Author: dan

  • Daily Park Report: March 30, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Maxed Out at 10/10 as Spring Break Crushes Every Park

    Hollywood Studios posted a perfect 10. Yesterday, Monday, March 30, the park hit a median wait of 52 minutes — more than 30% above its 30-day average — making it the only park to reach the Extreme tier. But this wasn’t an isolated spike. All four Walt Disney World parks ran heavy or higher, with Magic Kingdom close behind at 9/10. If you were hoping for a quiet Monday to dodge spring break crowds, the data says that strategy failed resort-wide.

    Conditions were near-ideal for a packed day: 81 degrees, partly cloudy, zero rain. With multiple school districts on break — including large Northeast feeder markets like New Jersey and Philadelphia — plus the broader March 30 through April 3 peak overlap window, every park absorbed well-above-average demand from rope drop onward.

    Hollywood Studios: Extreme Territory

    A 52-minute median is unusual for any day, let alone what should theoretically be a slower weekday. Hollywood Studios peaked at 10:00 AM with a staggering 70-minute median, meaning even secondary attractions were posting long waits before lunch. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run averaged 85 minutes — roughly half an hour above its baseline. Star Tours, typically a walk-on at 5 minutes, ballooned to 20 minutes as overflow guests looked for anything with a shorter queue. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway going down for nearly an hour around 1:00 PM only compressed demand further onto the remaining headliners.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed at 9/10

    Magic Kingdom’s 25-minute median doesn’t sound extreme until you remember this park’s baseline sits around 15 minutes. At 9/10, this was a genuinely packed day. The crowd signature was broad rather than concentrated — Fantasyland flat rides told the story clearly. The Barnstormer and Magic Carpets of Aladdin both hit 30 minutes, double their typical waits. Mad Tea Party and Dumbo ran at 20 and 25 minutes respectively, and even Prince Charming Regal Carrousel posted a 10-minute wait. When the Carrousel has a line, the park is full.

    Tomorrowland Speedway at 25 minutes (normally 15) confirmed the pressure extended well beyond Fantasyland. The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 35-minute median, then the afternoon brought operational trouble.

    Animal Kingdom and EPCOT: Heavy at 7/10

    Both parks landed at 7/10, which sounds moderate compared to the Studios chaos — but these are still elevated numbers. Animal Kingdom’s 41-minute median ran 18% above its 30-day average, peaking at 10:00 AM with a 65-minute median. The standout was Kali River Rapids averaging 65 minutes, more than double its usual 30. With temperatures in the low 80s, the warm weather premium on water rides was in full effect, and spring break families clearly prioritized the splash.

    EPCOT posted a 24-minute median with the Flower and Garden Festival in full swing. Soarin’ Around the World was the headline at 70 minutes — roughly 75% above its typical 40. Festival guests appear willing to wait for the marquee rides even when food booths are the main draw.

    Afternoon Downtimes Hit Magic Kingdom at the Worst Time

    Space Mountain went down at 2:41 PM and stayed offline for nearly two hours on an already packed day. With a 9/10 crowd level, losing a major Tomorrowland headliner during peak afternoon touring created real pain — Tomorrowland Speedway’s inflated waits likely got worse during this window. Pirates of the Caribbean followed with its own hour-long closure starting at 3:52 PM, and Jungle Cruise went down around 4:16 PM for 23 minutes. Losing three major capacity rides in the same afternoon at a 9/10 park is rough for anyone trying to tour without Lightning Lane.

    EPCOT had a quieter day operationally until the evening, when both Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Test Track closed in the 7:00 PM hour and never reopened. Guests hoping for a last ride before park close were out of luck on two of EPCOT’s biggest draws. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind also had a 25-minute midday closure, though that resolved quickly.

    Yesterday’s Prediction: A Miss

    We predicted Animal Kingdom at 4/10 yesterday. It came in at 7/10. That’s a clear miss, and it reinforces what the data keeps telling us about spring break weeks: the crowd pressure is broad and persistent. Even parks that traditionally absorb less overflow — like Animal Kingdom — run heavy when this many school districts are out simultaneously. We’re recalibrating accordingly.

    Tuesday Outlook: More of the Same

    Today’s forecast calls for 82 degrees and mostly cloudy skies with zero precipitation — essentially a copy of yesterday’s weather. The same spring break districts remain active, and we’re now squarely inside the March 30 through April 3 peak overlap. Nothing changes in the demand equation today.

    Expect Hollywood Studios to remain in the 8-10/10 range — it’s the smallest-capacity park and absorbs spring break families disproportionately. Magic Kingdom should run 7-9/10 again. EPCOT and Animal Kingdom are likely in the 6-8/10 range, with Flower and Garden continuing to draw foot traffic to EPCOT.

    Strategy for today: If you’re heading to the Studios, be at the tapstiles before rope drop or accept that you’re waiting 60+ minutes for headliners. Animal Kingdom and EPCOT remain your better bets for manageable waits, but “manageable” this week means 35-45 minute medians, not walk-ons. If you can shift your park day to later in the week, the overlap window closes April 3 — but realistically, spring break pressure persists through the weekend.

    Yesterday’s data makes one thing clear: spring break 2026 is running hot across the entire resort, and no park is offering a quiet escape right now.

    Patterns like these shift fast during spring break, and yesterday’s afternoon downtimes prove that operational surprises can reshape your whole touring plan. Lightning Brain tracks live wait times and attraction status so you can adjust on the fly. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 29, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Hit 9/10 While Animal Kingdom Stayed Comfortable — Sunday’s Spring Break Split

    Hollywood Studios pushed into packed territory on Sunday, posting a 46-minute median wait that landed it at 9/10 on our crowd scale. Meanwhile, just a few miles away, Animal Kingdom sat at a comfortable 4/10 with a 31-minute median. That gap — five full crowd levels between two parks on the same spring break Sunday — is the kind of split that separates a stressful touring day from a relaxed one, depending entirely on which park you chose.

    Conditions were pleasant enough: mid-70s, mostly cloudy, no rain. The kind of weather that keeps everyone comfortable in queues and doesn’t chase anyone indoors early. With spring break driving elevated traffic across the resort and the Flower & Garden Festival pulling crowds toward EPCOT, the four parks told very different stories.

    Hollywood Studios — Packed From the Rope Drop

    A 9/10 crowd level tells you the park was slammed, but the peak hour timing tells you how it got that way. Hollywood Studios hit its highest median at 10:00 AM — a 70-minute median that early means guests were stacking up from the moment the gates opened. Spring break families treating this as their must-do park, combined with a limited ride roster, created sustained pressure all day.

    Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run averaged 85 minutes, well above its typical 55. Star Tours doubled its usual wait to 10 minutes — modest in absolute terms, but a sign that overflow demand was reaching even the secondary attractions. And then the park lost its most popular family ride: Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway went down at 1:57 PM and didn’t reopen until 6:14 PM, a four-plus-hour closure right through the afternoon peak. With that headliner offline, guests had fewer places to go, and the remaining queues absorbed the pressure. Toy Story Mania also went down twice in the late afternoon (45 minutes, then 28 minutes), compounding an already tight situation in Toy Story Land. Slinky Dog Dash had a brief 23-minute closure at rope drop as well — not the start guests were hoping for.

    Magic Kingdom — Heavy but Manageable

    Magic Kingdom posted an 8/10 with a 21.9-minute median, running about 10% above its 30-day average. The 11:00 AM peak with a 30-minute median is textbook spring break behavior: families arriving after resort breakfast, building through late morning, then gradually thinning as afternoon heat and fatigue set in.

    The interesting signal was in Fantasyland. Dumbo hit 30-minute waits — double its typical 15 — while Barnstormer, Mad Tea Party, Prince Charming Regal Carrousel, and Magic Carpets of Aladdin all ran 67-100% above their baselines. These are the flat rides that families with young children default to, and every one of them was running hot. That’s spring break demographics in action: the park skews younger this time of year, and the kid-friendly rides bear the brunt. Country Bear Musical Jamboree was down for over two and a half hours in the morning (9:00–11:35 AM), removing a useful indoor capacity soak during the busiest part of the day.

    EPCOT — Busy, With a Rough Morning for Headliners

    EPCOT landed at 6/10 with a 21.2-minute median, slightly above its recent average. The Flower & Garden Festival continues to draw foot traffic, though festival guests tend to graze food booths more than queue for rides — which keeps the crowd level from spiking the way raw attendance might suggest.

