Tag: Crowds

  • Daily Park Report: January 11, 2026

    Marathon Weekend Delivers Ghost-Town Crowds: Every Park Below 3/10

    Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend turned Sunday into a touring unicorn: all four parks registered crowd levels of 3/10 or below, with wait times plummeting 37% to 50% below their 30-day averages. While 20,000+ runners conquered 26.2 miles before dawn, the guests who did show up conquered attractions with minimal resistance.

    The numbers are striking. Magic Kingdom posted a 10-minute median wait—half its typical 20-minute baseline. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, an attraction that routinely demands 30+ minutes, operated at 5 minutes all day. This wasn’t a slow Tuesday in September; this was a January Sunday with near-perfect weather (78°F high, mostly clear skies) that should have drawn substantial crowds. Marathon Weekend creates a distinct pattern: runners and their families prioritize rest over rope drop, and locals avoid the perceived chaos entirely.

    Magic Kingdom: The 2/10 Day

    Magic Kingdom delivered its lightest crowds in weeks, settling at a 2/10 with a 10-minute median wait. Even the noon peak hour managed only 15-minute medians—numbers typically reserved for the first hour of operation on normal days. The standout wasn’t a single attraction; it was nearly every attraction. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure at 5 minutes represents an 83% drop from its typical 30. Dumbo, Small World, and Under the Sea all sat at 5 minutes. Astro Orbiter, which often frustrates guests with its limited hourly capacity, managed just 10 minutes.

    Space Mountain’s 2-hour midday closure (11:03 AM to 1:00 PM) would normally ripple through Tomorrowland, pushing guests toward TRON and Buzz Lightyear. On a 2/10 day, the impact was negligible—excess capacity everywhere absorbed the displaced demand. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train’s brief 18-minute morning hiccup similarly vanished into the overall low-crowd baseline.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds That Weren’t

    EPCOT registered a 3/10—the highest of any park yesterday, yet still firmly in “light” territory at 12.7 minutes median. The Festival of the Arts opened this weekend, which historically brings incremental attendance. That bump either hasn’t materialized yet or was offset by Marathon Weekend’s suppression effect.

    The operational story at EPCOT centered on headliner instability. Frozen Ever After went down twice: 9:45 to 11:39 AM (114 minutes), then again from noon to 1:18 PM (78 minutes). That’s over 3 hours of downtime on a flagship attraction. Guests hunting for Norway’s standout ride found it unavailable for most of the morning and early afternoon. Test Track followed with its own extended closure from 1:30 to 4:03 PM (153 minutes). On a busier day, these cascading failures would have created visible congestion at Guardians and Remy’s. Yesterday, the park simply absorbed it. Guardians itself went down briefly (27 minutes) but recovered quickly.

    Spaceship Earth and Living with the Land both posted 5-minute waits—66% below their baselines. Festival guests appear to be treating World Showcase as a food-and-art crawl rather than a ride day.

    Hollywood Studios: Headliners at Walk-On Pace

    Hollywood Studios landed at 2/10 with a 25-minute median, representing a 37.5% drop from its elevated 40-minute baseline. Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run at 15 minutes (62.5% below typical) captured the day’s character. Rise of the Resistance’s early morning downtime (51 minutes starting at 8:33 AM) cleared before most guests arrived.

    Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster experienced a rougher operational day with three separate incidents, including a 75-minute evening closure from 5:00 to 6:15 PM. For guests rope-dropping or touring midday, this had minimal impact—but anyone planning a late-day Sunset Boulevard strategy found options limited.

    Animal Kingdom: The Quietest Safari

    Animal Kingdom posted the sharpest decline from baseline: 16.7-minute median versus a 30-minute 30-day average, a 44% drop. Kilimanjaro Safaris at 15 minutes (typically 40) meant guests could walk on and reboard multiple times if they wanted different animal sightings. For a park where Safaris often dictates touring order, this fundamentally changes the optimization calculus—you could tour in any sequence without penalty.

    No significant downtimes impacted Animal Kingdom, making it the most operationally stable park of the day.

    Downtime Analysis: EPCOT Bore the Burden

    EPCOT accumulated the heaviest operational losses yesterday. Families arriving mid-morning for Frozen Ever After found the attraction closed for two separate multi-hour windows. Parents pivoting to Test Track after lunch discovered it offline until past 4 PM. On a busier day, this would have created visible frustration and queue spillover. Yesterday’s light baseline meant guests simply walked to alternatives with minimal wait penalty—though the “attractions we planned to ride” checklist got shorter for many.

    Today’s Outlook: After Hours Reshapes Magic Kingdom

    Monday brings a significant dynamic shift: Disney After Hours at Magic Kingdom tonight. This paid event (running after regular park close) creates predictable patterns. Day guests often leave early knowing the park will be populated by After Hours ticketholders by evening. Expect Magic Kingdom to skew light in afternoon hours as guests either depart or never arrive, anticipating crowds that aren’t actually there.

    The FETC education conference continues, adding incremental attendance from educators exploring the parks around their sessions. Weather cools significantly—a high of 70°F with mostly cloudy skies represents a 8-degree drop from yesterday. This shift often suppresses water-adjacent attractions (Kali River Rapids, Splash Mountain’s spiritual successor in Tiana) while boosting indoor queue tolerance.

    The strategic play: Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom offer the cleanest touring today. Both parks lack after-hours events and should maintain yesterday’s light patterns as Marathon Weekend recovery continues. EPCOT’s Festival of the Arts will see its first normal weekday—expect slightly elevated World Showcase traffic but continued low ride waits. Magic Kingdom becomes a calculated bet: light afternoon crowds if you exit before After Hours, but increasingly event-focused energy as evening approaches.

    Marathon Weekend’s suppression effect typically lingers through Monday as runners and families depart. Expect crowd levels to remain below seasonal averages across all four parks.

    These ghost-town patterns are exactly what Lightning Brain tracks in real time—so you can identify and exploit low-crowd windows before they disappear. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Spring Break Impact Analysis

    The Hidden Peak Isn’t Where You Think

    Presidents Day weekend beats Christmas. That’s not a typo. February 15, 2025 posted a 32.9-minute average wait time across Walt Disney World—higher than any single day during Christmas week. The four-day stretch from February 14-17 averaged 31.4 minutes, outpacing the 30.7-minute average during Christmas week (December 22-28).

