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  • Daily Park Report: February 24, 2026

    Animal Kingdom Hit a 2/10 on a Clear February Tuesday

    Animal Kingdom recorded its lightest crowds in weeks yesterday, dropping to just 16.5 minutes median wait—a full 34% below its 30-day average. Meanwhile, Magic Kingdom dealt with a rough operational day, losing multiple headliners to extended downtimes while still managing to hit a 6/10 crowd level. The split tells you something about how guests are distributing across the resort right now.

    Weather was crisp but cooperative: a 34°F morning warming to 59°F by afternoon under clear skies. Cold mornings tend to delay rope drop arrivals, and we saw that pattern clearly at Animal Kingdom, where waits didn’t climb above 15 minutes until 11 AM.

    Magic Kingdom: Busy Despite the Breakdowns

    Magic Kingdom posted a 6/10 at 17.7 minutes median, roughly 11% below its recent average. But the number undersells how chaotic the day felt for guests. Pirates of the Caribbean went down twice—once for over two hours in the morning, then again for 95 minutes in the afternoon. Space Mountain was offline during the late-morning peak, taking out a key Tomorrowland anchor for nearly two hours. Haunted Mansion closed for 95 minutes during the afternoon.

    With these closures stacking up, guests redistributed to whatever was running. Fantasyland absorbed much of the pressure: Dumbo, “it’s a small world,” and Under the Sea all averaged 25-minute waits, roughly 67% above their typical baselines. These aren’t normally bottleneck attractions, but when three major rides are simultaneously unavailable, secondary options get hammered.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure bucked the trend at just 15 minutes—but that’s expected behavior on a day that started at 34°F. Guests weren’t lining up to get soaked.

    Hollywood Studios: Steady at 6/10

    Hollywood Studios held at a 6/10 with a 39-minute median, essentially flat against its 30-day average. The park peaked at noon with 55-minute medians before settling into the low 40s for the afternoon.

    Rise of the Resistance had a rough evening, going down twice—first for 45 minutes starting at 4 PM, then again for 75 minutes from 5:45 PM onward. That second closure ate into prime touring time for guests planning to hit Galaxy’s Edge before dinner. Slinky Dog Dash also went offline during the first hour of operation, though the 56-minute morning closure happened early enough that most guests probably didn’t notice.

    Tonight’s Disney After Hours event at Hollywood Studios won’t affect today’s daytime crowds—After Hours starts after regular park close, so day guests can tour on a normal schedule.

    EPCOT: Moderate at 5/10

    EPCOT came in at a 5/10 with an 18-minute median, about 10% below average. The park showed an unusual traffic shape: waits spiked to 30 minutes at 11 AM, dropped to 15 minutes by 1 PM, then popped back up to 25 minutes at 2 PM before flattening out. This sawtooth pattern suggests waves of guests moving between World Showcase and Future World rather than a steady build-and-fade.

    Frozen Ever After had a brief 20-minute closure late morning, but otherwise EPCOT ran clean operationally—a contrast to Magic Kingdom’s struggles.

    Animal Kingdom: The Quiet Park

    Animal Kingdom’s 2/10 was the standout of the day. At 16.5 minutes median, waits ran a third below the 30-day average. Kilimanjaro Safaris averaged just 20 minutes, nearly 43% under its typical 35-minute baseline. Expedition Everest posted 23-minute averages, also well below normal.

    Part of this is simply Tuesday behavior—Animal Kingdom tends to run lighter midweek. The cold morning likely suppressed early arrivals further, and with no special events driving traffic, guests who might otherwise head to AK apparently chose other parks. The only hiccup was a 35-minute Kali River Rapids closure late afternoon, which barely registered given how few guests were waiting for a water ride in 50-degree weather.

    Downtime Impact

    Magic Kingdom took the operational hit yesterday. Between Pirates (down twice for a combined 225 minutes), Space Mountain (100 minutes), Haunted Mansion (95 minutes), and Country Bear Musical Jamboree (65 minutes), guests lost access to major attractions across multiple lands throughout the day. The Fantasyland wait spikes—three family rides running 67% above baseline—directly correlate with these closures pushing guests toward whatever was available.

    Hollywood Studios saw Rise of the Resistance unavailable for two hours of evening touring, which likely pushed Galaxy’s Edge guests toward Smugglers Run (itself down for 35 minutes earlier). When your headliner goes down at 5:45 PM, there’s not much day left to recover.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, February 25

    Yesterday I predicted—well, the system shows 0/10 across multiple parks, which clearly isn’t right. That’s a data error on our end, not a real prediction. Setting that aside and looking at today’s actual conditions:

    Expect a warmer day with highs reaching 66°F under clear skies. Hollywood Studios hosts Disney After Hours tonight, but remember: this has no effect on daytime crowds since the event runs after regular park close.

    With no special events, no holiday pressure, and midweek timing, predict another moderate day across the resort. Magic Kingdom should land in the 5-6/10 range, similar to yesterday but potentially lighter if operational issues don’t repeat. Hollywood Studios will likely hold at 5-6/10. EPCOT should stay in the 4-5/10 range. Animal Kingdom could tick up slightly from yesterday’s 2/10 as the warmer afternoon temperatures make the park more appealing—call it 3-4/10.

    Best strategy: Hit Animal Kingdom in the morning while it’s still running light, then shift to Magic Kingdom or EPCOT for the afternoon. If yesterday’s downtime patterns repeat at MK, have a flexible backup plan.

    Track Real-Time Conditions

    Yesterday’s Magic Kingdom closures reshuffled guest flow in ways that weren’t obvious until you looked at the data. Lightning Brain tracks these operational changes live, so you can adjust your touring plan before you’re stuck in a 25-minute line for Under the Sea. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 23, 2026

    EPCOT Hit 9/10 on a Monday — And It Wasn’t Even the Busiest Park Story

    Yesterday told two very different tales. EPCOT climbed to a packed 9/10 with 28-minute median waits — 42% above its 30-day average — while Animal Kingdom sat at a breezy 3/10 just a few miles away. That’s not a typo. On the same Monday afternoon, guests at EPCOT faced 45-minute median waits at 11 AM while Animal Kingdom peaked at 35 minutes and cleared out to 10-minute waits by 4 PM.

    The Festival of the Arts drove that EPCOT surge, but not in the way you might expect. The headliners weren’t the problem — it was the low-capacity attractions. The Seas with Nemo & Friends posted 30-minute waits, six times its typical 5-minute baseline. Gran Fiesta Tour tripled to 15 minutes. These aren’t thrill rides; they’re climate-controlled respites between food booths. When festival crowds want somewhere to sit down and digest, they pile into dark rides.

    Hollywood Studios: Heavy All Day Long

    Hollywood Studios ran an 8/10 with 44-minute median waits, roughly 10% above average. The park hit its stride at 11 AM with 55-minute medians and never really let up — waits stayed above 50 minutes from noon through 4 PM before tapering into the evening.

    Rise of the Resistance went down twice: once mid-morning for 40 minutes and again from 4:50 to 6:00 PM. That evening closure came right as families were wrapping up dinner and looking for one more headliner. Slinky Dog Dash also dropped out for nearly an hour in the morning. When two of your three biggest capacity-eaters are offline during the same operational day, you feel it in the queue times elsewhere — though the data shows waits stayed relatively steady rather than spiking dramatically during these windows.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Without Festival Patience

    That 9/10 rating reflects genuine crowding. Spaceship Earth hit 25-minute waits, nearly double its baseline. Living with the Land pushed to 30 minutes. Journey Into Imagination sat at 25. These are attractions that typically absorb overflow — when they’re all running 15+ minutes above normal, the entire World Celebration and World Nature corridor feels congested.