    The morning was rough for anyone with a touring plan, though. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind was offline from 8:31 AM until 12:25 PM — nearly four hours with the park’s biggest draw unavailable. Frozen Ever After was also down for 92 minutes starting at park open. Losing both headliners simultaneously before lunch forces guests to reorganize their entire day. Mission: SPACE ran about 67% above its typical wait, likely catching some of that displaced demand. Test Track had a rough day too, going down three separate times (37 minutes in the afternoon, 94 minutes in the evening, and another 35 minutes later), which couldn’t have helped guest satisfaction in Future World.

    Animal Kingdom — The Quiet Alternative

    At 4/10 with a 31-minute median, Animal Kingdom ran about 11% below its 30-day average — a comfortable touring day by any measure. The 1:00 PM peak (55-minute median) was driven almost entirely by one ride: Avatar Flight of Passage averaged 105 minutes, roughly 62% above its typical 65. Strip out Pandora and the rest of the park was genuinely relaxed. Zootopia: Better Zoogether actually posted waits a third below its baseline. For anyone willing to skip Flight of Passage or use Lightning Lane, Animal Kingdom was Sunday’s clear winner for low-stress touring.

    Downtime Wrap-Up

    Sunday was a heavy downtime day across the resort. The headline closures — Runaway Railway’s four-hour afternoon outage and Cosmic Rewind’s four-hour morning absence — both hit during peak demand windows at already-crowded parks. EPCOT bore the worst of it overall: between Cosmic Rewind, Frozen Ever After, three separate Test Track closures, and late hits on Spaceship Earth, Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure (which closed at 7:38 PM and never reopened), and Gran Fiesta Tour, guests navigating World Discovery and World Celebration had to stay flexible. When this many rides go down at a 6/10 park, the functional crowd level for operating attractions creeps considerably higher.

    Yesterday’s Prediction: Strong

    Our Sunday forecast called for MK 6-8, EPCOT 5-7, Hollywood Studios 7-9, and Animal Kingdom 5-7. We nailed three out of four, with AK coming in just one level below our range at 4/10. The spring break pressure was real, but Animal Kingdom continues to underperform our expectations — guests simply aren’t prioritizing it the way they do the other three parks this week.

    Monday Outlook: March 30

    Spring break rolls on. Multiple Northeast school districts — including Philadelphia and several New Jersey districts — are entering their break windows today, layering fresh arrivals onto guests already mid-trip. The weather cooperates: highs near 78°F with mostly clear mornings and only a 10% rain chance by afternoon. That’s ideal park weather with no suppression factor.

    Mondays during spring break tend to see a modest dip from the weekend peak as some Saturday arrivals take a rest day, but fresh arrivals offset much of that. Expect Hollywood Studios in the 7-9/10 range again — it’s the hot park this season. Magic Kingdom should land 6-8/10, still heavy but potentially a touch lighter than Sunday. EPCOT at 5-7/10 with Flower & Garden continuing to draw steady traffic. Animal Kingdom at 4-6/10 — it could creep up if guests who struggled with Sunday’s Hollywood Studios crowds decide to pivot, but the pattern suggests it’ll stay on the lighter side.

    Strategy for today: if you’re heading to Hollywood Studios, be inside the gate at rope drop and hit headliners immediately. Sunday showed how quickly that park reaches capacity waits. If flexibility is an option, Animal Kingdom before noon followed by an EPCOT evening gives you the best of both parks without fighting peak crowds at either.

    Knowing which park is running hot before you commit your day — that’s the advantage real-time data gives you. Lightning Brain tracks these crowd splits as they develop so you can make smarter touring decisions on the fly. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Weekly Park Report: March 22 – March 28, 2026

    Magic Kingdom Didn’t Budge All Week

    Seven days. Four parks. One number that refused to move. Magic Kingdom posted a 20-minute median wait every single day this week — Sunday through Saturday, regardless of what happened around it. While Hollywood Studios swung from 40 to 50 minutes, and Animal Kingdom ranged from 25 to 45, MK sat at exactly 20 minutes like a thermostat locked in place. It’s the kind of consistency that suggests the park has hit its operational ceiling for absorbing spring break demand at current capacity. If you’re planning a Magic Kingdom day in the coming weeks, the message is clear: the park is running heavy but predictable, and there’s no secret light day hiding in the schedule.

    Week at a Glance

    This week, March 22-28, 2026, was a textbook late-spring-break week. The resort-wide median landed at 25 minutes, down from last week’s 30-minute peak but still well above the 20-minute baseline that held through most of February and early March. Hollywood Studios carried the heaviest load at 8/10, EPCOT and Magic Kingdom both ran at 7/10, and Animal Kingdom split the difference at 5/10. The week followed a clear arc: crowds opened strong on Sunday and Monday, dipped mid-week on Wednesday and Thursday, then surged to their highest point on Saturday. That weekend bookend pattern is spring break in a nutshell — families arriving and departing on weekends, with a brief exhale in between.

    Park-by-Park Analysis

    Hollywood Studios: The Spring Break Magnet

    Hollywood Studios absorbed more spring break pressure than any other park this week, posting a 45-minute median — up from its 40-minute six-week average. Three days hit 45 minutes or higher, and Saturday cracked 50, pushing the park into 9/10 territory for the day. Rise of the Resistance was the headline, averaging 89.5 minutes against its 30-day baseline of 55.5 minutes. That’s not just elevated — it’s a fundamentally different ride experience when you’re committing 90 minutes of your day to a single queue. Rise also logged 11 downtime incidents during the week, which only compounds the problem: every time the ride went offline, the returning capacity had to absorb a longer backup. Monday and Friday both landed at 45-minute medians, suggesting that weekday relief was harder to find here than anywhere else on property.

    EPCOT: Flower and Garden Meets Test Track Trouble

    EPCOT’s 25-minute weekly median and 7/10 crowd level tell a straightforward spring break story, but the real texture is in the reliability data. Test Track recorded 28 downtime incidents this week — nearly double the next-closest attraction on the list. For a park where Test Track is one of only a handful of high-capacity thrill rides, that kind of unreliability forces guests to reorganize their entire day. Soarin’ felt the pressure directly, averaging 59.7 minutes against a typical 38.5 — a jump that correlates neatly with guests pivoting away from a Test Track they couldn’t count on. The Flower and Garden Festival ran all week and likely contributed to EPCOT’s elevated foot traffic, particularly on Sunday and Monday when the park hit 30-minute medians. But the back half of the week settled to 20 minutes Tuesday through Friday, suggesting festival crowds are more of a weekend phenomenon.

    Magic Kingdom: The Flatline

    Twenty minutes. Every day. Magic Kingdom’s consistency this week was almost eerie. The park’s weekly crowd level registered at 7/10 — heavy — but without any of the variance that characterized the other three parks. No day dipped below 20 and no day climbed above it. The operational story here involves Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, which logged 14 downtime incidents, and Spaceship Earth at EPCOT sharing a similar count — though for MK, Prince Charming Regal Carrousel’s 13 incidents and the Railroad’s 8 added up to a park where secondary attractions weren’t always available to absorb overflow. Despite that, the median held firm. MK’s peak wait topped out at 120 minutes, the lowest peak of any park this week, suggesting that while the park was consistently busy, it never hit the acute pressure spikes that HS and EPCOT experienced.

    Animal Kingdom: Mid-Week Window

    Animal Kingdom offered the week’s widest range — from a 25-minute median on Wednesday to 45 minutes on Saturday. That 20-minute swing made it the most day-dependent park on property. At 5/10 for the week, it ran lighter than the other three parks overall, but Saturday’s 45-minute median pushed it into very heavy territory for a single day. Kali River Rapids was the standout outlier, averaging 45.1 minutes against its typical 26.1 — a jump likely driven by warm late-March weather making the water ride more appealing. Wednesday and Thursday were the sweet spots, with the park settling into comfortable 25-30 minute territory that made for genuinely good touring conditions.