    Spring break doesn’t arrive as one massive wave. It builds in overlapping surges, each carrying guests from different regions. We analyzed 1.3 million wait time readings across 89 days and 192 attractions from February through April 2025 to map exactly when spring break crowds hit—and where the gaps hide.

    Methodology

    This analysis covers February 1 through April 30, 2025, using wait time data collected at 5-minute intervals across all four Walt Disney World theme parks. We defined “high crowd” days as those averaging 28+ minutes—a threshold that separates typical operations from noticeably impacted days. All comparisons use a baseline established from February 3-13, 2025, before holiday surges began.

    The Three Waves of Spring Break

    Spring break crowds arrive in distinct phases, each driven by different school calendars:

    Wave 1: Presidents Day (February 14-22)

    The first surge catches many planners off guard. Presidents Day weekend 2025 produced the highest single-day crowds of the entire February-April window:

    Date Day Avg Wait
    Feb 14 Friday 31.9 min
    Feb 15 Saturday 32.9 min
    Feb 16 Sunday 30.9 min
    Feb 17 Monday 30.1 min

    The crowd premium during this period: 34.3% longer waits compared to baseline. That’s higher than Easter week (29.4%) and even the Central Florida spring break peak (27.2%).

    Wave 2: The March Surge (March 17-29)

    Here’s where regional timing creates an extended crunch. We recorded 13 consecutive days with high crowd levels from March 17 through March 29. This sustained period combines:

    • Central Florida locals (Orange, Osceola, Polk counties) breaking around March 17-21
    • Midwest schools (Illinois, Ohio, Michigan) typically releasing late March
    • An overlap window where both groups converge

    The Texas spring break wave (typically March 10-17) showed moderate impact in our data, with March 11 hitting 30.4 minutes. But the true surge builds once Central Florida schools release.

    Period Avg Wait vs Baseline
    March 17-23 (Central FL) 29.8 min +27.2%
    March 24-29 (Midwest overlap) 28.7 min +22.6%
    March 10-16 (Texas) 26.5 min +13.2%

    The peak single day during March: Thursday, March 20 at 31.2-minute average.

    Wave 3: Easter Week (April 14-19)

    Northeast schools (New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania) traditionally align their breaks with Easter. In 2025, Easter fell on April 20—and the week before delivered sustained crowds:

    Date Day Avg Wait
    Apr 14 Monday 29.1 min
    Apr 15 Tuesday 31.5 min
    Apr 16 Wednesday 30.9 min
    Apr 17 Thursday 30.4 min
    Apr 18 Friday 30.8 min
    Apr 19 Saturday 29.0 min
    Apr 20 Easter Sunday 23.5 min

    Easter Sunday itself dropped to normal levels—families travel home or spend the day at resorts. The premium for Easter week (excluding Easter Sunday): 29.4% above baseline.

    The Gap Week Nobody Talks About

    Between the March surge and Easter week sits a genuine window of relief: March 31 through April 6.

    This gap week averaged just 23.8 minutes—essentially identical to our early February baseline of 23.4 minutes. While the peak March week (March 17-23) ran 29.8 minutes, the gap week delivered waits 20% lower.

    Period Avg Wait Min Day Max Day
    Peak March (Mar 17-23) 29.8 min 28.4 min 31.2 min
    Gap Week (Mar 31 – Apr 6) 23.8 min 21.6 min 28.1 min

    The gap exists because most school districts have already returned from their March breaks, while Easter-aligned districts haven’t yet released. April 1-3, 2025 were particularly calm, all posting under 23-minute averages.

    How Spring Break Compares to Other Peaks

    Where does spring break rank among Disney World’s crowd seasons? Here’s the 2025 comparison:

    Period Avg Wait Median Wait
    New Years Week (Dec 29+) 36.7 min 25 min
    Presidents Day Weekend 31.4 min 25 min
    Christmas Week 30.7 min 20 min
    Easter Week 30.3 min 20 min
    Central FL Spring Break 29.8 min 20 min
    Thanksgiving Week 27.4 min 15 min
    Gap Week 23.8 min 15 min

    New Years week remains the undisputed champion of crowds. But the spring break peaks hold their own against Christmas—and Presidents Day weekend actually outperforms it.

    The Park Impact Varies

    Spring break doesn’t hit all parks equally. Using the Central Florida break week (March 17-23) as the reference point:

    Park Baseline Spring Break Premium
    EPCOT 22.5 min 29.8 min +32.7%
    Animal Kingdom 29.4 min 37.4 min +27.3%
    Hollywood Studios 28.6 min 35.8 min +25.2%
    Magic Kingdom 22.5 min 27.5 min +22.2%

    EPCOT sees the largest relative increase, likely due to Flower & Garden Festival crowds layering onto spring break visitors. Animal Kingdom runs the highest absolute waits—Avatar Flight of Passage jumped from 70 to 92 minutes during peak spring break, a 22-minute premium.

    The Day-of-Week Shift

    During normal operations, weekday crowds run noticeably lighter than weekends. Spring break flattens this curve dramatically:

    Day Baseline Spring Break Premium
    Wednesday 20.2 min 27.2 min +7.0 min
    Tuesday 21.6 min 27.4 min +5.8 min
    Thursday 24.0 min 27.8 min +3.8 min
    Monday 23.7 min 26.7 min +3.0 min
    Friday 25.5 min 28.3 min +2.8 min
    Saturday 28.0 min 29.3 min +1.3 min
    Sunday 25.0 min 26.1 min +1.1 min

    Wednesdays see the biggest transformation—from the lightest day of a normal week to nearly matching weekend levels. The advantage of midweek visits evaporates during spring break.