    Frozen Ever After compounded the problem by going down for three hours starting at 8:40 AM. That’s the park’s biggest Lightning Lane draw offline through the late-morning peak. Norway pavilion crowds had nowhere to go, and neighboring attractions absorbed the spillover. By the time Frozen reopened at 11:40, the damage was done — the whole park was running hot.

    Animal Kingdom: The Monday Surprise

    While EPCOT and Hollywood Studios ran heavy, Animal Kingdom posted a 3/10 — actually 18% below its 30-day average. The park cleared out dramatically after lunch, dropping from 35-minute median waits at noon to just 10 minutes by 4 PM.

    This is a classic post-holiday-weekend pattern. Families who extended their President’s Day trips departed Monday morning, and Animal Kingdom’s later opening time (relative to EPCOT) meant departure-day guests skipped it entirely. The guests who did show up had the run of the place by afternoon.

    Magic Kingdom: Moderate With a Cold-Weather Twist

    Magic Kingdom landed at 5/10 with 17-minute median waits — about 16% below average. The most notable data point: Tiana’s Bayou Adventure averaged just 5 minutes, roughly 85% below its typical 35-minute wait. With morning temperatures in the low 40s, guests weren’t lining up to get soaked. PeopleMover also ran light at 5 minutes, while “it’s a small world” pushed to 25 minutes as families sought indoor, dry attractions.

    The After Hours event that evening had no impact on daytime operations — that’s how After Hours works. Day guests toured normally; the late-night event simply added extra hours after the regular 9 PM close.

    Downtime Report

    Frozen Ever After’s three-hour morning outage was yesterday’s most consequential closure. With EPCOT already running packed, losing Norway’s anchor attraction through peak hours left festival guests with fewer options to escape the pavilion walkways. Test Track also went down briefly at 4:40 PM for 25 minutes — short enough to avoid major disruption but long enough to strand guests who’d been waiting.

    At Hollywood Studios, the twin Rise of the Resistance closures totaled nearly two hours of lost capacity. Slinky Dog’s 55-minute morning outage overlapped with the first Rise closure, creating a rough 9-10 AM window where two major attractions were simultaneously unavailable.

    Today’s Outlook: Tuesday Cooldown

    Yesterday’s predictions missed badly — we didn’t have forecasts for most parks and undershot EPCOT by 2 levels. The post-holiday exodus we expected happened at Animal Kingdom but nowhere else.

    Today should see genuine cooling. Temperatures start at 33°F and peak at only 54°F — the coldest day of the week. Expect Magic Kingdom in the 4-5/10 range as water rides stay quiet. Hollywood Studios should drop to 6-7/10 without the Monday holiday holdovers. EPCOT will likely moderate to 6-8/10; the Festival of the Arts continues, but weekday festival crowds trend lighter than Monday-after-a-holiday crowds.

    Animal Kingdom is your best bet today. A 3-4/10 day with comfortable touring conditions and no major events. If you want to ride Avatar Flight of Passage without Lightning Lane, this is your window.

    Bottom line: Layer up for the morning chill, hit Animal Kingdom or Magic Kingdom early, and save EPCOT for late afternoon when festival crowds thin out.

    Track the Patterns That Matter

    A 9/10 EPCOT next to a 3/10 Animal Kingdom — on the same day — shows exactly why park-by-park data matters. Lightning Brain identifies these splits in real time so you’re never stuck in the crowded half. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 22, 2026

    EPCOT Surged to 8/10 While Magic Kingdom Coasted at Moderate Levels

    Yesterday, Sunday, February 22nd, EPCOT posted wait times 37.5% above its 30-day average—the clear outlier across Walt Disney World. With a median wait of 27.5 minutes pushing the park to an 8/10 crowd level, guests faced conditions usually reserved for peak holiday periods. Meanwhile, Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios both landed at a moderate 5/10, and Animal Kingdom stayed light at 3/10. The split tells an interesting story about where crowds chose to spend their final Sunday of Presidents’ Day weekend.

    Temperatures climbed to 80°F with overcast skies for most of the day—comfortable touring weather that kept guests in queues rather than seeking shade. The Youth Flag Football World Championships continued bringing thousands of athlete families to the resort, and EPCOT’s Festival of the Arts appears to have been their destination of choice.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Hit Hard

    EPCOT absorbed the brunt of Sunday’s traffic. The park hit its peak at 11 AM with 35-minute median waits, and those levels held steady through mid-afternoon before easing after 4 PM. The Festival of the Arts drew guests who weren’t just there for food booths—they were riding attractions too.

    The outlier data tells the story clearly. The Seas with Nemo & Friends posted 25-minute averages, five times its typical 5-minute wait. Gran Fiesta Tour tripled to 15 minutes. Living with the Land doubled to 30 minutes. These aren’t headliners seeing surge demand—they’re the low-wait attractions guests typically use as walk-ons. When your “easy” rides are posting 15-25 minute waits, you’re in a genuinely crowded park.

    Soarin’ climbed to 55-minute averages, well above its usual 35 minutes. Spaceship Earth showed 25-minute waits when it was operational—but that’s only part of the picture.

    EPCOT’s Downtime Disaster

    Spaceship Earth went down at 8:40 AM and didn’t reopen until 5:05 PM—over eight hours offline during peak park hours. For a park already running hot, losing its most iconic attraction created genuine problems. Test Track added to the pain with two separate closures totaling nearly two hours, and Frozen Ever After was unavailable for 100 minutes during the midday rush.

    When three major attractions are simultaneously unavailable, remaining queues absorb the displaced demand. The elevated waits on typically low-wait attractions likely reflect this spillover as much as raw crowd volume.

    Hollywood Studios: A Manageable Moderate

    Hollywood Studios landed at 5/10 with a 37-minute median—actually 17% below the 30-day average despite strong weekend attendance. The park peaked at 1 PM with 50-minute medians and held in the 40-50 minute range through late afternoon.

    Star Tours posted unusual numbers, averaging just 10 minutes against a typical 5-minute baseline. That’s elevated for Star Tours but still represents an easy boarding. No major headliner downtimes affected the park, which likely helped distribute crowds more evenly than EPCOT experienced.

    Magic Kingdom: Lighter Than Expected

    Magic Kingdom’s 5/10 might look moderate on paper, but a 15-minute median represents a 24% drop from the 30-day average. For a Sunday during Presidents’ Day weekend, these are comfortable touring conditions. The park peaked gently at 1 PM with just 20-minute medians.

    Seven Dwarfs Mine Train went down for 20 minutes mid-morning, but the brief closure didn’t materially impact the day. More notably, Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel both ran at half their typical wait times—a sign that crowd pressure simply wasn’t there.

    Animal Kingdom: The Quiet Alternative

    At just 3/10, Animal Kingdom offered the lightest touring conditions of any park. The 21-minute median sat nearly 17% below the 30-day average. The park showed an interesting traffic shape: a sharp spike to 40-minute medians at noon, then a rapid drop to 20 minutes by 2 PM.