    Daily Pattern

    Day MK EPCOT HS AK Notes
    Sun 3/22 20 (7) 30 (8) 40 (6) 40 (6) Weekend arrival surge
    Mon 3/23 20 (7) 30 (8) 45 (8) 35 (5) HS draws the Monday crowd
    Tue 3/24 20 (7) 20 (5) 45 (8) 35 (5) EPCOT eases, HS stays packed
    Wed 3/25 20 (7) 20 (5) 40 (6) 25 (4) Best touring day of the week
    Thu 3/26 20 (7) 20 (5) 40 (6) 30 (4) Mid-week relief continues
    Fri 3/27 20 (7) 20 (5) 45 (8) 35 (5) Weekend ramp begins
    Sat 3/28 20 (7) 25 (7) 50 (9) 45 (8) Week’s peak across the board

    Crowd levels shown in parentheses. Median wait in minutes.

    The pattern is a classic spring break U-shape. Families checking in over the weekend drove Sunday and Monday higher, the mid-week lull on Wednesday and Thursday offered a breather as some groups departed and others hadn’t yet arrived, and then the Saturday surge brought the week to its peak. Hollywood Studios was the only park that never really participated in the mid-week dip — its lowest day was still 40 minutes. If you’re visiting during a spring break window, Wednesday remains your best bet, but only if you’re willing to skip HS or accept longer waits there.

    Reliability Report

    Test Track was the week’s most troubled attraction by a wide margin. Twenty-eight downtime incidents across seven days means the ride was going down an average of four times daily. For guests who planned their EPCOT day around an early Test Track ride, the odds of hitting a closure window were uncomfortably high. The downstream effect showed up clearly in Soarin’s numbers, which ran over 50% above their typical baseline all week. At Magic Kingdom, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure continued its pattern of operational struggles with 14 incidents, while Spaceship Earth matched that count at EPCOT. Rise of the Resistance’s 11 incidents at Hollywood Studios hit harder given the park’s already-strained capacity — every closure pushed that 89-minute average even higher for the guests who did get in line.

    Next Week Outlook

    Spring break season is winding down but not over. Expect crowds to ease slightly from this week’s levels as the last wave of school districts returns, but don’t expect a dramatic drop — early April historically holds above baseline until the second week. The Flower and Garden Festival continues at EPCOT, which will keep weekend foot traffic elevated. Your best strategy: target Tuesday through Thursday if your schedule allows, and prioritize Animal Kingdom or EPCOT on those mid-week days when they historically run lightest. If Hollywood Studios is on your must-do list, arrive at rope drop and hit Rise of the Resistance first — its reliability issues make a wait-and-see approach risky.

    Plan Smarter, Not Harder

    This week showed a 20-minute swing between the best and worst days at Animal Kingdom, and Hollywood Studios never dropped below a 6/10 even on its lightest afternoon. Choosing the right day and the right park is the difference between a 25-minute median and a 50-minute one. Lightning Brain’s daily crowd modeling helps you find those mid-week windows before they fill up. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 28, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Cracked 9/10 on a Spring Break Saturday — and Magic Kingdom Peaked at 5 PM

    A 48-minute median wait at Hollywood Studios. That’s not just busy — that’s Packed territory, a 9/10, the highest crowd level we’ve recorded at the park in weeks. Yesterday, Saturday, March 28, was the kind of spring break day that separates the planners from the wing-it crowd. But the more interesting signal came from Magic Kingdom, where the crowd peak didn’t arrive until 5:00 PM — a late surge that reshaped the entire day’s touring calculus.

    Clear skies and a high of 86°F created picture-perfect conditions, and spring break families took full advantage. With multiple school districts still on break and a Saturday giving everyone a park day with no travel pressure, the resort ran hot across all four parks.

    Hollywood Studios — 9/10 (Packed)

    Hollywood Studios bore the brunt of spring break demand, posting a 47.9-minute median wait — roughly 20% above its 30-day average. The noon peak hit a 65-minute median, meaning headliner attractions were well into the 90-plus minute range during midday. Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance going down for 41 minutes in the early afternoon only compounded the pressure, forcing guests into already-swollen queues for Tower of Terror and Slinky Dog Dash. This park was, put simply, a tough place to tour without Lightning Lane yesterday.

    Magic Kingdom — 8/10 (Very Heavy)

    Magic Kingdom landed at a 20.4-minute median — solidly in the Very Heavy range for a park where a typical day sits around 15 minutes. What made yesterday unusual was the timing: the crowd peak didn’t arrive until 5:00 PM, with a 30-minute median in the evening hours. That’s the signature of a park-hopper influx. Guests who started their day at Animal Kingdom or EPCOT appear to have shifted to the Magic Kingdom for the evening, stacking onto the spring break base already there.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure went offline for about 50 minutes over the lunch hour, and with temperatures in the mid-80s, it was one of the most in-demand attractions in the park — that closure pushed guests toward Fantasyland alternatives. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel posted a 10-minute average wait, double its usual 5 minutes, and Magic Carpets of Aladdin ran at 25 minutes, well above its typical 15. These aren’t headliners, but when families with small children lose a major ride, the flat rides absorb the overflow. The PeopleMover also closed for 47 minutes right at the 5 PM peak, removing one of the park’s most reliable crowd-absorbers at the worst possible time.

    EPCOT — 6/10 (Busy)

    EPCOT posted a 21.2-minute median, slightly above its 30-day average — busy but manageable for anyone with a loose plan. The Flower and Garden Festival continues to draw foot traffic, though much of that demand flows toward outdoor kitchens rather than ride queues. The 11:00 AM peak with a 30-minute median aligned with the classic festival pattern: guests arrive for brunch-time booth browsing and queue for a ride or two before settling into the food-and-drink circuit.

    The Seas with Nemo and Friends posted a 20-minute average — double its typical 10 minutes — which reads as an air-conditioning play on a hot day more than genuine demand for the attraction itself.

    The headline at EPCOT, though, was Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind going down at 3:28 PM and never reopening. Nearly five hours of lost capacity on the park’s most popular attraction during peak spring break. Journey Into Imagination With Figment also had a rough day, closing three separate times for a combined total of over three and a half hours. And Spaceship Earth was offline for over an hour in the morning. For guests who arrived in the afternoon expecting to ride Cosmic Rewind, it was a significant blow — and it likely pushed some of those guests toward the Magic Kingdom for their evening plans, contributing to that late MK peak.

    Animal Kingdom — 6/10 (Busy)

    Animal Kingdom ran right near its 30-day baseline at a 36.1-minute median, landing at a comfortable 6/10. Expedition Everest was down for just over an hour at rope drop, which stung for early arrivals, but recovered and ran smoothly the rest of the day. The standout here was Kali River Rapids posting a 55-minute average — more than double its typical 25 minutes. On a day pushing 86°F, that’s entirely expected. Guests will gladly wait nearly an hour to get soaked when it’s that warm. The 11:00 AM peak with a 60-minute median shows families front-loaded their Animal Kingdom touring before hopping elsewhere for the evening.

    Downtime Impact

    EPCOT took the hardest hit operationally. Losing Cosmic Rewind for the entire back half of the day is the kind of disruption that changes how thousands of guests spend their evening. Between Cosmic Rewind, Figment’s repeated closures, and Spaceship Earth’s morning outage, EPCOT lost a combined 10+ hours of major attraction capacity. The fact that EPCOT still only posted a 6/10 crowd level speaks to how much of the Flower and Garden crowd isn’t primarily there for rides. At Hollywood Studios, the Rise of the Resistance closure was shorter but hit during the absolute peak of the day, compounding an already strained park.

    Sunday Outlook: March 29

    Today brings a cooler day — highs around 75°F with mostly cloudy skies and virtually no rain chance. Spring break is still in full effect, and it’s a Sunday, which typically means a split personality: morning crowds from guests with one park day left, and lighter evenings as families begin travel home.

    Expect Hollywood Studios in the 7-9/10 range again — spring break Sundays don’t let up at this park. Magic Kingdom should settle in the 6-8/10 range, likely without yesterday’s dramatic late surge since Sunday evening tends to thin out. EPCOT and Animal Kingdom should both run in the 5-7/10 range, with Flower and Garden continuing to distribute EPCOT’s crowds more toward walkways than queues. The cooler temperatures will likely pull Kali River Rapids back toward normal wait times — don’t expect yesterday’s 55-minute waits to repeat at 75°F.

    Strategy for today: if you’re choosing one park, Animal Kingdom in the morning gives you the best ratio of ride capacity to crowd pressure. If you’re hopping, start at Animal Kingdom and move to EPCOT for a Flower and Garden evening — assuming Cosmic Rewind is back online.