    Headliner Impact

    The attractions with the longest baseline waits see the largest absolute increases:

    Attraction Baseline Spring Break Premium
    Avatar Flight of Passage 70 min 92 min +22 min
    Slinky Dog Dash 63 min 85 min +22 min
    Rise of the Resistance 51 min 69 min +19 min
    Space Mountain 40 min 55 min +15 min
    Kilimanjaro Safaris 36 min 51 min +15 min
    TRON Lightcycle / Run 75 min 89 min +14 min

    Practical Recommendations

    If you must visit during spring break:

    • Target the gap week (late March/early April) if school schedules allow
    • Avoid Presidents Day weekend—it’s worse than Christmas week
    • Don’t expect weekday crowds to be meaningfully lighter
    • Easter Sunday itself runs calm if your timing allows

    If you have flexibility:

    • Early February (before Presidents Day) delivers baseline crowds
    • Late April (after Easter) returns to normal quickly
    • The window around March 30-31 offers a brief respite

    Limitations

    This analysis uses 2025 data, and school calendars shift annually. Easter moves each year (2026 falls on April 5, significantly earlier), which will alter the timing of both the Easter surge and the gap week. Regional school district calendars vary—use this as a pattern guide rather than a fixed schedule.

    We also can’t isolate spring break travelers from locals or annual passholders in this data. The patterns reflect total crowd behavior, not purely vacation visitors.

    Conclusion

    Spring break at Disney World runs for roughly 10 weeks, from Presidents Day weekend through late April. The 13-day March surge (March 17-29) represents the most sustained period of elevated crowds, but Presidents Day weekend actually produces higher peak days than any other period in the window.

    The opportunity lies in the gaps: early February, the overlooked late March/early April window, and Easter Sunday itself. With 1.3 million data points confirming these patterns, the math is clear—timing your spring trip around these waves makes a measurable difference.

    Spring break crowds add 6-8 minutes to the average wait. That’s 27% longer lines, multiplied across every attraction you visit. The difference between a well-timed trip and a peak-week trip isn’t minor—it’s the difference between riding six headliners and riding four.


    Timing is everything at Disney World. Lightning Brain’s real-time data helps you hit attractions at the optimal moment, whether you’re navigating spring break crowds or finding the quiet windows. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.

  • Weekly Park Report: January 4 – January 10, 2026

    The Post-Holiday Plunge: January 4-10 Delivered the Lightest Crowds in Six Weeks

    Resort-wide median wait times dropped 43% from the previous week. That’s not a typo. After the holiday surge pushed the December 28-January 3 period to 35-minute medians, this week crashed back to 20 minutes—matching the quietest weeks we’ve tracked since early December. Guests who timed their visits for this window were rewarded with exceptional touring conditions, particularly at EPCOT and Animal Kingdom.

    Week at a Glance

    This week, January 4-10, 2026, registered as the transition period Disney veterans know well: the exhale after New Year’s. The resort averaged a 20-minute median wait, down dramatically from last week’s 35 minutes and tied with three of the past six weeks for the lightest period since late November. But the week wasn’t uniformly quiet. Sunday and Monday still carried holiday momentum with elevated crowds, while Wednesday through Friday delivered genuinely light conditions across most parks. Marathon Weekend’s Thursday kickoff added complexity but didn’t derail the overall trend.

    The headline: patience paid off. Guests who waited until mid-week found a completely different resort than those who arrived on Sunday.

    Park-by-Park Analysis

    EPCOT: The Quiet Champion

    EPCOT posted the week’s most dramatic improvement, dropping 40% from its 6-week average. The 15-minute median wait—a 3/10 crowd level—meant World Showcase strollers found walk-on conditions at attractions that typically demand patience. Living with the Land, still running its Glimmering Greenhouses holiday overlay through early January, averaged just 11.7 minutes, a full 50% below its typical 23.4-minute baseline. Even with Festival of the Arts preparations underway, the park delivered consistently light crowds from Tuesday onward. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind remained the exception, driving the 125-minute peak wait, but the overall experience favored guests who chose EPCOT this week.

    Animal Kingdom: Four Days of Excellence

    Animal Kingdom quietly delivered some of the best touring conditions in recent memory. The 25-minute median (3/10, Light) ran 16.7% below the 6-week average, but the real story emerged mid-week: Wednesday and Thursday both hit 15-minute medians, creating ideal conditions for Flight of Passage without Lightning Lane. Kali River Rapids averaged just 12.2 minutes—43.5% below typical—though January water ride demand naturally softens. DINOSAUR showed 10 downtime incidents across the week, occasionally frustrating guests who planned around it, but the park’s overall reliability supported strong touring days.

    Hollywood Studios: Holding Steady Despite Downtime

    Hollywood Studios maintained its 40-minute median, exactly matching the 6-week average and landing at a 6/10 (Busy) crowd level. The park ran hotter than the resort trend, with Sunday and Monday both hitting 50-minute medians before settling into the mid-30s later in the week. Rise of the Resistance logged 10 downtime incidents, creating morning frustration for rope-droppers on multiple days—guests who built strategies around early Rise rides found themselves pivoting to Tower of Terror or Slinky Dog. Speaking of Slinky, Toy Story Mania led all attractions with 16 downtime incidents, making Toy Story Land reliability a recurring challenge.

    Magic Kingdom: Heavy Despite the Lull

    Magic Kingdom registered the week’s highest crowd level at 7/10 (Heavy) with a 20-minute median, matching its 6-week baseline exactly. The Kingdom doesn’t drop as dramatically during post-holiday periods—it remains the default choice for many guests. Sunday through Tuesday hovered around 20-25 minutes before Wednesday delivered a genuine 15-minute day. Haunted Mansion’s 13 downtime incidents made it the park’s least reliable major attraction; guests attempting late-evening Mansion rides faced unexpected closures on several nights. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel and Mad Tea Party also showed elevated downtime, suggesting Fantasyland operations struggled this week.