    Expedition Everest went down for over three hours starting at 10:05 AM, removing the park’s most popular thrill ride during the morning build. With Everest unavailable, guests may have simply chosen other parks—or those already at Animal Kingdom found shorter waits on remaining attractions. Kali River Rapids saw a brief 25-minute closure but otherwise operated normally (though demand for water rides remains low in February regardless of the 80-degree temperatures).

    Today’s Outlook: Cold Snap Changes Everything

    Monday, February 23rd brings a dramatic temperature swing—highs of just 51°F compared to yesterday’s 80°F. This 30-degree drop will reshape guest behavior significantly.

    Magic Kingdom hosts Disney After Hours tonight, but remember: After Hours events don’t affect daytime operations. The park runs its normal schedule until close, with the separately-ticketed event beginning afterward. Don’t expect party-night-style suppression.

    EPCOT’s Festival of the Arts continues, but yesterday’s 8/10 crowds may not repeat. Cold weather typically pushes guests toward indoor attractions and shorter park days. Expect EPCOT in the 5-7/10 range as festival crowds thin slightly but World Showcase restaurants stay packed with guests seeking warm meals.

    Hollywood Studios should land in the 4-6/10 range—comfortable for most guests, with indoor attractions like Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway seeing elevated relative demand.

    Animal Kingdom faces the biggest weather impact. With temperatures in the 40s at rope drop, expect a slow morning start as guests sleep in or delay arrival. Predict 3-5/10 with the lower end more likely.

    Magic Kingdom will likely see 4-6/10 as the post-holiday Monday exodus begins and cold weather keeps some families at resort pools (heated) rather than in park queues.

    Track the Patterns That Matter

    Yesterday’s EPCOT surge while other parks stayed moderate shows how quickly conditions can vary across the resort. Lightning Brain tracks these splits in real-time so you can pivot your touring plan before you’re stuck in a 25-minute queue for Nemo. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 20, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Cracked 9/10 on President’s Day Weekend Eve

    Friday delivered exactly what the calendar promised: Hollywood Studios hit a 9/10 crowd level with 49-minute median waits, the highest we’ve recorded this month. When you stack NYC public schools on midwinter recess, Boston on February vacation, Atlanta in winter break mode, and Louisiana districts off for Mardi Gras—all arriving on the first day of a three-day weekend—this is what happens. The Youth Flag Football World Championships added thousands more families to the mix, many of whom clearly chose the Galaxy’s Edge experience over the other parks.

    Weather played its supporting role flawlessly: 87°F highs and zero precipitation meant no afternoon thunderstorm exodus, no heat-driven early departures. Crowds built steadily and stayed.

    Hollywood Studios: Peak Capacity Operations

    The Studios ran hot from the moment rope dropped. By 9 AM, median waits had already hit 50 minutes—a level most parks don’t see until midday. The 1 PM peak pushed to 60-minute medians, and unlike typical Friday patterns where crowds thin after 3 PM, this park held at 50+ minutes through 6 PM.

    Operational challenges compounded the pressure. Millennium Falcon went down for two hours starting at 8:10 AM—brutal timing that pushed early-morning Galaxy’s Edge crowds toward Rise of the Resistance. Rise itself had two separate closures totaling 100 minutes during the afternoon. Toy Story Mania lost nearly two hours across two incidents. When your headliners keep cycling offline, the queue pressure redistributes across everything else. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster’s morning closure added to the squeeze.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Actually Rode Rides

    EPCOT registered 7/10 with 24-minute medians, running 21% above its 30-day average. The Festival of the Arts typically brings food-and-art browsers who skip queues, but Friday’s festival guests apparently wanted both experiences. The Seas with Nemo & Friends hit 20-minute waits—four times its baseline. Journey Into Imagination ran similarly elevated. Even Spaceship Earth, usually a reliable walk-on at 15 minutes, pushed to 25.

    The 11 AM peak at 40-minute medians suggests guests arriving with park open stayed through lunch rather than treating EPCOT as an evening festival destination. Frozen Ever After and Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure both went down for 70 minutes during the late afternoon, removing two of World Showcase’s biggest draws during prime touring hours.

    Magic Kingdom: Heavy Despite the Numbers

    Magic Kingdom’s 7/10 rating with 19-minute medians might look moderate on paper, but context matters. The park ran 4.5% below its 30-day average—unusual for a holiday weekend Friday—largely because of a brutal morning for operations. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train was offline for 150 minutes starting at 10:10 AM, taking Fantasyland’s anchor attraction out during the heart of touring hours. Space Mountain missed the first two hours of operation. The Barnstormer, Winnie the Pooh, Pirates, “it’s a small world,” and Peter Pan all had closure incidents before noon.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure told a different story: 55-minute average waits, 57% above its baseline. On an 87-degree day, guests weren’t avoiding the water ride—they were lining up for it.

    Animal Kingdom: The Comfortable Alternative

    Animal Kingdom offered the day’s best touring conditions at 4/10 with 28-minute medians. The 11 AM peak hit 40 minutes but dropped to 25 by mid-afternoon. For families seeking actual ride time rather than queue time, this was the play.

    Kali River Rapids posted the day’s most dramatic outlier: 45-minute waits against a typical 5-minute baseline. The 87-degree heat transformed a normally walk-on rapids ride into a destination attraction. Guests clearly sought the soaking. Zootopia: Better Zoogether ran 67% above baseline at 25 minutes—still manageable, but showing that even AK’s newer attractions felt the weekend pressure.

    Downtime Impact Summary

    Magic Kingdom absorbed the heaviest operational hits. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train’s 150-minute closure from 10:10 AM to 12:40 PM forced Fantasyland guests to redistribute across Peter Pan (which itself went down briefly), Winnie the Pooh, and the other dark rides. When your E-ticket is unavailable for 2.5 hours during peak morning touring, everyone’s plans shift.

    Hollywood Studios lost meaningful capacity across its headliners: Millennium Falcon’s two-hour morning closure, Rise of the Resistance’s combined 100 minutes offline, and Toy Story Mania’s repeated issues meant guests spent significant portions of the day with reduced options. On a 9/10 crowd day, that hurts.

    Saturday Prediction: Expect the Weekend Peak

    Yesterday’s prediction missed badly—we had insufficient data for MK, HS, and AK ranges, and the 0/10 floors obviously didn’t hold. EPCOT’s 7-9/10 prediction landed correctly at 7/10. Today we have better calibration.

    Saturday is typically the highest-traffic day of any holiday weekend, and President’s Day weekend is no exception. All the school breaks remain active. The Flag Football championships continue. Weather looks identical: mid-80s and clear.

    Hollywood Studios: 9-10/10. Yesterday’s 9/10 was Friday. Saturday will match or exceed it. If you’re going, rope drop is non-negotiable, and even then expect sustained pressure. Tonight’s After Hours event starts at park close, so daytime operations are unaffected.

    EPCOT: 7-8/10. Festival of the Arts continues drawing strong attendance. World Showcase will be packed from late morning through fireworks.

    Magic Kingdom: 7-8/10. Expect it to run heavier than Friday now that the arriving-Friday crowds have settled into touring mode.

    Animal Kingdom: 5-6/10. Remains the best option for actual ride time. Kali will continue drawing long waits in this heat. Rope drop Flight of Passage, then work the rest of the park while others pack the other three parks.