    Track It Live

    Yesterday’s late Magic Kingdom surge and EPCOT’s Cosmic Rewind shutdown are exactly the kind of mid-day shifts that change your entire touring plan. Lightning Brain tracks these patterns in real time so you can pivot before the crowds catch up. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 27, 2026

    Spring Break Friday Packed Two Parks to Heavy While Animal Kingdom Coasted

    Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios both hit 7/10 on Friday — and they got there through very different paths. Magic Kingdom dealt with a parade of mechanical issues that should have thinned waits but didn’t, while Hollywood Studios lost its marquee attraction for over three hours during the morning rush and still posted heavy crowds. Meanwhile, Animal Kingdom sat at a comfortable 4/10, running about 16% below its 30-day average. Spring break guests clearly had favorites, and Animal Kingdom wasn’t one of them.

    Clear skies and a high of 86.5°F made for a textbook late-March Florida day — warm enough to drive water ride demand through the roof but not oppressive enough to send anyone home early. With various school districts on spring break and the Global Pet Expo pulling convention traffic into Orlando, there was no shortage of bodies in the parks.

    Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance Goes Down, Crowds Stay Up

    Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance was offline from 9:06 AM until 12:23 PM — over three hours during the busiest window of the day. That’s a headliner loss during peak morning touring, and yet the park still posted a 41-minute median, slightly above its 30-day average. Guests who rope-dropped Galaxy’s Edge found themselves redirected to Tower of Terror and Slinky Dog Dash, which absorbed the displaced demand. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway added to the turbulence with its own 60-minute closure over the lunch hour. For a park with a relatively thin ride lineup, losing two major attractions in the same day and still running heavy tells you how much spring break pressure is flowing through the gates. Peak hour hit at 11 AM with a 50-minute median — right in the teeth of the Rise closure.

    Magic Kingdom: Seven Out of Ten Despite a Rough Day for Maintenance

    Magic Kingdom posted a 19-minute median wait, landing at 7/10, but the ride availability story was messy. Pirates of the Caribbean was down for over two and a half hours starting at park open. Country Bear Musical Jamboree — freshly reimagined and still drawing strong interest — was unavailable for nearly four hours through the afternoon. Space Mountain closed for just over an hour during the post-lunch surge. That’s three popular attractions gone during prime touring windows.

    The demand simply redistributed. The Barnstormer ran 25-minute averages, roughly 67% above its typical 15 minutes, and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel doubled its usual wait to 10 minutes. When Fantasyland’s bigger rides stay operational but the surrounding attractions go down, the kiddie corridor becomes a bottleneck. Peak hour came early at 10 AM with a 25-minute median — a sign that morning rope-drop crowds hit hard and then slowly dispersed as the closures stacked up.

    EPCOT: Flower & Garden Keeps Things Busy

    EPCOT ran a 6/10 with a 20-minute median, right in line with its 30-day average. The Flower & Garden Festival continues to draw foot traffic, though a good chunk of those guests are grazing outdoor kitchens rather than queuing for rides. The exceptions were notable: Soarin’ Around the World averaged 60 minutes, well above its typical 35, making it the park’s biggest demand magnet. Gran Fiesta Tour doubled its usual wait to 10 minutes — a sign of boat ride popularity on a warm day.

    Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind went down for 55 minutes over the lunch hour, and The Seas with Nemo & Friends was offline for nearly two hours in the morning. Losing Nemo likely pushed some families toward the Living with the Land side of The Land pavilion, while the Cosmic Rewind closure compressed afternoon demand into the post-2 PM window. Spaceship Earth had a brief 17-minute closure but nothing guests would have noticed unless they were in line at that exact moment.

    Animal Kingdom: The Spring Break Sleeper

    At just 4/10, Animal Kingdom was the clear outlier across the resort. A 29-minute median sits comfortably below the 30-day average of 35 minutes. But the individual attraction story is more interesting than the park-wide number suggests. Kali River Rapids averaged 55 minutes — more than double its typical 25. On an 86-degree day, that tracks perfectly. Guests wanted to get soaked, and they were willing to wait for it. The ride also went down for over two hours in the early afternoon, which compressed demand into the operating windows and inflated those averages further. Strip out Kali’s outsized numbers and the rest of the park was running genuinely light. If you were touring Pandora or the safari on Friday, you had a good day.

    Downtime Report

    Friday was a rough day for ride availability across the resort. The headline numbers:

    Attraction Park Duration Window
    Country Bear Musical Jamboree MK ~4 hours 12:53 PM – 4:37 PM
    Rise of the Resistance HS ~3.5 hours 9:06 AM – 12:23 PM
    Pirates of the Caribbean MK ~2.5 hours 8:01 AM – 10:34 AM
    Kali River Rapids AK ~2.25 hours 1:10 PM – 3:26 PM
    The Seas with Nemo & Friends EP ~1.75 hours 9:30 AM – 11:18 AM

    Magic Kingdom bore the brunt, with Space Mountain, Barnstormer, and Enchanted Tales with Belle all taking additional hits throughout the day. When this many attractions go down in a single park, it compresses standby demand onto whatever’s still running — which explains why a 7/10 crowd level felt heavier than the median number alone suggests.

    Prediction Scorecard

    Yesterday’s forecast nailed all four parks. We called Magic Kingdom 6-8, got 7. EPCOT 5-7, got 6. Hollywood Studios 5-7, got 7. Animal Kingdom 3-5, got 4. A clean sweep heading into the weekend.

    Saturday Outlook: March 28, 2026

    Saturdays during spring break are historically the heaviest day of the week at Walt Disney World, and there’s nothing in today’s setup to suggest an exception. Clear to partly cloudy skies with a high of 83°F means no weather suppression at all — just a full day of comfortable touring weather that keeps guests in the parks longer.

    The Flower & Garden Festival continues at EPCOT, and the Orlando Boat Show is still drawing some regional traffic into the area. Expect crowds to build on Friday’s levels across the board:

    • Magic Kingdom: 7-8/10. Saturday spring break energy plus the resort’s most popular park. Arrive before rope drop or wait until after 5 PM.
    • Hollywood Studios: 7-8/10. Assuming Rise of the Resistance stays operational, expect heavy morning demand in Galaxy’s Edge. Lightning Lane is worth the investment here today.
    • EPCOT: 6-7/10. Festival foot traffic will be heavy, but ride waits should remain manageable outside of Guardians and Soarin’. The World Showcase opens at 11 AM — touring Future World early is your best move.
    • Animal Kingdom: 4-6/10. Friday’s light crowds could tick up on Saturday as families who parked-hopped elsewhere circle back, but AK remains the best value play this weekend. Another warm day means Kali will draw long waits again.

    If you can only pick one park today, Animal Kingdom offers the best crowd-to-attraction ratio by a wide margin. If you’re set on Magic Kingdom, commit to the early morning and have a park-hop exit strategy by midday.

    Yesterday’s downtime chaos is exactly the kind of thing that can reshape your entire touring day without warning. Lightning Brain tracks real-time attraction status so you can adjust on the fly instead of walking into a closed queue. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 26, 2026

    EPCOT Lost Its Two Biggest Rides for Most of Thursday — and Still Hit 6/10

    Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind was offline for seven and a half hours. Frozen Ever After was unavailable for roughly six and a half hours across two separate closures. Together, those two attractions account for a massive share of EPCOT’s daily ride demand — and yet the park posted a 20.8-minute median wait, slightly above its 30-day average. Spring break crowds simply had nowhere else to go. That resilience tells you everything about where demand stands right now across Walt Disney World.

    Thursday brought near-perfect park weather — 85 degrees, mostly clear skies, barely a trace of rain. Combined with ongoing spring break travel and the Global Pet Expo pulling convention-goers into the resort area, all four parks ran at moderate-to-heavy levels.

    EPCOT: Absorbing the Chaos

    Cosmic Rewind went down at 8:30 AM and didn’t reopen until 4:01 PM — a 450-minute closure that essentially removed the park’s biggest headliner for the entire daytime touring window. When the ride was finally operational, pent-up demand pushed its average posted wait to 170 minutes, more than double the typical 80. Frozen Ever After wasn’t much better, closing from 8:35 AM to 12:19 PM, reopening briefly, then going down again from 3:01 to 5:43 PM. That’s over six hours of downtime on EPCOT’s second-most popular attraction, and when it was running, waits averaged 90 minutes.