    Daily Pattern Analysis

    Day Resort Trend Busiest Park Lightest Park Notes
    Sun 1/4 Elevated HS (50 min) MK (20 min) Holiday crowds lingering
    Mon 1/5 Elevated HS (50 min) MK/EP (25 min) Last busy day
    Tue 1/6 Moderate HS (40 min) EP (15 min) Transition begins
    Wed 1/7 Light HS (35 min) AK/EP (15 min) Week’s lightest day
    Thu 1/8 Light HS (40 min) AK/EP/MK (15 min) Marathon Weekend starts
    Fri 1/9 Light HS (35 min) EP/MK (15 min) Continued light crowds
    Sat 1/10 Moderate HS (40 min) EP/MK (15 min) Weekend uptick

    The pattern tells a clear story: holiday guests departed through Monday, creating a two-day overlap before the true post-holiday lull arrived Wednesday. Marathon Weekend—which typically adds 30,000+ runners and their families to the Orlando area—didn’t materially impact park crowds Thursday through Saturday. Runners focus on early mornings and recovery; the parks benefit from their presence without the corresponding queue pressure. Hollywood Studios remained consistently busier than other parks throughout the week, likely driven by Rise of the Resistance demand that persists regardless of overall resort crowd levels.

    Reliability Report

    Test Track led EPCOT’s downtime with 15 incidents, continuing a pattern that’s persisted since the attraction’s post-refurbishment reopening. Guests planning EPCOT days around an early Test Track ride faced morning uncertainty on multiple days. The Magic Kingdom’s Fantasyland cluster—Haunted Mansion (13), Carrousel (11), Magic Carpets (10), Mad Tea Party (9)—suggests either staffing challenges or mechanical issues concentrated in that area. Spaceship Earth’s 10 incidents at EPCOT surprised; the attraction typically runs reliably. Guests experienced the most consistent operations at Animal Kingdom’s headliners (Flight of Passage, Kilimanjaro Safaris) and Magic Kingdom’s mountains.

    Weather Impact

    Weather data wasn’t available for detailed analysis this week, but January’s mild Orlando temperatures typically support comfortable touring without the summer heat that drives guests toward indoor attractions. No significant weather events impacted operations during the analysis period.

    Next Week Outlook

    Marathon Weekend concludes Sunday with the full marathon, which may create Transportation and Ticket Center congestion for Magic Kingdom guests. The following week (January 11-17) historically delivers some of the year’s lightest crowds—the true “off-season” window before Martin Luther King Jr. weekend. Guests visiting next week should expect continued Light to Moderate conditions, with mid-week days (Tuesday-Thursday) offering the best opportunities. Hollywood Studios will likely remain relatively busier than other parks; consider EPCOT or Animal Kingdom for the lightest crowds. Festival of the Arts preparations at EPCOT continue but shouldn’t impact ride availability.

    Plan Your Light-Crowd Visit

    This week proved that timing transforms the Disney experience. The difference between Sunday’s 50-minute Hollywood Studios waits and Wednesday’s 15-minute Animal Kingdom conditions is the difference between a stressful day and a magical one. Lightning Brain’s crowd modeling identifies these windows before they happen, helping you choose not just the right park but the right day. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: January 10, 2026

    Marathon Weekend Delivers Ghost-Town Touring Across All Four Parks

    Saturday delivered something rare at Walt Disney World: every single park came in below its 30-day average, with EPCOT plunging a staggering 42% below normal. For guests who braved the 82-degree January heat, the reward was walk-on conditions at attractions that typically demand patience.

    The culprit is obvious: Marathon Weekend. With 75,000+ runners and spectators focused on race logistics rather than park touring, Saturday became an accidental gift for everyone else. Clear skies and warm temperatures kept conditions pleasant, but the real story is in the numbers.

    EPCOT: Festival Season Without Festival Crowds

    EPCOT recorded a 3/10 crowd level with a 14.5-minute median wait—42% below its 30-day average. For context, this is a Saturday in early January, when post-holiday crowds typically linger. Instead, guests walked onto Frozen Ever After and Test Track with minimal friction.

    The 11:00 AM peak at just 20 minutes median reflects Festival of the Holidays traffic patterns: guests arriving for booth openings, then dispersing for food rather than queuing for attractions. Living with the Land posted 10-minute averages, 33% below its typical 15 minutes—a reversal from the holiday overlay crowds we saw in December.

    Late afternoon brought operational challenges. Test Track went down for 90 minutes starting at 5:09 PM, followed immediately by Cosmic Rewind’s 39-minute closure at 5:51 PM. Guests attempting an evening World Showcase loop found two headliners simultaneously unavailable—a frustrating end to an otherwise smooth day.

    Magic Kingdom: Space Mountain’s Afternoon Disappearance

    Magic Kingdom landed at 5/10 with a 15.8-minute median, 21% below its 30-day average. The park absorbed Marathon Weekend’s reduced attendance gracefully, but one major incident reshaped afternoon touring.

    Space Mountain went down at 1:45 PM and stayed closed until 4:39 PM—nearly three hours during peak demand. Tomorrowland guests hunting alternatives found an unexpected silver lining: TRON posted 55-minute averages, a full 31% below its typical 80 minutes. Whether this reflects Marathon Weekend’s lower crowds or guests avoiding the construction-adjacent area, the result was accessible boarding for Disney’s newest coaster.

    Prince Charming Regal Carrousel doubled its typical wait to 10 minutes—a curiosity likely driven by runDisney families with young children seeking gentler attractions after early race-morning wake-ups. Tomorrowland Speedway, conversely, dropped 33% below normal, suggesting the teenage demographic skews toward race participants rather than spectators.

    Animal Kingdom: Light Crowds, Late Peak

    Animal Kingdom recorded the day’s lowest crowd level at 3/10, with a 23.8-minute median sitting 21% below average. The 5:00 PM peak is telling: families with marathon runners likely arrived late after morning race obligations cleared.

    Expedition Everest’s 60-minute morning downtime (8:15-9:15 AM) hit during a low-traffic window, minimizing guest impact. DINOSAUR’s 51-minute closure from 4:51-5:42 PM proved more disruptive, coinciding with the park’s peak hour and forcing DinoLand guests toward TriceraTop Spin as their only immediate option.

    Hollywood Studios: Toy Story Land’s Domino Effect

    Hollywood Studios posted the highest crowd level at 5/10, though its 37.9-minute median still came in 5% below the 30-day average. The park’s compact footprint means moderate crowds feel heavier than equivalent numbers elsewhere.