    If you have flexibility, Animal Kingdom is your Saturday play. If you’re locked into Hollywood Studios, consider whether tonight’s After Hours ticket might deliver a better experience than fighting the daytime crowds.

    Track the Weekend in Real Time

    Holiday weekends create exactly the kind of park-to-park disparity that rewards flexible touring. Yesterday’s spread—9/10 at Hollywood Studios versus 4/10 at Animal Kingdom—meant dramatically different guest experiences. Lightning Brain tracks these splits live so you can pivot before you’re stuck in a queue. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 19, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Slammed to 10/10 as Presidents’ Day Week Peaks

    Hollywood Studios hit our maximum measurable crowd level yesterday. A 57-minute median wait—43% above the 30-day average—put the park firmly in “Extreme” territory, the kind of day where even seasoned guests feel the squeeze. This wasn’t a surprise given the collision of forces: NYC, Boston, and Atlanta school breaks all active simultaneously, plus thousands of Youth Flag Football World Championships families flooding the resort, plus the NAHB builders’ convention adding even more bodies. What’s notable is how unevenly that pressure distributed across the four parks.

    Hollywood Studios: A Stress Test

    With median waits above 70 minutes from 2 PM through 5 PM, Hollywood Studios became a patience exercise. Tower of Terror averaged 85 minutes—more than double its typical 40-minute baseline. The park peaked at 3 PM with a 73-minute median, and even after 6 PM, waits only dropped to 50 minutes. Rise of the Resistance going down for 70 minutes during the early afternoon didn’t help; neither did Toy Story Mania’s three separate closures totaling over two hours. When headliners go offline at a 10/10 park, there’s nowhere for that demand to go except longer lines everywhere else.

    EPCOT: Festival of the Arts Draws Heavy Crowds

    EPCOT ran at 8/10—”Very Heavy”—with a 26-minute median, 28% above baseline. The morning surge hit hard, peaking at 11 AM with 40-minute medians before gradually easing through the afternoon. Festival of the Arts likely contributed, though festival guests often prioritize food and gallery experiences over queue-based attractions. Still, the spillover from smaller attractions was evident: The Seas with Nemo & Friends averaged 25 minutes (normally 5), and Figment hit 20 minutes. Living with the Land, doubling as an air-conditioned respite on an 84-degree day, posted 25-minute waits. The morning was particularly rough: Frozen Ever After was down for nearly two hours across two incidents, and Test Track was offline for 90 minutes during rope drop—painful timing for guests trying to knock out headliners early.

    Magic Kingdom: Heavy but Not Extreme

    Magic Kingdom landed at 7/10 with a 20-minute median, exactly matching its 30-day average despite the elevated crowd pressure across the resort. The park absorbed its share of school-break families, peaking at 1 PM with 30-minute medians, but the afternoon brought operational headaches. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was down for over four hours across two separate incidents—nearly the entire peak period from 12:50 PM to 5:25 PM with only a brief window of operation. Space Mountain went down for 90 minutes during the mid-afternoon. Peter Pan’s Flight missed the first two hours of the day. Despite this, the park held at “Heavy” rather than tipping into “Very Heavy,” suggesting guests distributed reasonably well across the lineup. Mad Tea Party and Under the Sea both ran about 67% above their typical waits, absorbing some of the displaced demand from offline headliners.

    Animal Kingdom: The Outlier

    While the other three parks ran hot, Animal Kingdom posted a comfortable 4/10 with a 25-minute median—essentially flat versus the 30-day average. This park remains underleveraged on heavy resort days, and yesterday was no exception. Even Kali River Rapids, typically a 5-minute walk-on during cooler months, averaged 40 minutes. That’s less about Animal Kingdom being crowded and more about the 84-degree high making the soaking ride appealing. The park peaked at 1 PM with 40-minute medians but dropped to 15 minutes by 7 PM. For guests who recognized the dynamic, this was the place to be.

    Downtime Impact

    Yesterday was operationally rough. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure’s back-to-back closures removed Magic Kingdom’s newest headliner during the entire afternoon peak. At Hollywood Studios, Rise of the Resistance’s 70-minute afternoon outage came at the worst possible time for a 10/10 day—guests who missed their window had no good alternatives with Toy Story Mania also cycling through closures. EPCOT’s morning was particularly frustrating: both Frozen Ever After and Test Track were offline during the first two hours, forcing rope-drop crowds to scramble. Spaceship Earth’s 45-minute evening closure came just as After Hours guests were entering, though the event’s limited attendance meant the impact was minimal.

    Friday Outlook

    Our prediction for yesterday missed badly on three parks—we had incomplete data for MK, HS, and AK going into the day. EPCOT’s 7-9/10 prediction landed correctly at 8/10, so the methodology works when the inputs are there.

    Today continues the Presidents’ Day week surge with the same school breaks active and the Youth Flag Football championships still running. Another clear day with highs in the low 80s removes any weather friction. Expect Hollywood Studios to remain in the 9-10/10 range—the park simply doesn’t have enough capacity for this demand level. EPCOT should stay at 7-9/10 with Festival of the Arts continuing. Magic Kingdom will likely run 6-8/10 as families target the flagship park for their Friday visit. Animal Kingdom remains your best bet for manageable waits, probably 5-6/10, though the warm weather will keep water ride lines elevated.

    The play today: hit Animal Kingdom if you want to actually ride things. If Hollywood Studios is non-negotiable, be there at rope drop and accept that afternoons will be a grind.

    This kind of park-to-park disparity is exactly what data reveals but instinct misses. Lightning Brain tracks these patterns in real time so you can tour smarter, not harder. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: February 18, 2026

    Presidents’ Day Week Surge: Hollywood Studios and EPCOT Both Hit 10/10

    Yesterday, Wednesday, February 18, Hollywood Studios posted a 54-minute median wait—35% above its 30-day average and firmly in “Extreme” territory at 10/10. EPCOT matched that ceiling with its own 10/10 rating, driven by a 75% jump over baseline. When two parks simultaneously max out on a midweek February day, you’re seeing the full force of overlapping school breaks colliding with a major convention.

    The crowd pressure makes sense when you stack up the factors: NYC, Boston, and Atlanta public schools are all on winter break simultaneously, and the NAHB International Builders’ Show brought tens of thousands of additional visitors to Orlando. Weather cooperated with an 81°F high and zero precipitation, removing any excuse to stay poolside.

    Hollywood Studios: Sustained Pressure All Day

    Hollywood Studios peaked at noon with a 68-minute median, but the story is how little relief guests found at any hour. Even at 8 AM, waits were already at 33 minutes. By 9 AM, the median hit 50 minutes and stayed above 48 for the rest of the operating day. This wasn’t a park with a bad hour—it was a park running hot from rope drop to close.

    Toy Story Mania had a particularly rough day operationally, going down four separate times totaling over two hours of lost capacity. The longest stretch ran from 1:05 to 2:00 PM, right during peak afternoon demand. With one of Toy Story Land’s two major attractions repeatedly unavailable, pressure redistributed across the park’s limited ride inventory.

    EPCOT: Festival of the Arts Meets School Break Chaos

    EPCOT’s 35-minute median represents the highest crowd level we’ve recorded there during Festival of the Arts this year. The 7 PM peak—50-minute median—tells you exactly what happened: families flooded World Showcase for dinner and evening touring after spending daytime hours elsewhere.