    The displaced demand showed up everywhere. Soarin’ averaged 60 minutes — normally a 35-minute attraction. Even Gran Fiesta Tour doubled from its usual 5 minutes to 10. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Journey Into Imagination both had their own hour-long closures in the afternoon, compounding an already strained day for EPCOT guests. The Flower & Garden Festival likely kept foot traffic elevated even as ride capacity shrank, with guests cycling between food booths and whatever queues were actually open.

    Magic Kingdom: Spring Break Owns Fantasyland

    The Magic Kingdom was the busiest park on property at 7/10, with a 19.7-minute median wait peaking at 1:00 PM. The Fantasyland flat rides told the spring break story clearly: Dumbo, Barnstormer, and Magic Carpets of Aladdin all averaged 25 minutes — nearly double their baselines. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel hit 10 minutes, twice its norm. These are family-heavy attractions, and when young-kid families flood the parks during school breaks, Fantasyland absorbs it first.

    MK had its own operational headaches. Pirates of the Caribbean closed for over two hours during the late morning, and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was down for the first 100 minutes of the day. Neither closure appeared to create dramatic spillover — the park’s deep bench of attractions distributed demand well enough — but losing Pirates during the 10:35 AM to 12:48 PM window meant one fewer air-conditioned escape during the hottest stretch of the morning.

    Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance Had a Rough Day

    Studios posted a 6/10 at 38.8 minutes median, slightly below its 30-day average. The headline was Rise of the Resistance, which went down three separate times: a 97-minute morning closure, a 193-minute midday outage, and another 56 minutes in the early evening. That’s nearly six hours of combined downtime on the park’s marquee attraction. Despite that, the park’s overall numbers held steady — Slinky Dog Dash and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway likely absorbed the excess demand without dramatic spikes showing up in the aggregate median.

    Animal Kingdom: The Quiet Option

    Animal Kingdom came in at just 4/10 with a 25.6-minute median — about 15% below its 30-day average and the most comfortable touring of any park Thursday. For spring break guests willing to make the trip, this was the smart play. With all three other parks running at 6/10 or above, AK offered meaningfully shorter waits across the board. The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 45-minute median, then tapered off through the afternoon.

    Downtime Impact Summary

    Thursday was one of the rougher operational days in recent memory. Across the resort, the three highest-profile E-tickets — Cosmic Rewind, Frozen Ever After, and Rise of the Resistance — combined for nearly 20 hours of downtime. EPCOT bore the worst of it, and guests who arrived expecting to ride Guardians and Frozen spent most of their day without access to either.

    Attraction Park Total Downtime
    Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind EPCOT 7 hr 31 min
    Frozen Ever After EPCOT 6 hr 24 min
    Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance Hollywood Studios 5 hr 46 min
    Pirates of the Caribbean Magic Kingdom 2 hr 14 min
    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Magic Kingdom 1 hr 41 min

    Friday Prediction: More Spring Break, Better Weather

    First, a quick look back: yesterday’s predictions went four-for-four, landing every park within the forecasted range. We’ll take it.

    Friday brings another clear, hot day — 86-degree high with zero precipitation in the forecast. The Global Pet Expo continues, and spring break travel remains in full swing. Fridays during spring break tend to hold steady or build slightly as weekend arrivals layer onto guests already mid-trip.

    Expect Magic Kingdom in the 6-8/10 range — Fantasyland will stay crowded with families, and the afternoon peak could push higher if Friday arrivals head straight to the flagship park. EPCOT should land at 5-7/10, assuming Cosmic Rewind and Frozen actually stay operational; Flower & Garden Festival foot traffic keeps the floor elevated regardless. Hollywood Studios at 5-7/10 — a Friday without party suppression keeps it busy, though not extreme. Animal Kingdom at 3-5/10 remains the value pick for shorter waits and more relaxed touring.

    Strategy for today: if yesterday’s EPCOT downtimes frustrated you, try again — Friday mornings often see better operational stability. If you want the path of least resistance, Animal Kingdom before noon is your best bet for knocking out headliners with minimal waits.

    Thursday’s operational chaos is exactly the kind of day where real-time data changes your plan. Lightning Brain tracks live wait times, downtime alerts, and crowd trends so you can pivot the moment a headliner goes down — not two hours later. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 25, 2026

    Animal Kingdom Ran 31% Below Average While Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios Packed In Spring Break Crowds

    Wednesday’s most striking number wasn’t the 140-minute average for Rise of the Resistance or the nearly six hours Tiana’s Bayou Adventure spent offline. It was the gap between parks: Animal Kingdom posted a 3/10 crowd level with a 20.8-minute median wait, while Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios both hit 7/10. Spring break guests had clear favorites yesterday, and Animal Kingdom wasn’t one of them.

    Hollywood Studios: Heavy and Headliner-Hungry

    Hollywood Studios led all four parks at 7/10 with a 41.5-minute median wait, peaking at 10:00 AM with a 50-minute median. That early peak tells a familiar spring break story — rope-drop rushes from resort guests trying to knock out headliners before lines build. But one headliner wasn’t cooperating.

    Rise of the Resistance was down for over three hours from park open until nearly noon. When it finally came back online, pent-up demand sent waits soaring — the attraction averaged 140 minutes across the day, roughly two and a half times its typical 55-minute average. That’s a punishing wait even by spring break standards and suggests that guests who missed their morning window circled back aggressively in the afternoon. Slinky Dog Dash also took a 37-minute hit late morning, and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway closed at 7:15 PM and didn’t reopen, cutting the evening lineup short for guests who planned late-day touring.

    Magic Kingdom: Heavy Crowds, Heavier Downtime

    Magic Kingdom came in at 7/10 with an 18.1-minute median, which actually ran about 10% below its 30-day average despite the heavy label. The explanation is partly mechanical: Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was offline for the vast majority of the operating day. The first closure stretched from 9:01 AM to 2:29 PM — over five hours. After a brief return, it went down again from 3:55 PM to 6:34 PM. That’s roughly eight hours of downtime for one of the park’s highest-demand attractions.

    With Tiana’s unavailable, pressure redistributed across Fantasyland and Adventureland. The Barnstormer averaged 25 minutes, about two-thirds above its usual 15 — a sign that families with young children had fewer options and longer waits for the ones that remained. Pirates of the Caribbean also took an early 18-minute closure, though it recovered quickly. The late afternoon brought a cluster of brief downtimes: the Railroad, it’s a small world, and Carousel of Progress all closed within minutes of each other around 4:30 PM, compressing options during what’s normally a busy touring window.

    EPCOT: Busy but Bruised by Late-Day Closures

    EPCOT posted a 6/10 at 20.4 minutes median, right in line with its 30-day average. The Flower & Garden Festival continues to draw foot traffic, and Soarin’ bore the brunt — averaging 65 minutes, nearly double its typical 35. That attraction has become the clear demand magnet when festival crowds build, as it sits right in the flow between World Showcase gardens.

    The afternoon and evening were rough operationally. Spaceship Earth closed from 1:57 PM to 5:12 PM — over three hours without the park’s icon. Test Track had a particularly bad day with three separate closures totaling over two and a half hours, including a final shutdown at 6:50 PM from which it never recovered. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure and Journey Into Imagination both closed in the late afternoon as well. For guests arriving on an evening park reservation, the ride menu was significantly diminished.

    Animal Kingdom: Spring Break’s Overlooked Option

    Animal Kingdom posted the day’s lightest crowds at 3/10 with a 20.8-minute median — nearly a third below its 30-day average. Every major headliner ran well under typical levels: Avatar Flight of Passage averaged 45 minutes (versus 65 typical), Kilimanjaro Safaris came in at 28 minutes (versus 40), and Expedition Everest managed just 20 minutes. Even Zootopia: Better Zoogether sat at 10 minutes. A 33-minute closure on Flight of Passage around midday barely registered in the overall numbers.

    The likely explanation is simply spring break crowd distribution. When families have four parks to choose from, the ones with the most headline attractions — Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios — absorb disproportionate share. Animal Kingdom’s earlier closing time may also have pushed day-trippers toward parks where they could tour later into the evening.

    Downtime Report

    Wednesday was one of the rougher operational days in recent weeks. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure’s combined eight hours of downtime was the headliner, effectively removing a top-tier attraction from Magic Kingdom for the entire day. Guests who planned their day around riding it likely had to restructure entirely.