    The 12:00 PM peak at 55 minutes median reflects Hollywood Studios’ typical lunch-hour surge, but Toy Story Land experienced cascading problems. Toy Story Mania went down for 57 minutes starting at 1:12 PM, followed immediately by Slinky Dog Dash’s 27-minute closure at 1:42 PM. For 27 minutes, the land’s only operating attraction was Alien Swirling Saucers—a situation that created visible queue overflow into the walkways.

    Today’s Forecast: Marathon Morning Creates Split-Day Dynamics

    Sunday brings the Marathon itself, which means road closures affect Magic Kingdom and EPCOT access until mid-morning. Expect light crowds at those parks before 10:00 AM as guests without race connections sleep in or wait out traffic.

    The FETC education technology conference adds weekday-style professional crowds, but Sunday impact is minimal. Weather shifts cooler (high of 78°F) with 36% precipitation chance—enough to keep outdoor queue-averse guests considering backup plans but unlikely to cause significant operational impacts.

    The play: Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom offer the cleanest morning access while Marathon road closures persist. By afternoon, expect Magic Kingdom to surge as race spectators transition into park visitors. EPCOT remains the wildcard—Festival of the Holidays continues, but yesterday’s 42% below-average suggests marathon families prioritize rest over World Showcase laps.

    If yesterday’s patterns hold, any park delivers comfortable touring today. The question is whether marathon fatigue keeps today’s numbers suppressed or whether post-race celebration drives a Sunday rebound.

    Track the Patterns That Matter

    Marathon Weekend reshapes the entire resort, and yesterday’s 42% EPCOT drop is exactly the kind of opportunity that disappears without real-time data. Lightning Brain’s event-aware modeling shows you where to tour while race logistics dominate elsewhere. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: January 9, 2026

    Marathon Weekend Delivers Ghost-Town Touring Across All Four Parks

    Walk-on waits at Dumbo. Five-minute queues for Spaceship Earth. A 75% drop at Living with the Land. Friday’s data tells a clear story: Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend creates one of the best touring windows of the year, and yesterday’s crowds proved it.

    All four parks posted crowd levels between 3/10 and 4/10, with EPCOT and Animal Kingdom dropping 36-40% below their 30-day averages. The combination of marathon runners resting before Saturday’s races and casual tourists avoiding the perceived chaos created a resort-wide lull. Near-perfect weather—82 degrees, mostly clear skies, zero precipitation—would normally draw heavy crowds to outdoor attractions. Instead, guests who showed up found breathing room everywhere.

    EPCOT: The Biggest Winner

    EPCOT recorded the steepest drop of the day: a 40% decline from its 30-day average, settling at a 15-minute median and a 3/10 crowd level. For context, this park typically runs 25-minute medians during this stretch of January. The 11 AM peak hit just 25 minutes—a number most parks would celebrate as an off-peak afternoon.

    The attraction data reveals just how empty the park felt. Spaceship Earth posted 5-minute averages against a typical 15 minutes. Living with the Land, still running its Glimmering Greenhouses holiday overlay, dropped to 5 minutes—75% below its usual 20. Even Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, normally a 55-minute commitment, averaged just 35 minutes. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind did go down for 48 minutes mid-morning, and Remy followed with a 45-minute closure around noon, but neither disruption materially impacted a park this empty.

    Animal Kingdom: Light Crowds, Quiet Touring

    Animal Kingdom matched EPCOT’s 3/10 crowd level with a 19-minute median—36% below its 30-day average of 30 minutes. The 11 AM peak reached only 35 minutes, comfortable territory for a park that can spike to 45+ during busy periods.

    Zootopia: Better Zoogether posted 10-minute averages, half its typical 20-minute wait. Kali River Rapids went down for 53 minutes during the early afternoon, but with crowds this light, displaced guests absorbed easily into other Pandora and Africa attractions. Expedition Everest’s 36-minute morning closure occurred before most guests arrived, limiting its impact.

    Magic Kingdom: Comfortable Despite Being the Busiest

    Magic Kingdom technically recorded the highest crowd level at 4/10, but a 15-minute median still represents a 25% drop from its 30-day average. The noon peak hit just 20 minutes—a number that would register as a slow Tuesday during moderate seasons.

    Fantasyland became a walk-on paradise. Dumbo averaged 5 minutes against a typical 15. Mad Tea Party, Prince Charming Regal Carrousel, and the PeopleMover all posted 5-minute averages at 50% below normal. The Magic Carpets of Aladdin dropped to 10 minutes from its usual 15. TRON Lightcycle / Run went down for 45 minutes in the late afternoon, and Winnie the Pooh had two separate closures totaling over an hour, but with so much capacity available elsewhere, guests simply redirected without building queues.

    Hollywood Studios: Headliner Trouble in Toy Story Land

    Hollywood Studios posted a 4/10 with a 35-minute median, 12.5% below average. Respectable numbers, but this park absorbed the day’s most disruptive downtime sequence.

    Slinky Dog Dash vanished for 102 minutes during the peak noon-to-afternoon window. Families hunting Toy Story Land options found themselves rerouting, and that pressure showed when Toy Story Mania went down twice later in the day for 32 and 30 minutes respectively. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster added a 96-minute afternoon closure, and Rise of the Resistance dropped for 42 minutes during the dinner hour. Four headliner attractions experiencing significant downtime on the same day is unusual—but with base crowds running light, the cascading effect stayed manageable rather than catastrophic.

    Downtime Patterns Worth Noting

    Yesterday logged 17 notable closures exceeding 15 minutes across the resort. Hollywood Studios bore the heaviest burden with five incidents totaling nearly five hours of combined headliner downtime. EPCOT saw six closures but spread across attractions with lower demand. The timing clustered notably in the early-to-mid afternoon, suggesting either scheduled maintenance windows or heat-related mechanical stress during peak temperature hours.

    For guests in the parks, the practical impact was minimal. When Slinky Dog went down at 12:57 PM, Hollywood Studios was running a 45-minute peak median—meaning displaced riders found 35-40 minute alternatives rather than 60+ minute backups. Light base crowds absorbed the disruption.