    The morning wasn’t gentle either. By 10 AM, waits jumped from 15 minutes to 48, a jarring transition that caught early-arrivers off guard. The attraction outliers reveal a park under pressure: The Seas with Nemo & Friends averaged 45 minutes (typically 5), Journey Into Imagination hit 25 minutes (normally 5), and even Gran Fiesta Tour tripled its usual wait.

    EPCOT also suffered the day’s worst downtime situation. Frozen Ever After was offline twice—once for 65 minutes in the morning and again for nearly three hours in the afternoon. Test Track missed the first 90 minutes of the operating day. Guardians went down for 80 minutes during the 1 PM rush. The Seas with Nemo & Friends was unavailable for over five hours total across two incidents. For a park already at capacity, losing four headliners for significant stretches created genuine touring problems.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed But Not Quite Maxed

    Magic Kingdom came in at 9/10 with a 24-minute median—elevated but not unprecedented. The park’s larger capacity absorbed the holiday week crowds more gracefully than its smaller siblings. Peak hour hit at 1 PM with 30-minute medians, and waits stayed remarkably flat through midday rather than showing the usual afternoon spike.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure averaged 65 minutes, more than double its 30-minute baseline. Given the 81°F temperatures, the water ride was a natural draw. Peter Pan’s Flight lost 65 minutes of capacity during the early afternoon peak, which likely contributed to elevated waits across Fantasyland—Under the Sea and Dumbo both doubled their normal wait times.

    Animal Kingdom: The Outlier at 4/10

    While three parks ran at or near capacity, Animal Kingdom posted a comfortable 4/10 with a 27-minute median. This park absorbed the smallest share of the holiday week surge, likely because it lacks the ride density that school-break families prioritize.

    One genuine surprise: Kali River Rapids averaged 30 minutes, six times its typical 5-minute wait. On an 81-degree day, guests clearly sought water rides—and Animal Kingdom only has one. Expedition Everest went down for nearly two hours in the late afternoon, but by then the park had already cleared past its 1 PM peak.

    Downtime Impact

    EPCOT bore the brunt of operational issues yesterday. Between Frozen Ever After, Test Track, Guardians, Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, and The Seas with Nemo & Friends, guests lost access to major attractions for a combined 9+ hours of downtime. When a park is already at 10/10, every lost ride creates genuine touring problems—there’s nowhere for that demand to go except longer lines elsewhere.

    Hollywood Studios’ Toy Story Mania troubles compounded an already stressed park. Four separate closures meant guests couldn’t count on the attraction being available at any given time, making Lightning Lane planning nearly impossible.

    Thursday Prediction: Elevated Pressure Continues

    Yesterday’s prediction missed badly—we had incomplete data that showed 0/10 ranges for three parks, while actuals came in at 9/10 and 10/10. The school break overlap is producing crowds well above what midweek February typically delivers.

    For Thursday, expect the pressure to continue. NYC, Boston, and Atlanta schools remain on break. The convention is still active. Weather looks nearly identical—80°F high, partly cloudy, no rain. The only new variable is Disney After Hours at EPCOT tonight, which starts after regular park close and won’t affect daytime crowds.

    Prediction ranges:

    • Hollywood Studios: 8-10/10. Yesterday’s pattern suggests sustained demand through the week.
    • EPCOT: 7-9/10. Festival of the Arts plus school breaks, though some guests may shift to MK or AK after yesterday’s downtime frustrations.
    • Magic Kingdom: 7-9/10. Expect similar pressure to yesterday with possible slight increases as word spreads that AK ran lighter.
    • Animal Kingdom: 5-6/10. Yesterday showed this park absorbs less school-break demand, but some redistribution is likely.

    Strategy: If you must do Hollywood Studios, arrive before 8 AM and knock out headliners before the 10 AM surge. Animal Kingdom remains your best bet for manageable waits—even at elevated levels, a 6/10 there means 35-minute medians versus 55+ at the Studios.

    School break overlaps create exactly these kinds of multi-day surges—and they’re hard to navigate without real-time data. Lightning Brain tracks these crowd patterns live so you can pivot when one park maxes out. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Extended Evening Hours

    The Deluxe Resort Perk That Actually Delivers

    Avatar Flight of Passage averages 73 minutes during regular evening hours. During Extended Evening Hours, that drops to 34 minutes—a 39-minute savings on a single attraction. Na’vi River Journey falls from 48 to 18 minutes. Tower of Terror cuts its wait nearly in half. These aren’t theoretical projections. They’re what actually happens when day guests leave and only deluxe resort guests remain.

    Extended Evening Hours (EEH) ranks among Disney’s most valuable resort perks, but the benefits vary dramatically by park. After analyzing 726,363 evening wait time readings across 57 EEH nights and 663 total nights of data from July 2025 through February 2026, we found that some parks deliver massive time savings while others barely move the needle.

    Methodology

    We compared posted wait times during EEH periods (typically 9-11 PM or park-specific windows) against the same time windows on non-EEH nights. Our dataset covered 28 attractions across all four parks participating in Extended Evening Hours: EPCOT (23 nights analyzed), Animal Kingdom (12 nights), Magic Kingdom (12 nights), and Hollywood Studios (10 nights). Only attractions with sufficient EEH data (50+ samples) were included in final calculations.

    Animal Kingdom: The Clear Winner

    Animal Kingdom delivers the most dramatic EEH value of any park. The average wait time drops from 41 minutes on regular evenings to just 18 minutes during EEH—a 55% reduction across all attractions.

    Attraction Regular Evening EEH Evening Time Saved % Reduction
    Avatar Flight of Passage 73 min 34 min 39 min 54%
    Na’vi River Journey 48 min 18 min 31 min 63%
    Expedition Everest 22 min 11 min 12 min 52%
    DINOSAUR 20 min 12 min 8 min 39%
    Zootopia: Better Zoogether! 19 min 14 min 5 min 25%

    With EEH at Animal Kingdom, you could reasonably ride Flight of Passage, Na’vi River Journey, and Expedition Everest all within the two-hour window. On a regular night, Flight of Passage alone might consume your entire evening.

    Hollywood Studios: Exceptional Value for Thrill Seekers

    Hollywood Studios shows the second-strongest EEH performance, with park-wide averages dropping from 34 minutes to 23 minutes—a 31% reduction.

    Attraction Regular Evening EEH Evening Time Saved % Reduction
    Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster 49 min 29 min 20 min 41%
    Slinky Dog Dash 59 min 39 min 20 min 35%
    Tower of Terror 43 min 26 min 17 min 39%
    Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway 35 min 23 min 12 min 33%
    Toy Story Mania! 36 min 27 min 9 min 25%
    Alien Swirling Saucers 18 min 11 min 7 min 38%
    Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run 25 min 24 min 1 min 5%
    Star Tours 7 min 6 min 1 min 10%

    The thrill rides show the largest benefit. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster and Slinky Dog Dash both save 20 minutes per ride, while Tower of Terror saves 17 minutes. Lower-wait attractions like Star Tours and Millennium Falcon see minimal improvement because their regular evening waits are already manageable.

    Magic Kingdom: Moderate but Meaningful

    Magic Kingdom EEH is relatively new to 2026, with most dates occurring in January and February. The park-wide average drops from 33 to 29 minutes—a more modest 11% reduction. But certain attractions show substantial savings.