    EPCOT took the hardest hit by volume. Test Track’s repeated failures — three closures plus a final no-reopen shutdown — suggest a persistent issue rather than isolated incidents. Combined with Spaceship Earth’s three-hour afternoon closure and evening losses of Remy’s and Figment, EPCOT lost significant ride capacity during its busiest hours. For a park already running at 6/10, that’s a meaningful reduction in guest experience.

    Thursday Prediction: March 26

    Yesterday’s prediction accuracy: Wednesday’s spring break pattern played out largely as expected, with the park-to-park spread being the main variable.

    For Thursday, expect more of the same spring break dynamic. Clear morning skies and a high of 82°F should keep outdoor touring comfortable, and with no rain in the forecast, there won’t be weather-driven closures to worry about. The Global Pet Expo continues at the convention center, which tends to push convention-goer families into the parks during evening hours.

    Park Predicted Range Rationale
    Magic Kingdom 6-8/10 Spring break demand stays strong; watch whether Tiana’s operational issues persist
    Hollywood Studios 6-8/10 Continued headliner demand; Rise of the Resistance reliability will be the swing factor
    EPCOT 5-7/10 Flower & Garden draws steady traffic; Soarin’ will likely remain the pressure point
    Animal Kingdom 3-5/10 May stay light if spring breakers continue favoring other parks

    Strategy for today: If you have flexibility, Animal Kingdom in the morning is the clear play — yesterday’s data suggests you could tour every headliner with minimal waits before noon. Then hop to EPCOT for afternoon Flower & Garden touring when ride lines peak elsewhere. Avoid Hollywood Studios before noon unless you have Lightning Lane access for Rise of the Resistance.

    See the Patterns Before They Happen

    Yesterday’s massive park-to-park crowd split — Animal Kingdom at 3/10 while two parks hit 7/10 — is exactly the kind of imbalance that changes your entire touring plan. Lightning Brain tracks these splits in real time so you can pivot to the lighter park before the crowds catch on. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Most Reliable Rides

    Avatar Flight of Passage Has 99.66% Uptime — and a 68-Minute Average Wait

    That’s the holy grail of Disney World ride planning: a headliner attraction that almost never goes down. Across all of 2025 — 365 days, 54 million status records — Flight of Passage experienced just 28 downtime incidents. That’s once every 13 days. For a ride with cutting-edge motion simulation, 3D projection, and wind-and-scent effects, that operational consistency is remarkable.

    But Flight of Passage isn’t alone. Our analysis of every operating status change across Walt Disney World’s four theme parks in 2025 reveals a clear tier system of reliability — and some of the most dependable rides are ones you’d least expect.

    Methodology

    We analyzed 54 million status records from all of 2025 (January 1 through December 31), covering every attraction across Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom. Uptime percentage measures how often a ride was OPERATING versus DOWN during periods it was scheduled to be open (excluding planned closures and refurbishments). We tracked individual downtime incidents — each transition from OPERATING to DOWN — to calculate incident frequency and mean time between failures. Wait time data from the same period provides context on ride popularity.

    The Top 10: Disney World’s Most Reliable Major Rides

    To separate signal from noise, we filtered for attractions that actually have ride vehicles, queues, and meaningful guest throughput. Walk-through exhibits and static displays like Cinderella Castle technically have 100% uptime, but that’s not useful information for touring plans. Here are the rides that matter most:

    Rank Attraction Park Uptime Avg Wait Days Between Incidents
    1 Kilimanjaro Safaris AK 99.78% 33 min 16.6
    2 Avatar Flight of Passage AK 99.66% 68 min 13.0
    3 Soarin’ Around the World EPCOT 99.59% 30 min 14.0
    4 Star Tours HS 99.55% 9 min 12.2
    5 Na’vi River Journey AK 99.42% 46 min 5.0
    6 Zootopia: Better Zoogether! AK 99.17% 21 min
    7 Alien Swirling Saucers HS 99.14% 25 min 4.9
    8 Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run HS 99.11% 37 min 7.9
    9 Tower of Terror HS 98.94% 42 min 4.3
    10 Buzz Lightyear’s Space Ranger Spin MK 98.87% 25 min

    The standout pattern: Animal Kingdom dominates the top of the reliability rankings. Three of the top six most reliable rides live in Disney’s newest theme park — and one of them (Flight of Passage) is also the highest-demand attraction in all of Walt Disney World.

    The Holy Grail: Popular AND Dependable

    Reliability alone isn’t what makes a ride valuable for your touring plan. What you really want is a ride that’s both popular (worth prioritizing) and reliable (almost certainly running when you show up). We identified these by cross-referencing uptime with average posted wait times:

    Tier 1: High demand + ultra-reliable (99%+ uptime, 30+ min average wait)

    • Avatar Flight of Passage — 99.66% uptime, 68-min avg wait. The single best combination of popularity and reliability at Disney World.
    • Na’vi River Journey — 99.42% uptime, 46-min avg wait. Pandora’s dark ride is nearly as dependable as its neighbor.
    • Kilimanjaro Safaris — 99.78% uptime, 33-min avg wait. The most reliable major ride at Disney World, period.
    • Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run — 99.11% uptime, 37-min avg wait. Galaxy’s Edge technology that actually works.
    • Soarin’ Around the World — 99.59% uptime, 30-min avg wait. The theater format pays dividends in reliability.

    Tier 2: High demand + very reliable (97-99% uptime, 40+ min average wait)

    • Tower of Terror — 98.94% uptime, 42-min avg wait
    • TRON Lightcycle / Run — 97.78% uptime, 67-min avg wait
    • Peter Pan’s Flight — 97.63% uptime, 43-min avg wait
    • Toy Story Mania! — 97.32% uptime, 41-min avg wait

    Notice what’s missing from these lists: the rides with the worst reputations for breakdowns. Test Track (86.86% uptime), Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (90.43%), and Rise of the Resistance (92.09%) all combine high demand with significantly lower reliability — making them the riskiest anchors for a touring plan.


    Lightning Brain tracks real-time ride status across every Disney World attraction, so you’ll know instantly when a ride goes down — or comes back up. Available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.


    Hidden Gems: Reliable Rides You Can Always Count On

    Some of the most reliable rides at Disney World fly under the radar. These attractions rarely break down AND rarely have long waits — making them perfect for filling gaps in your touring plan or recovering from a headliner being unexpectedly closed:

    • Star Tours (HS, 99.55% uptime, 9-min avg wait) — A motion simulator that’s been refined over decades. Near-perfect reliability with virtually no line. This is the best ride-value-per-minute at Hollywood Studios.
    • Walt Disney’s Enchanted Tiki Room (MK, 99.38% uptime, 11-min avg wait) — Goes down once every 8 days on average, but with a show format, that rarely affects guests already inside.
    • Mad Tea Party (MK, 98.83% uptime, 10-min avg wait) — Simple spinning mechanics equal dependable operations.
    • “it’s a small world” (MK, 98.68% uptime, 16-min avg wait) — The classic boat ride format that Disney perfected in 1964 still delivers consistent operations 60+ years later.
    • Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor (MK, 98.36% uptime, 11-min avg wait) — Theater-based format with remarkably consistent availability.

    Does Ride Technology Predict Reliability?

    The data reveals clear patterns by attraction type:

    Technology Type Examples Avg Uptime
    Theater/Show Hall of Presidents, Tiki Room, Muppet*Vision 3D ~99.2%
    Simulator/Motion Base Star Tours, Soarin’, Flight of Passage, Smugglers Run ~99.4%
    Omnimover/Slow Dark Ride Buzz Lightyear, small world, Spaceship Earth ~97.5%
    Trackless Dark Ride Rise of the Resistance, Remy’s, Mickey’s Runaway Railway ~93.2%
    Outdoor Coaster Barnstormer, Everest, Seven Dwarfs, TRON, Slinky Dog ~94.4%
    Indoor Coaster Space Mountain, Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster, Cosmic Rewind ~94.3%
    Water/Flume Ride Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Kali River Rapids, Pirates ~91.8%
    High-Speed Track Ride Test Track ~86.9%

    The trend is unmistakable: simpler motion systems and theater-style attractions dominate the reliability rankings. Simulators — where the ride vehicle stays in place and the screen does the moving — outperform almost every other technology type. Flight of Passage achieves 99.66% uptime despite its complexity because its core motion platform is self-contained; there’s no track system, no water, no outdoor exposure.