    Today’s Outlook: Marathon Morning Creates Split Conditions

    Saturday brings the Walt Disney World Marathon itself, which fundamentally changes morning transportation dynamics. Runners and spectators will dominate resort movement before 10 AM, but the race clears by early afternoon.

    Expect a slow-starting morning across all parks as marathon logistics complicate arrivals. Post-race, runner families typically gravitate toward lower-intensity parks—EPCOT and Animal Kingdom historically see slight afternoon bumps while Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios stay suppressed. Weather remains ideal: 81 degrees, mostly clear, zero precipitation chance.

    The play today: If you can reach the parks by rope drop despite marathon road closures, you’ll find near-empty conditions through late morning. If transportation delays push your arrival past 11 AM, pivot to Hollywood Studios or Magic Kingdom where post-marathon crowds tend to stay lightest. Animal Kingdom closes earliest on marathon weekends, so prioritize it for morning hours if Pandora is your goal.

    Yesterday’s downtime concentration at Hollywood Studios suggests monitoring attraction status before committing to Toy Story Land—two consecutive days of heavy closures would be unusual, but the pattern warrants awareness.

    Track the Marathon Effect in Real Time

    Marathon Weekend creates exactly the kind of unusual crowd patterns that reward data-aware touring. Lightning Brain tracks these dynamics live, so you can see which parks are absorbing runner families and which are staying empty. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: January 8, 2026

    Animal Kingdom Hit Ghost-Town Status While Four Major Attractions Went Dark

    A 60% drop from normal. That’s what Animal Kingdom delivered yesterday—a 1/10 crowd level that turned the park into a walk-on paradise. Meanwhile, headliner attractions across all four parks staged a synchronized rebellion, with seven rides experiencing downtimes exceeding an hour. Thursday’s data tells two stories: one of unprecedented light crowds, and one of operational chaos that reshaped guest touring patterns throughout the day.

    Weather wasn’t the culprit. With 80-degree highs under mostly clear skies, conditions were ideal for touring. The real driver appears to be post-holiday decompression combined with Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend. Runners descending on the resort tend to spend their pre-race days resting rather than rope-dropping parks, and yesterday’s numbers reflect that behavior across the board.

    Animal Kingdom: The Emptiest Day in Recent Memory

    An 11.9-minute median wait. That number is remarkable even for Animal Kingdom’s traditionally lower crowds. At 60% below the 30-day average, yesterday represented genuine walk-on conditions for nearly every attraction in the park. DINOSAUR posted 5-minute waits—75% below its typical 20 minutes—while Kali River Rapids matched that despite pleasant weather that would normally drive water ride demand. Even the relatively new Zootopia: Better Zoogether! dropped to 10-minute waits, half its usual.

    The one hiccup: Expedition Everest vanished for 96 minutes during the early afternoon, going down at 12:07 PM and not returning until 1:43 PM. For the sparse crowds present, this was a minor inconvenience. The 1:00 PM peak hour still only hit 20-minute medians—a number most parks would celebrate as their daily low.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Stayed Home

    EPCOT’s 3/10 crowd level and 14.8-minute median represented a 41% drop from recent averages. Living with the Land posted just 5-minute waits—notable because during the recent Festival of the Holidays, this attraction frequently saw inflated numbers as guests sought climate-controlled breaks between food booths. Yesterday’s low wait suggests the festival crowd has largely departed.

    The park’s operational day was rougher than the crowd levels suggest. Test Track went down for 84 minutes during the early afternoon (1:40 PM to 3:04 PM), followed by Spaceship Earth’s 75-minute closure from 4:25 PM to 5:40 PM. Then Frozen Ever After—EPCOT’s perpetual queue magnet—disappeared for 103 minutes during the evening hours, from 5:21 PM until 7:04 PM. Guests arriving for evening touring found three major attractions unavailable in sequence.

    Magic Kingdom: Tiana’s Bayou Adventure Dominated Despite Morning Closure

    The Magic Kingdom story yesterday was Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. Despite a 159-minute morning closure (9:01 AM to 11:40 AM), the attraction still averaged 55-minute waits—120% above its typical 25 minutes. Guests who arrived at rope drop found the park’s hottest attraction unavailable until nearly lunch, then faced the day’s longest waits once it reopened.

    Outside of Tiana’s, Magic Kingdom delivered comfortable 4/10 conditions with a 13.2-minute median. Classic Fantasyland attractions hit basement-level waits: Dumbo, Mad Tea Party, and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel all posted 5-minute averages. The PeopleMover matched that—unusual for an attraction that typically absorbs overflow from Tomorrowland’s thrill rides.

    The afternoon brought additional turbulence. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train closed for 55 minutes starting at 2:06 PM, followed by Haunted Mansion’s 90-minute outage from 3:04 PM to 4:34 PM. Space Mountain added a 24-minute closure in the late afternoon. Guests touring Fantasyland and Liberty Square during the 2-4 PM window faced a cascade of unavailable headliners.

    Hollywood Studios: The Busiest Park by Default

    At 6/10 and a 38.3-minute median, Hollywood Studios claimed the day’s highest crowd level—though still 4% below its 30-day average. The noon peak hit 50-minute medians, making this the only park where guests encountered genuinely busy conditions.

    Morning rope-droppers faced disappointment. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway went down at 8:31 AM—before the park even hit full stride—and didn’t return until 11:01 AM, a 150-minute outage. Rise of the Resistance followed with its own 51-minute morning closure. Guests targeting Galaxy’s Edge and the Chinese Theatre for early touring found both headline attractions unavailable simultaneously. Runaway Railway then went down again in the afternoon for another 42 minutes.

    The Downtime Pattern

    Yesterday’s operational issues weren’t random. Morning closures clustered between 8:30 and 9:30 AM, hitting Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, Rise of the Resistance, and the Walt Disney World Railroad simultaneously. A second wave struck between 2:00 and 4:30 PM, taking out Mine Train, Haunted Mansion, Carousel of Progress, and Space Mountain. Evening brought the EPCOT trio offline.