    Attraction Regular Evening EEH Evening Time Saved % Reduction
    Space Mountain 35 min 25 min 10 min 29%
    Seven Dwarfs Mine Train 49 min 41 min 7 min 15%
    Peter Pan’s Flight 40 min 34 min 6 min 16%
    Haunted Mansion 27 min 22 min 5 min 19%
    “it’s a small world” 11 min 7 min 3 min 32%
    TRON Lightcycle / Run 70 min 67 min 3 min 4%
    Pirates of the Caribbean 14 min 11 min 3 min 22%

    TRON Lightcycle / Run is the notable exception—EEH barely dents its wait times. The attraction maintains 65+ minute averages even during extended hours. This suggests TRON draws its own dedicated crowd regardless of general park capacity.

    EPCOT: The Surprising Underperformer

    EPCOT has the most EEH nights (23 in our analysis period) but delivers the weakest overall benefit. Park-wide average wait times actually increased slightly during EEH: from 37 to 38 minutes.

    Attraction Regular Evening EEH Evening Time Saved % Reduction
    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure 54 min 42 min 12 min 23%
    Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind 79 min 70 min 9 min 12%
    Frozen Ever After 48 min 40 min 8 min 17%
    Soarin’ Around the World 23 min 19 min 4 min 17%
    Test Track 66 min 63 min 4 min 5%
    Spaceship Earth 10 min 10 min 0 min -2%
    Mission: SPACE 18 min 18 min 0 min -3%

    Guardians of the Galaxy remains stubbornly crowded even during EEH, with waits averaging 70 minutes. Test Track similarly shows minimal improvement. Only Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure delivers meaningful savings at 12 minutes. The World Showcase attractions that would normally provide breathing room (like Gran Fiesta Tour) operate during EEH, but the headliners that draw deluxe resort guests maintain their crowds.

    Which Attractions Offer the Best EEH Value?

    Looking across all parks, the top 10 attractions by absolute time saved during EEH:

    Rank Attraction Park Time Saved
    1 Avatar Flight of Passage Animal Kingdom 39 min
    2 Na’vi River Journey Animal Kingdom 31 min
    3 Slinky Dog Dash Hollywood Studios 20 min
    4 Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Hollywood Studios 20 min
    5 Tower of Terror Hollywood Studios 17 min
    6 Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure EPCOT 12 min
    7 Expedition Everest Animal Kingdom 12 min
    8 Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway Hollywood Studios 12 min
    9 Space Mountain Magic Kingdom 10 min
    10 Guardians of the Galaxy EPCOT 9 min

    Practical Implications

    Animal Kingdom EEH is exceptionally valuable. If you’re staying at a deluxe resort and have an Animal Kingdom day, prioritize EEH nights. The 70-minute savings you can accumulate across Pandora attractions alone justifies the resort tier upgrade for many families.

    Hollywood Studios EEH makes thrill rides accessible. The 20-minute savings on Slinky Dog Dash and Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster means you can reasonably hit both plus Tower of Terror in your two-hour EEH window.

    EPCOT EEH works best if you skip Guardians. The time savings concentrate in Remy’s and Frozen Ever After. If you’re determined to ride Guardians during EEH, expect to still wait 70+ minutes.

    Magic Kingdom EEH won’t help with TRON. The 3-minute average reduction on TRON makes EEH ineffective for that specific attraction. Space Mountain shows better returns at 10 minutes saved.

    Limitations

    Our analysis compares posted wait times, which may differ from actual experienced waits. EEH dates in our dataset concentrate in the second half of 2025 and early 2026, so seasonal patterns may shift. Magic Kingdom EEH data is limited to 12 nights, all in winter 2025-2026, which may not reflect summer patterns. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster closes permanently March 2, 2026 for its Muppets transformation, so its EEH data applies only until then.

    Conclusion

    Extended Evening Hours deliver real value—but the magnitude varies dramatically by park. Animal Kingdom guests enjoy a transformed experience with wait times cut in half. Hollywood Studios thrill seekers gain meaningful time savings across the marquee attractions. EPCOT and Magic Kingdom show more modest improvements, with certain headliners (Guardians, TRON) remaining crowded regardless of who’s allowed in the park.

    For deluxe resort guests deciding how to spend their EEH nights, Animal Kingdom and Hollywood Studios consistently deliver the best returns on your resort investment. EPCOT EEH works well if you set realistic expectations and avoid trying to force a short wait on Guardians.

    Track Wait Times in Real Time

    Extended Evening Hours require knowing exactly when to ride each attraction. Lightning Brain surfaces these patterns in real time so you can maximize every minute of your EEH window. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 17, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Broke the Scale on Presidents’ Day Tuesday

    Hollywood Studios posted a 69-minute median wait yesterday—nearly double its 30-day average. That’s not a typo. On a Tuesday that should theoretically be quieter than the long weekend, the park hit 10/10 crowd levels and stayed there. Magic Kingdom matched it at 10/10. The Presidents’ Day weekend didn’t end Monday; it rolled straight into Tuesday with NYC and Boston schools still on break and 50,000+ convention attendees from Design & Construction Week looking for evening entertainment.

    Perfect touring weather amplified the effect: 76°F, clear skies, zero precipitation. When conditions are this ideal and school breaks stack, guests don’t leave early. They stay through fireworks.

    Hollywood Studios: A Park Under Siege

    At 85 minutes median during the 1 PM peak, Hollywood Studios experienced the kind of demand that breaks touring plans. Tower of Terror averaged 120 minutes—triple its typical 40-minute wait. Even Star Tours, usually a reliable walk-on at 5 minutes, ballooned to 25 minutes as guests sought anything with a shorter queue.

    Operational issues compounded the pressure. Toy Story Mania went down for an hour during the lunch rush, and with Slinky Dog Dash posting 25-minute morning downtime alongside Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, Toy Story Land became a frustration zone rather than a destination. Tower of Terror had its own troubles—55 minutes down in the morning and another 40 minutes in the evening—yet still maintained those 2-hour waits when operational. That’s how extreme demand was.

    Magic Kingdom: Matching the Intensity

    Magic Kingdom also registered 10/10, with a 30-minute median representing a 51% jump over its 30-day baseline. The 1 PM peak hit 40 minutes across the board, but the standouts tell the deeper story. Space Mountain averaged 125 minutes—and that’s despite being offline for nearly two hours in the morning and almost two more hours in the afternoon. When guests couldn’t ride Space Mountain, they flooded Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, pushing it to 80-minute waits despite warm weather making the water ride comfortable.

    Under the Sea saw 40-minute waits, nearly three times its normal 15. Mad Tea Party hit 25 minutes. These aren’t headliners—they’re usually overflow capacity. When your backup attractions are running at triple their baseline, every touring strategy gets thrown out the window.

    Peter Pan’s Flight going down for 65 minutes during the early afternoon didn’t help. With the Fantasyland anchor unavailable, guests dispersed to secondary attractions, spreading the pain across the entire land.

    EPCOT: Heavy but Manageable

    EPCOT logged an 8/10 at 25 minutes median—elevated but not crushing. Festival of the Arts is in full swing, and the data suggests festival crowds browse more than they queue. Peak demand arrived early, with 11 AM posting 40-minute medians, then tapering to 20 minutes by mid-afternoon as guests shifted to food booths and galleries.