    Trackless ride systems, Disney’s newest ride technology, are the least reliable category of dark rides. Rise of the Resistance (92.09%), Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure (92.31%), and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway (95.20%) all fall in the bottom half of the reliability rankings. These rides navigate by sophisticated wireless guidance systems with dozens of ride vehicles operating independently — more moving parts means more failure points.

    Water rides consistently rank near the bottom. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (90.43%) and Kali River Rapids (91.07%) both suffer from the inherent challenges of water management systems — pumps, flumes, and splash effects that are mechanically complex and weather-sensitive.

    Park-by-Park: Which Park Runs the Tightest Ship?

    Park Attractions Tracked Avg Uptime Lowest Uptime Ride
    Animal Kingdom 20 98.58% Kali River Rapids (91.07%)
    EPCOT 33 98.29% Test Track (86.86%)
    Hollywood Studios 13 97.32% Rise of the Resistance (92.09%)
    Magic Kingdom 38 96.80% Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (90.43%)

    Animal Kingdom leads all four parks with an average uptime of 98.58%. This is partly a function of its ride roster — Kilimanjaro Safaris and the Pandora attractions are all simulator or vehicle-based systems that don’t rely on complex track infrastructure — but it’s still an impressive showing. If you’re building a day around consistently available rides, Animal Kingdom is your safest bet.

    Magic Kingdom finishes last, which seems counterintuitive for Disney’s flagship park. But it has 38 tracked attractions — nearly double Hollywood Studios — and many of them are legacy rides with decades-old mechanical systems. The sheer number of attractions means more opportunities for downtime. That said, 96.80% average uptime is still excellent; it translates to roughly 20 minutes of downtime per ride per operating day.

    Practical Implications: Building a Bulletproof Touring Plan

    Here’s how to use this data when planning your days:

    Anchor your plan around reliable headliners. Flight of Passage (99.66%), Kilimanjaro Safaris (99.78%), Soarin’ (99.59%), and Millennium Falcon (99.11%) are the rides you can confidently plan around. They’ll be running when you arrive.

    Plan flexibility for unreliable headliners. Test Track (86.86%), Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (90.43%), and Rise of the Resistance (92.09%) need backup plans. If your day revolves around one of these, you need a contingency. Rise of the Resistance goes down roughly once per day and averages 21 minutes of downtime per incident when it does.

    Use reliable low-wait rides as your recovery options. When a headliner goes down and your plan gets disrupted, default to: Star Tours (99.55%, 9-min wait), Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor (98.36%, 11 min), or Country Bear Musical Jamboree (98.31%, 11 min). These are essentially guaranteed to be available.

    At Animal Kingdom, go aggressive. The park’s top rides are so reliable that you can realistically plan to ride Flight of Passage, Na’vi River Journey, Kilimanjaro Safaris, and Expedition Everest in sequence with very little risk of a disruption. That combo of four headliners with a combined average uptime above 98% doesn’t exist at any other park.

    At Magic Kingdom, plan for one disruption. With 38 attractions averaging 96.8% uptime, the math says at least one ride you want will be down during your visit. It won’t ruin your day — but build 30 minutes of buffer into your schedule.

    Limitations

    Our status data captures ride status at approximately 5-minute intervals, which means very brief downtimes (under 5 minutes) may be underrepresented while incidents spanning a status check are captured. We categorized ride types manually based on their physical systems; some rides blend categories. Uptime percentages exclude planned closures and refurbishments — we’re measuring only unplanned downtime during operating hours. Weather-related closures that register as “DOWN” rather than “CLOSED” are included in our analysis, which may slightly disadvantage outdoor attractions.

    The Bottom Line

    Disney World’s most reliable rides aren’t random — they follow clear patterns. Simulators and theater attractions dominate the top of the reliability rankings. Animal Kingdom runs the most consistent fleet. And several headliner attractions — Flight of Passage, Kilimanjaro Safaris, Soarin’, Millennium Falcon — achieve the rare combination of being both wildly popular and almost never broken.

    The next time you’re building a touring plan, start with the rides that will actually be running. The most reliable attractions aren’t just a nice-to-have — they’re the foundation of a day that doesn’t fall apart when one ride goes down.

    Plan smarter: lightningbrain.app · App Store

  • Daily Park Report: March 24, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Pushed to 8/10 While Animal Kingdom Stayed a Spring Break Sleeper

    Rise of the Resistance averaged 120 minutes yesterday. That’s more than double its typical 55-minute baseline, and it anchored a Hollywood Studios day that hit 8/10 — the heaviest park on property by a wide margin. Meanwhile, Animal Kingdom sat at a comfortable 4/10 just a few miles away. If you were touring the Studios yesterday, you felt every minute of spring break. If you were at Animal Kingdom, you might have wondered where everybody went.

    Tuesday, March 24 brought partly cloudy skies and a high of 82°F — warm enough to make outdoor queues uncomfortable but not enough to chase anyone home. Spring break season is in full swing with multiple school districts on break, and the numbers reflected it: three of four parks landed at 7/10 or above. Only Animal Kingdom held steady.

    Hollywood Studios: Spring Break’s Pressure Cooker

    At 44-minute medians and a peak hour of 1:00 PM hitting 65 minutes, Hollywood Studios ran heavy all day. The 8/10 crowd level sits 11% above the 30-day average, and the pain was concentrated on headliners. Rise of the Resistance at 120 minutes was the single longest average wait across all four parks, but the morning didn’t start smoothly either — Rise went down for over an hour starting at 8:41 AM, meaning early-morning rope-droppers who targeted it got burned.

    Star Tours was the bigger operational story. A 310-minute closure from 8:40 AM to 1:50 PM wiped out the attraction for the entire morning and into peak afternoon. With Star Tours and Rise both unavailable during the morning window, Galaxy’s Edge essentially had one headliner operating for hours. Toy Story Mania also went down for 48 minutes over the lunch hour, and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway was offline for 43 minutes in the early morning. For a park already running heavy with spring break crowds, losing that much ride capacity compounded the squeeze on everything that was operating.

    EPCOT: Flower & Garden Draws Them In

    EPCOT came in at 7/10 with a 22-minute median — roughly 12% above its 30-day average. The Flower & Garden Festival is pulling guests in, and the noon peak hour at 40-minute medians confirms midday congestion was real. Soarin’ was the standout at 60 minutes average, nearly double its 35-minute baseline. That’s a classic spring break signature: families gravitating toward the familiar headliner.

    Spaceship Earth had a rough day operationally, going down twice — a 92-minute closure around midday and another 129-minute closure in the early evening. Losing the park’s icon ride during two separate windows pushed foot traffic toward World Showcase, which likely contributed to sustained waits across Future World attractions. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure also closed for an hour in the morning. On the flip side, Journey Into Imagination with Figment averaged just 10 minutes against a 15-minute norm, and it closed for the night at 7:44 PM without reopening — a quiet exit for a quiet day on that attraction.

    Magic Kingdom: Steady at 7/10

    Magic Kingdom’s 20-minute median matched its 30-day average exactly, but that baseline already reflects elevated spring break traffic. A 7/10 crowd level with an 11:00 AM peak tells the familiar spring break story: families arriving at rope drop, building through late morning, then gradually thinning in the afternoon heat. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel doubled its typical wait to 10 minutes — a small number, but it signals how thoroughly Fantasyland was saturated with families with young children.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure went down for nearly two hours in the morning, from 9:11 to 11:05 AM. On a warm 82-degree day when a water ride should be drawing strong demand, that’s a significant loss during the building-crowd window. The Barnstormer was out even longer — over five hours from 8:32 AM to 1:35 PM — removing a key Fantasyland capacity sponge for young kids. TRON had a shorter 24-minute closure mid-morning that likely caused a brief backup in Tomorrowland.

    Animal Kingdom: The Comfortable Exception

    Animal Kingdom posted a 4/10 at 30-minute medians, right in line with its 30-day average. While the other three parks absorbed spring break pressure, AK held steady. The 11:00 AM peak hit 50 minutes, but overall the park offered the most relaxed touring experience on property. Kali River Rapids averaged 35 minutes — well above its 20-minute norm, but that’s entirely expected when the thermometer hits 82°F. Warm weather turns a skippable rapids ride into a must-do cooldown. Zootopia: Better Zoogether averaged just 10 minutes, a third below its typical wait, suggesting the newer attraction’s initial buzz has settled into a manageable rhythm.