    For guests, this created a touring day where flexibility was essential. Those locked into specific attraction priorities found themselves repeatedly redirected. Those willing to pivot—especially toward Animal Kingdom’s ghost-town conditions—were rewarded with exceptional experiences.

    Today’s Outlook: Marathon Friday

    Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend continues today, with the half marathon scheduled for Saturday morning and the full marathon Sunday. Friday typically sees slightly elevated park attendance as runners complete their final pre-race park visits, but the pattern from yesterday suggests crowds will remain manageable.

    The forecast calls for 81-degree highs under mostly clear skies with zero precipitation chance—another ideal touring day. Expect Animal Kingdom to rebound slightly from yesterday’s extreme lows but remain well below typical levels. Hollywood Studios will likely maintain its position as the busiest park, particularly during morning hours when rope-drop crowds concentrate.

    The play today: Animal Kingdom in the morning, capitalizing on continued marathon-weekend suppression. If yesterday’s downtime pattern repeats, avoid committing to specific headliner attractions before 10:00 AM—morning operational issues hit three parks yesterday. Afternoon touring at Magic Kingdom offers the best balance of availability and manageable waits, assuming Tiana’s Bayou Adventure operates normally.

    Track Real-Time Conditions

    Yesterday’s downtime cascade is exactly the scenario where real-time data changes everything. Lightning Brain monitors attraction status continuously, helping you pivot before a 150-minute closure derails your touring plan. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: January 7, 2026

    Animal Kingdom Hit Ghost-Town Levels While Rise of the Resistance Dominated Hollywood Studios

    A 56% drop from normal. That’s what Animal Kingdom recorded yesterday—the kind of number that turns a typical Wednesday into something closer to a private tour. While one park emptied out, Hollywood Studios told a completely different story: Rise of the Resistance commanded 140-minute waits, more than double its typical 55 minutes, as guests concentrated their energy on Galaxy’s Edge.

    Wednesday brought near-perfect touring conditions across the property. With highs near 79°F under mostly clear skies and no major events reshaping guest flow, the post-holiday exodus was in full effect. The Surf Expo drew some attendees to the convention center, but the real driver was simpler: families who flooded the parks through New Year’s have gone home, and locals haven’t yet returned in force.

    Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance Tells the Whole Story

    At a 5/10 crowd level with a 37.7-minute median wait, Hollywood Studios ran slightly below its 30-day average. But the headline attraction rewrote the script entirely. Rise of the Resistance posted 140-minute averages—and that’s despite going down twice, first for 99 minutes in the morning and again for a crushing 196-minute closure spanning the lunch rush from 11:21 AM to 2:37 PM.

    Those nearly five hours of combined downtime created a pressure cooker effect. Guests who arrived expecting Galaxy’s Edge found themselves rerouting to Toy Story Land, where Slinky Dog Dash absorbed the spillover. When Rise finally reopened mid-afternoon, pent-up demand sent waits soaring. The 12:00 PM peak hour hit 50-minute medians across the park—guests clearly weren’t leaving, they were waiting out the closure.

    Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway also experienced an 18-minute morning outage, and Toy Story Mania went down for 27 minutes in the early evening. For a park with only a handful of headliners, these stacked downtimes compressed crowds into fewer attractions.

    Animal Kingdom: The Disappearing Act

    A 2/10 crowd level. A 13.1-minute median wait. A 56.3% drop from the 30-day average. Animal Kingdom was effectively empty yesterday.

    DINOSAUR posted 5-minute waits—75% below its typical 20 minutes. Zootopia: Better Zoogether clocked in at just 10 minutes, half its normal queue. Even the park’s peak hour at 3:00 PM only reached 20-minute medians. Guests who ventured here found what amounts to a walk-on park.

    Kali River Rapids went down for 51 minutes during the early afternoon, but with crowds this light, the impact was negligible. There simply weren’t enough guests competing for attractions to create meaningful displacement.

    Magic Kingdom: Comfortable Touring with One Exception

    Magic Kingdom settled at a 4/10 crowd level with a 13.8-minute median—31% below the 30-day average. The park offered comfortable touring nearly everywhere, with attractions like Dumbo, Tomorrowland Speedway, and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel posting 5-minute waits (50-67% below their baselines).

    The exception: Tiana’s Bayou Adventure. The attraction averaged 45 minutes, 80% above its typical 25-minute wait. An early 78-minute closure (9:01–10:19 AM) compressed morning demand, and the attraction’s continued novelty keeps it operating as the park’s primary crowd magnet. Guests seeking log flume thrills had to either commit to the Tiana queue or skip it entirely—there was no middle ground.

    Astro Orbiter’s 87-minute morning outage and a 22-minute Haunted Mansion closure created brief Fantasyland and Tomorrowland bottlenecks, but with such light overall crowds, recovery came quickly.

    EPCOT: Festival Season Without the Festival Crowds

    EPCOT registered a 4/10 at just 15.4 minutes median—38.4% below its 30-day average. With the Festival of the Holidays wrapped and no major draw reshaping foot traffic, World Celebration and World Nature operated at comfortable levels.

    Soarin’ posted 15-minute waits, 57% below its 35-minute baseline. Living with the Land—which had been drawing elevated waits during its Glimmering Greenhouses holiday overlay—dropped to just 5 minutes. The Seas with Nemo & Friends matched that 5-minute mark. Journey Into Imagination With Figment went down for 46 minutes mid-afternoon, but with such light crowds, guests simply walked to neighboring attractions.

    Test Track’s 36-minute evening closure and Spaceship Earth’s 27-minute afternoon outage were the only other notable interruptions—neither created visible cascading effects.

    Today’s Outlook: Marathon Weekend Begins

    Walt Disney World Marathon Weekend launches today, and that changes the calculus. Runners flooding the resort tend to spend mornings at race events and afternoons recovering poolside rather than touring parks—but their families often don’t. Expect moderate upticks at Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios as travel companions seek entertainment while runners rest.

    Weather remains favorable: highs near 79°F, mostly cloudy, zero precipitation chance. The Surf Expo continues but remains a minimal factor.