    The outliers here were interesting: Nemo & Friends and Journey Into Imagination both hit 20 minutes, four times their usual 5. Gran Fiesta Tour reached 15. These are classic “escape the heat” rides being used as rest stops between World Showcase laps. Remy’s morning downtime (35 minutes) caused brief disruption, but EPCOT’s distributed layout absorbed the impact better than the more concentrated parks.

    Animal Kingdom: The Moderate Alternative

    At 5/10 and 35 minutes median, Animal Kingdom offered the closest thing to reasonable touring yesterday. That’s still 39% above its baseline, but compared to the chaos elsewhere, guests who chose this park made the right call. Kali River Rapids at 35 minutes (normally 5) stands out, though warm afternoon temperatures made the rapids genuinely appealing rather than a last resort.

    The 1 PM peak hit 50 minutes, dropping to 30 by 3 PM. Animal Kingdom’s early close pushed guests out before evening, keeping it from matching the sustained pressure at the other parks.

    Downtime Impact

    Space Mountain’s operational struggles deserve special attention. The attraction was unavailable from 7:50-9:25 AM and again from 1:55-3:45 PM—over three hours total on a 10/10 day. Early morning guests arriving for rope drop found Tomorrowland’s signature ride closed, pushing them toward Fantasyland and creating early congestion that never fully cleared. The afternoon closure during peak hours forced thousands of guests to abandon Space Mountain from their plans entirely.

    At Hollywood Studios, the morning cluster of closures—Tower of Terror, Slinky Dog, and Runaway Railway all down around 8 AM—meant guests entering at park open had essentially zero major attractions available. That’s a brutal start to an already overcrowded day.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, February 18

    First, let’s address yesterday’s predictions: we missed badly on Magic Kingdom, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom. The model showed zeros for those parks, and they came in at 10, 10, and 5 respectively. Our EPCOT call of 7-8/10 landing at 8 was the only accurate read. Full accountability—the holiday momentum was stronger than predicted.

    For today: NYC and Boston schools remain on break, Atlanta schools join them, and the Design & Construction Week convention continues. Weather stays ideal at 78°F with clear skies. The Presidents’ Day crowd surge typically tapers by Wednesday as some families depart, but school breaks sustain elevated levels.

    Expect Hollywood Studios in the 8-10/10 range again—it’s the hot park right now and convention crowds love the evening atmosphere. Magic Kingdom should ease slightly to 7-9/10 as some weekend warriors head home. EPCOT will likely hold at 7-8/10 with Festival of the Arts drawing steady traffic. Animal Kingdom remains your best bet at 4-6/10, particularly if you can arrive at rope drop and finish by early afternoon.

    Strategy: If you’re committed to Hollywood Studios today, be in line for security by 7 AM and sprint to Galaxy’s Edge before demand builds. Otherwise, consider Animal Kingdom morning into EPCOT evening—the festival atmosphere after 5 PM offers short waits and excellent food without the midday crush.

    Track the Real-Time Shifts

    When three parks hit extreme levels simultaneously, knowing where the pressure is building—and where it’s easing—makes or breaks your touring day. Lightning Brain’s live crowd tracking shows you these shifts as they happen, not hours later. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 16, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Pushed Past Our Scale on President’s Day

    A 67-minute median wait. That’s not a typo. Hollywood Studios didn’t just hit 10/10 yesterday—it blew past what our crowd scale was designed to measure. For context, our “Extreme” threshold starts at 46 minutes. The park spent most of the day with median waits in the 70-80 minute range, peaking at 2 PM when half of all posted waits exceeded 80 minutes.

    President’s Day delivered exactly the kind of day our crowd pressure system exists to flag. The federal holiday combined with NYC and Boston school breaks created a perfect storm, compounded by two ESPN youth sports tournaments flooding the parks with thousands of athlete families. Mild temperatures in the mid-60s to low-70s kept guests comfortable enough to stay all day rather than retreat to hotels.

    Hollywood Studios: Off the Charts

    There’s no sugarcoating this: Hollywood Studios was brutal. Tower of Terror posted 80-minute averages—double its typical 40-minute baseline. Star Tours, usually a 5-minute walk-on, averaged 25 minutes all day. When your secondary attractions are running at five times their normal waits, the headliners become nearly untouchable without Lightning Lane.

    The park ran hot from 9 AM straight through 7 PM, with only a brief dip to 60 minutes during the 3 PM hour. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster going down for nearly two hours mid-morning didn’t help—that 110-minute closure pushed even more guests toward Tower of Terror and the Toy Story Land attractions. When Rock ‘n’ Roller came back, it went down again for another 50 minutes in the afternoon.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed but Functional

    Magic Kingdom hit 9/10 with a 22.5-minute median—heavy, but manageable compared to the Studios chaos. The park absorbed enormous crowds without completely breaking, thanks partly to its sheer size and attraction count.

    Space Mountain had a rough day operationally: down for nearly two hours in the morning, then another 2.5-hour closure in the afternoon. That’s 4+ hours of downtime on a 9/10 crowd day. Guests who arrived planning to rope-drop Space Mountain found it unavailable until nearly 11 AM, then lost it again right after lunch. Under the Sea also closed for over three hours during the afternoon—a significant loss of Fantasyland capacity when the park needed every queue absorbing bodies.

    Peak crowds hit at noon with 30-minute medians, but the park maintained that level through 4 PM before slowly easing. Even at 7 PM, waits were still running 20 minutes—there was no quiet evening window.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Hit Hard

    EPCOT registered 8/10 with a 25.6-minute median, well above its typical 20-minute baseline. The Festival of the Arts drew strong attendance, but unlike pure food-festival days, these crowds were riding attractions. Spaceship Earth averaged 30 minutes—double its norm. Journey Into Imagination hit 20 minutes, four times its usual wait. Even The Seas with Nemo & Friends, typically a walk-on, posted 20-minute waits.

    Frozen Ever After going down for over two hours first thing in the morning created problems in World Showcase before the park found its rhythm. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure also took an hour-plus closure in the early afternoon. Both are high-capacity France pavilion attractions; losing them sequentially meant guests had fewer options in that corner of the park.

    The 11 AM peak at 45 minutes was intense, but EPCOT’s crowds dissipated more predictably than the other parks—by 1 PM, waits had dropped to 25 minutes and stayed reasonable through close.

    Animal Kingdom: The Relative Escape

    At 6/10 with a 37.9-minute median, Animal Kingdom was the calmest option—though “calm” is relative when Kilimanjaro Safaris is posting 85-minute waits, nearly triple its 30-minute baseline. The safari’s 40-minute midday closure didn’t help capacity.

    The park peaked early at 11 AM with 50-minute medians, then gradually eased through the afternoon. By 4 PM, waits had dropped to 25 minutes. Guests who treated Animal Kingdom as an afternoon destination after abandoning crowded morning plans elsewhere found reasonable touring conditions. Kali River Rapids at 20 minutes showed guests were willing to get wet despite temperatures in the mid-60s—a sign of how few alternatives felt accessible.

    Downtime Impact

    Yesterday’s operational issues hit at the worst possible times. Space Mountain’s morning closure meant rope-drop crowds redistributed across Tomorrowland and Fantasyland, compressing already-stressed capacity. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster going down during Hollywood Studios’ most crowded hours pushed guests toward an already-overwhelmed Tower of Terror.