    Downtimes: A Rough Morning Across the Board

    Yesterday was operationally messy. Four parks combined for over 1,300 minutes of notable downtime. The worst hit was Hollywood Studios, where Star Tours’ five-hour morning closure overlapped with Rise of the Resistance’s early outage, effectively neutering the Galaxy’s Edge corridor during peak arrivals. At EPCOT, Spaceship Earth going down twice in one day is unusual and removed a high-capacity people-eater during periods when the park needed it most. Magic Kingdom’s combination of Barnstormer (five hours) and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (two hours) hit the family-ride segment hardest. None of these appeared weather-related — skies were partly cloudy with negligible precipitation.

    Yesterday’s Prediction: Clean Sweep

    Our Tuesday forecast nailed all four parks. MK at 6-8 landed on 7, EPCOT at 6-8 landed on 7, Hollywood Studios at 7-9 landed on 8, and Animal Kingdom at 4-6 landed on 4. A strong day for the model, and spring break patterns are holding predictable so far this week.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, March 25

    Expect a similar profile with slight softening. Wednesday is typically the lightest midweek day during spring break as some families take rest days or visit water parks. A high of 79°F under mostly cloudy skies with minimal rain chance means comfortable outdoor touring without weather disruptions.

    • Hollywood Studios: 7-8/10. Still the busiest park on property during spring break, but midweek easing should take the edge off yesterday’s 8.
    • Magic Kingdom: 6-8/10. Spring break families keep this heavy, though Wednesday historically softens slightly from Tuesday.
    • EPCOT: 6-7/10. Flower & Garden Festival continues to draw, but midweek should pull back from yesterday’s 7.
    • Animal Kingdom: 3-5/10. The comfortable touring option remains. If you’ve been putting off Kilimanjaro Safaris or Flight of Passage, Wednesday morning at AK is your play.

    Strategy: Animal Kingdom in the morning remains the best value on property right now. If Studios is your priority, arrive before rope drop and target Rise of the Resistance immediately — yesterday’s early closure is a reminder that waiting until midday is a gamble. EPCOT evenings are pleasant for Flower & Garden browsing once the midday peak subsides.

    Spring break crowd splits like yesterday’s — where one park sits 4 points below the others — are exactly the kind of pattern that saves you hours of queue time if you catch it early. Lightning Brain tracks these dynamics in real time so you can pivot before the crowds do. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: March 23, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Hit 9/10 While Animal Kingdom Coasted at 4/10 — Spring Break’s Lopsided Monday

    A 47-minute median wait at Hollywood Studios. That’s not just busy — that’s Packed territory, a 9/10 crowd level that pushed Rise of the Resistance to a staggering 135-minute average. Meanwhile, six miles away, Animal Kingdom sat at a comfortable 4/10 with a 29-minute median. If you picked the wrong park yesterday, you felt it. If you picked the right one, you might not have believed the crowds existed at all.

    Monday, March 23 delivered textbook spring break conditions — 84 degrees, clear skies, zero precipitation — and the crowds responded accordingly. Three of four parks registered heavy-or-above levels, with only Animal Kingdom breaking the pattern. The split tells us something useful: spring break families are gravitating toward headliner-dense parks, and AK remains undervalued as an escape valve.

    Hollywood Studios — The Pressure Cooker

    At 9/10, Hollywood Studios ran roughly 18% above its 30-day average, with a median wait of 47 minutes. The peak hit at 10:00 AM — a full 60-minute median — meaning guests who rope-dropped without a plan were immediately swimming upstream. Rise of the Resistance averaged 135 minutes, more than double its typical 55-minute baseline. That’s a ride where Lightning Lane pays for itself three times over on a day like this.

    The morning wasn’t without disruption. Rise went down for 84 minutes starting at 8:38 AM, and Slinky Dog Dash closed for 21 minutes during the same window. For early-arriving guests banking on a quick Batuu hit, that was a gut punch. Toy Story Mania also took two hits — a 42-minute closure late morning and another 24-minute interruption just after noon. With the park’s three biggest draws all experiencing downtime on one of its busiest days, the waits that remained operational absorbed enormous pressure.

    EPCOT — Flower & Garden Meets Spring Break

    EPCOT registered 8/10 with a 26.7-minute median, a full third above its 30-day average. The curious detail: peak hour landed at 8:00 AM with a 45-minute median, suggesting a massive early-morning surge from guests using Early Entry. Soarin’ averaged 75 minutes — more than double its usual 35 — and even low-demand rides felt the squeeze. Nemo & Friends posted 20-minute waits, Gran Fiesta Tour hit 10, and Spaceship Earth averaged 25 minutes, all well above their baselines.

    EPCOT also had its roughest operational day in recent memory. Spaceship Earth was offline for two hours starting at 8:32 AM — right during that peak window — which likely concentrated early-morning demand onto remaining World Celebration attractions. Frozen Ever After went down for over two hours midday, and Test Track was unavailable for 87 minutes in the afternoon. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure closed twice, including a final 60-minute closure at 7:05 PM from which it never reopened. Four major attractions logging significant downtime on an 8/10 crowd day is a tough guest experience. The Flower & Garden Festival likely kept overall satisfaction higher than the queue data alone would suggest — festival booths don’t have wait times.

    Magic Kingdom — Steady and Heavy

    Magic Kingdom came in at 8/10 with a 21-minute median, peaking at 11:00 AM. The numbers here are less dramatic than the other headliner parks, but a 30-minute median at peak still means the most popular rides were pushing well past that. Fantasyland flat rides told the crowd story clearly: Dumbo averaged 25 minutes, Magic Carpets of Aladdin hit 25, and “it’s a small world” posted the same — all roughly two-thirds above their typical levels.

    Haunted Mansion went down for 75 minutes starting at 9:02 AM, and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure closed for 42 minutes during the same early window. On an 84-degree day, Tiana’s was running strong demand (warm-weather water ride appeal), so that morning closure likely frustrated guests who had specifically targeted it. Later in the day, Winnie the Pooh took two separate hits totaling over 90 minutes combined, though its impact on overall park flow was modest.

    Animal Kingdom — The Spring Break Sleeper

    Animal Kingdom was the clear outlier at 4/10, actually running slightly below its 30-day average. This park continues to be spring break’s best-kept secret. The one standout: Kali River Rapids averaged 45 minutes, well above its usual 20. With temperatures in the mid-80s, families were happy to get soaked — a sharp contrast to winter months when that queue sits near zero. Beyond Kali, the park offered genuinely comfortable touring conditions, with a noon peak of 50 minutes concentrated in a narrow band of headliners while the rest of the lineup stayed manageable.

    Downtime Summary

    Yesterday was a rough operational day resort-wide, with EPCOT taking the hardest hit. The park lost a combined 7+ hours of capacity across Spaceship Earth, Frozen Ever After, Test Track, and Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure. Hollywood Studios saw its top three attractions — Rise of the Resistance, Slinky Dog Dash, and Toy Story Mania — all go down during morning hours when demand was at its highest. For guests without flexible plans, these closures turned an already-packed day into a test of patience.

    Today’s Outlook: Tuesday, March 24

    Our prediction scorecard from yesterday landed well — we nailed Magic Kingdom (predicted 7-8, got 8) and EPCOT (predicted 6-8, got 8), and came close on Animal Kingdom (predicted 5-6, got 4). The miss was Hollywood Studios, where we predicted 6-7 and it delivered a 9. Spring break demand at HS continues to outpace expectations.

    Today’s forecast is nearly identical — 83 degrees, mostly clear, no rain — so there’s no weather-driven reason to expect a significant shift. Spring break is still in full swing. Expect Hollywood Studios to remain the hottest park, likely in the 7-9/10 range, as families continue to prioritize Galaxy’s Edge and Toy Story Land. Magic Kingdom and EPCOT should hold in the 6-8/10 range, with EPCOT’s Flower & Garden Festival sustaining elevated foot traffic. Animal Kingdom is your best bet for manageable waits, likely landing in the 4-6/10 range again.

    The play today: If you have park hopper tickets, start at Animal Kingdom at open, ride Flight of Passage and Kilimanjaro Safaris with short waits, then hop to your preferred headliner park after 2:00 PM when the initial morning surge has mellowed.

    Yesterday’s dramatic park split — a 9/10 at Hollywood Studios versus a 4/10 at Animal Kingdom — is exactly the kind of imbalance that separates a great park day from a frustrating one. Lightning Brain tracks these splits in real time so you can make the call before you’re stuck in a parking tram. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!