day in Central Florida. The crowds weren’t weather-driven — they were calendar-driven. The March 30 through April 3 peak overlap window is now in full effect, with New Jersey and Philadelphia school districts on spring break simultaneously.

    Hollywood Studios: The Pressure Cooker

    A 52.5-minute median is firmly in Extreme territory, and guests felt it everywhere. The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 70-minute median — meaning half the operating attractions had waits exceeding an hour before lunch. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run anchored the pain at 105 minutes average, nearly double its typical 55-minute baseline. Star Tours was the real head-scratcher: a ride that normally posts 5-minute waits averaged 25 minutes all day, a sign that overflow demand was flooding even secondary attractions.

    Toy Story Mania compounded the problem by going down twice — once for 51 minutes during the late-morning peak and again for 41 minutes in the early evening. With the park’s most family-accessible headliner unavailable during peak hours, that demand had nowhere to go but into already-strained queues. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway also took a 44-minute hit in the morning, leaving Hollywood Studios running without two major draws during its busiest window.

    Magic Kingdom: Fantasyland Under Siege

    Magic Kingdom matched Hollywood Studios at 10/10, and the pressure concentrated squarely in Fantasyland. The Barnstormer averaged 35 minutes — more than double its usual 15. Dumbo and Magic Carpets of Aladdin both hit 30 minutes. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel posted 15-minute waits, triple its norm. Even Mad Tea Party and “it’s a small world” were running well above baseline. This is the signature of spring break family crowds: parents with young children packing the low-thrill, high-capacity attractions that usually act as walk-ons.

    The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 40-minute median, and the morning wasn’t without operational headaches. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was offline for the first hour of operation, and The Barnstormer was down for 62 minutes starting at 8:50 AM — right when Early Entry guests were flowing into Fantasyland. Tomorrowland Speedway at 25 minutes (typically 15) suggests families were spreading out across the park looking for shorter alternatives, but not finding many.

    EPCOT: The Relative Bargain

    At 6/10 with a 21.3-minute median, EPCOT was actually running below its 30-day average despite the resort-wide spring break surge. The Flower and Garden Festival likely kept walkways busy, but festival guests tend to graze food booths rather than queue for rides. The Seas with Nemo and Friends doubled its typical wait to 20 minutes — a minor outlier suggesting some families drifted to EPCOT’s gentler attractions as an escape valve from Magic Kingdom.

    EPCOT’s afternoon wasn’t seamless, though. Journey Into Imagination With Figment went down twice, totaling nearly two hours of downtime across both incidents, and never reopened after the 7:12 PM closure. Test Track also took two hits — 25 minutes in the afternoon and 22 minutes in the evening. Living with the Land was offline for over an hour during the mid-afternoon. For a park running at moderate levels, those interruptions were more manageable than they would have been at the packed parks.

    Animal Kingdom: Holding Steady

    Animal Kingdom posted the calmest day of the four at 5/10 with a 33.8-minute median, right in line with its 30-day average. The park peaked later than the others — 1:00 PM rather than 11:00 AM — which is typical for Animal Kingdom’s layout and guest flow. No significant outliers and no notable downtimes made this the smoothest guest experience across the resort on Tuesday.

    Downtime Impact

    The headline downtime story was at Hollywood Studios, where Toy Story Mania’s two closures totaling 92 minutes hit a park that was already operating at its ceiling. When your median wait is already above 50 minutes and you lose a high-capacity family ride during peak, every other queue absorbs the impact. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway being down concurrently in the morning meant the park’s two most family-friendly headliners were both unavailable before 10:00 AM.

    At Magic Kingdom, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure and The Barnstormer were both offline during the opening hour. On a less crowded day, early-morning closures are recoverable. At 10/10, they set the tone for the rest of the morning by funneling Early Entry guests into fewer options right out of the gate.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, April 1

    Yesterday we predicted Animal Kingdom at 4/10 — it came in at 5/10. A slight miss but within one level, and the overall grade was strong. The model’s instinct to keep AK lower was reasonable given the data, but spring break pressure proved persistent.

    Today continues the peak overlap window with the same school districts on break. Weather is nearly identical: 80-degree high, partly cloudy, zero rain chance. There’s no reason to expect a meaningful dip from yesterday’s levels.

    Park Predicted Range Reasoning
    Hollywood Studios 9-10/10 Consistently the spring break magnet; yesterday’s 10/10 likely repeats
    Magic Kingdom 8-10/10 Family crowds aren’t leaving mid-week; Fantasyland will stay packed
    EPCOT 5-7/10 Festival keeps it from spiking; remains the best touring value
    Animal Kingdom 5-6/10 Holding near baseline despite resort-wide pressure

    Strategy for today: If you have flexibility, EPCOT and Animal Kingdom remain your best bets. Arrive at either by park open and knock out headliners before the midday build. If Hollywood Studios is non-negotiable, rope-drop the big three and consider an afternoon break — the park was at 70-minute medians by 11:00 AM yesterday, and today should follow a similar curve.

    See the Patterns Before You’re in the Queue

    Yesterday’s two-park extreme split is exactly the kind of day where having live crowd data changes your plan. Lightning Brain tracks these park-to-park differences in real time so you can pivot before you tap into a 105-minute standby line. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!