    The cumulative impact: three separate 40+ minute closures at Toy Story Mania throughout the day, plus Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway going offline during the dinner hour. Hollywood Studios was running short-staffed on operational attractions exactly when it needed maximum capacity.

    Today’s Outlook: Still Elevated, Slightly Better

    Yesterday’s prediction missed badly—we didn’t have data for three parks, which left obvious gaps. Today we’re working with complete information and a clear pattern.

    President’s Day itself has passed, but the pressure hasn’t fully released. NYC and Boston schools remain on break, and the NAHB International Builders’ Show brings convention traffic to the area. The sports tournaments have wrapped, which should relieve some pressure at Hollywood Studios specifically.

    Expect Hollywood Studios in the 8-9/10 range—down from yesterday’s extreme but still firmly in “very heavy” territory. Magic Kingdom should run 7-8/10 as some holiday families begin departures. EPCOT’s Festival of the Arts continues, likely keeping it at 7-8/10. Animal Kingdom may offer the best touring at 7/10, particularly in the afternoon hours that worked well yesterday.

    Clear skies and comfortable temperatures in the low-70s mean no weather-driven crowd suppression. If you’re in the parks today, prioritize morning hours before 10 AM and consider Animal Kingdom if your plans are flexible.

    Holiday weekends reshape crowd distribution in ways that aren’t obvious from the gate. Lightning Brain’s event-aware modeling shows you where to tour while the crowds concentrate elsewhere. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: February 15, 2026

    President’s Day Weekend Crushed Every Park: Hollywood Studios Hit 10/10 as 93% Surge Swamped Animal Kingdom

    Yesterday, Sunday, February 15, 2026, Walt Disney World experienced its most intense day in recent memory. Hollywood Studios maxed out at 10/10 crowds with a 59.8-minute median wait—nearly 50% above its 30-day average. But the real shock came from Animal Kingdom, where waits surged 93% above normal, transforming a park that typically serves as a crowd relief valve into a packed destination in its own right.

    The culprit is obvious: President’s Day weekend. This three-day federal holiday weekend is historically one of Disney World’s busiest periods, and Sunday delivered exactly that. Two major youth sports events—the USA Competitions Presidential Classic and Disney Presidents Day Soccer Tournament—flooded the resort with athlete families, adding thousands of guests who tour parks between competition sessions. With temperatures climbing to a pleasant 82°F under partly cloudy skies, nothing kept guests away.

    Hollywood Studios: The Breaking Point

    Hollywood Studios cracked under the pressure. A 10/10 crowd level means the park exceeded its comfortable operating capacity, and guests felt it. The 11 AM peak saw median waits hit 75 minutes—guests arriving mid-morning faced a wall of humanity at every major attraction.

    Toy Story Mania compounded the misery with three separate downtimes totaling 135 minutes across the day. The morning closure (8:05-8:35 AM) caught early risers off guard. The midday outages (12:25-1:20 PM and 2:15-3:05 PM) hit during peak demand, forcing families deeper into an already overwhelmed park. Star Tours posted 20-minute waits—300% above its typical 5 minutes—as guests hunted for anything with a manageable queue.

    Animal Kingdom: The 93% Surge Nobody Expected

    Animal Kingdom’s 48.3-minute median represents a near-doubling of normal wait times. At 9/10 crowds, this park—often recommended as a quieter alternative—offered no relief yesterday.

    Kilimanjaro Safaris anchored the chaos with 85-minute waits, 183% above typical. The noon peak pushed medians to 75 minutes across the board. Even typically sleepy attractions buckled: Wildlife Express Train tripled to 15 minutes, and Zootopia: Better Zoogether climbed to 38 minutes.

    The warmth drove unexpected behavior at Kali River Rapids. Despite an 82°F high, the rapids attraction posted 50-minute waits—900% above its usual 5 minutes. Guests evidently decided getting soaked was worth it. That demand made the 105-minute afternoon closure (2:10-3:55 PM) particularly painful, removing a high-capacity attraction during peak hours.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Met Holiday Crowds

    EPCOT ran 80% above its 30-day baseline, landing at 8/10. The International Festival of the Arts typically draws steady but manageable crowds; layering President’s Day weekend on top created genuine congestion.

    The data tells a clear story of guests seeking climate-controlled refuge between festival booths. Gran Fiesta Tour, The Seas with Nemo and Friends, and Journey Into Imagination all posted 20-minute waits—300% above typical. Spaceship Earth hit 30 minutes, double its baseline. These aren’t thrill rides drawing dedicated fans; they’re comfortable, air-conditioned experiences that become rest stops when outdoor booth lines grow long.

    Frozen Ever After’s 60-minute morning closure (8:40-9:40 AM) removed EPCOT’s most popular attraction during the early touring window. Guests who rope-dropped for Frozen found themselves redirected, likely inflating nearby World Showcase waits.

    Magic Kingdom: The Relative Calm

    In any other week, Magic Kingdom’s 22.3-minute median and 9/10 crowd level would lead the story. Yesterday, it was the calmest park—a 11.5% increase versus Hollywood Studios’ 49.5% spike.

    The peak shifted late, hitting 4 PM rather than the typical midday surge. This suggests guests delayed Magic Kingdom visits, perhaps touring other parks in the morning before migrating for evening fireworks. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure commanded 65-minute waits (160% above normal), though the 35-minute morning closure (8:20-8:55 AM) temporarily suppressed early demand.

    Late afternoon brought maintenance hiccups: Haunted Mansion went down for 25 minutes around 5:30 PM, and Carousel of Progress followed with a 20-minute closure. Neither significantly impacted overall flow, but guests in those queues lost valuable touring time.

    Downtime Impact: Toy Story Mania’s Triple Failure

    Hollywood Studios guests absorbed the worst operational luck. Toy Story Mania’s 135 cumulative minutes of downtime removed roughly 2,000 ride experiences from an already maxed-out park. Families who built their day around Toy Story Land found Alien Swirling Saucers and Slinky Dog Dash absorbing overflow demand, pushing those queues even higher.

    At Animal Kingdom, Kali River Rapids’ nearly two-hour afternoon closure hit during peak heat—exactly when demand for water rides peaked. Guests seeking relief found none, likely pushing toward indoor attractions and compounding the park-wide congestion.

    Today’s Prediction: President’s Day Proper

    Today is President’s Day itself, and conditions favor another brutal day. NYC Public Schools and Boston Public Schools are both on winter break, adding major feeder market volume. The soccer tournaments and cheerleading competition continue through today.

    The weather shift helps marginally: a high of 69°F (down from yesterday’s 82°F) will suppress water ride demand and make outdoor queuing more comfortable. But cooler temps also mean fewer guests will leave early due to heat fatigue.

    The play: If you must visit today, arrive before rope drop and focus on one park. Hollywood Studios is the riskiest choice given yesterday’s 10/10 performance. Magic Kingdom’s late-peaking pattern suggests morning hours offer the best window. EPCOT remains viable if you’re content experiencing the Festival of the Arts food booths rather than fighting attraction queues.

    If you have flexibility, consider postponing until Tuesday or Wednesday when weekend crowds disperse and school groups return home.

    Track the Surge in Real Time

    Yesterday’s 93% surge at Animal Kingdom caught many guests off guard—they arrived expecting a quieter alternative and found packed queues instead. Lightning Brain’s real-time monitoring spots these crowd shifts as they develop, not after the fact. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!