    The strategy: Animal Kingdom’s ghost-town pattern from yesterday is likely to persist—marathon families gravitate toward the castle and Galaxy’s Edge, not Pandora. If you want virtually walk-on conditions, Animal Kingdom remains your best bet. Hollywood Studios carries risk: yesterday’s Rise of the Resistance downtime patterns could repeat, and with slightly higher marathon weekend crowds, recovery queues will be longer. EPCOT offers the safest middle ground—comfortable waits with enough headliners to fill a full day.

    Plan Smarter, Not Harder

    Yesterday’s 56% Animal Kingdom drop wasn’t obvious from the parking lot. These hidden patterns are exactly what Lightning Brain surfaces—showing you which park is actually empty while others absorb the crowds. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: January 6, 2026

    Magic Kingdom Crowds Surged 30% Above Other Parks Tuesday

    Magic Kingdom recorded an 8/10 crowd level yesterday while Animal Kingdom and EPCOT sat at 3/10 and 5/10 respectively. That 30-point swing between parks on the same Tuesday tells the story of post-holiday crowd behavior: families with remaining vacation days flooded the flagship park while the rest of the resort emptied out.

    Weather played a supporting role. Near-80-degree highs with clear skies created ideal conditions for outdoor touring, yet that warmth drove distinctly different choices across properties. The 21-minute median at Magic Kingdom represents a 6.5% increase over the 30-day average, while Animal Kingdom dropped 31% below its baseline to just 21 minutes.

    Magic Kingdom: Fantasyland Became a Bottleneck

    The 8/10 crowd level at Magic Kingdom showed most clearly in Fantasyland, where family-friendly attractions absorbed the Tuesday surge. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure hit 50-minute averages—double its typical 25-minute baseline—as the park’s newest headliner continued drawing disproportionate demand. But the real surprise was the spillover effect: “it’s a small world” and Under the Sea both doubled their normal waits to 30 minutes, while even Prince Charming Regal Carrousel doubled from 5 to 10 minutes.

    Pirates of the Caribbean in Adventureland saw 35-minute waits, 75% above its 20-minute norm. The pattern is clear: guests who couldn’t secure Tiana’s Bayou Adventure queued for the next-best boat ride. Peak crowds hit at noon with 30-minute medians across the board, suggesting families arrived mid-morning after hotel breakfasts and created maximum pressure through the lunch hour.

    Hollywood Studios: Rise of the Resistance Chaos

    Hollywood Studios recorded a 7/10 with 41-minute medians, but the headline was Rise of the Resistance’s troubled day. The attraction went down for nearly four hours in the morning (8:31 AM to 12:22 PM) and another two hours in late afternoon (4:51 PM to 6:52 PM). When operational, waits spiked to 90-minute averages—64% above the typical 55 minutes—as guests who’d been waiting all morning rushed the queue.

    Toy Story Land absorbed some of the Galaxy’s Edge pressure. Slinky Dog Dash experienced its own 37-minute midday closure, and Toy Story Mania went down for 34 minutes in late afternoon. Families hunting for alternatives found queues backing up across the land. The noon peak saw 55-minute medians, the day’s highest single-hour reading at any park.

    Animal Kingdom: The Empty Alternative

    Animal Kingdom’s 3/10 crowd level represented a 31% drop below its 30-day average. At 21-minute medians, guests who chose this park over Magic Kingdom were rewarded with comfortable touring conditions across nearly every attraction.

    The exception was Kali River Rapids, which posted 35-minute averages—250% above its typical 10-minute wait. The near-80-degree weather drove guests toward water rides, but Kali complicated matters by going down for four and a half hours from 9:01 AM to 1:31 PM. When it reopened, pent-up demand created the day’s most dramatic single-attraction spike. DINOSAUR also experienced a 75-minute morning closure, but with lighter overall crowds, the impact stayed contained.

    EPCOT: Festival Season Wind-Down

    EPCOT posted a 5/10 crowd level with 17-minute medians—32% below the 30-day average. With Festival of the Holidays concluded on December 30, the World Showcase food booths that typically drive foot traffic have closed, and wait times reflected the shift.

    Operational issues hit several attractions. Living with the Land—still running its Glimmering Greenhouses holiday overlay through early January—went down for 78 minutes midday. Frozen Ever After closed for nearly an hour in the afternoon. Turtle Talk With Crush experienced a two-hour morning closure. Despite these disruptions, the lighter baseline crowds meant guests could easily pivot to alternatives without significant wait increases.

    Downtime Impact Analysis

    Tuesday’s operational challenges created cascading effects, particularly at Hollywood Studios. Rise of the Resistance’s six combined hours of downtime during a 7/10 crowd day meant thousands of guests needed alternative plans. Galaxy’s Edge has limited capacity-absorbing alternatives—Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run likely saw elevated waits throughout the day as the only other major attraction in the land.

    At Animal Kingdom, the Kali River Rapids closure during morning hours—when temperatures were climbing toward the day’s 80-degree high—forced water-seekers to wait. The 35-minute waits when it reopened demonstrate how quickly demand concentrates on a single attraction when alternatives don’t exist.

    Today’s Outlook: Wednesday, January 7

    Expect similar patterns today with one key difference: the post-holiday exodus continues. Surf Expo runs at the Orange County Convention Center, which typically has minimal impact on park attendance but may slightly reduce local annual passholder visits.

    Weather remains favorable at 77 degrees with partly cloudy skies and zero precipitation chance. Magic Kingdom will likely stay elevated as families squeeze in final vacation-day visits, but the 8/10 levels should moderate slightly as the week progresses toward school resumption.

    The strategic play: Animal Kingdom’s 31% crowd drop makes it the clear winner for guests seeking low waits. Arrive early to experience Kali River Rapids before any potential operational issues, then work through Pandora while morning temperatures stay comfortable. EPCOT offers the next-best alternative, particularly for guests who don’t need the headline attractions and can enjoy World Showcase at a leisurely pace.

    Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios carry more risk. Both parks showed elevated crowds and significant attraction downtimes yesterday. If your heart is set on Rise of the Resistance, monitor wait times through the Lightning Brain app and be prepared to pivot quickly if operational issues recur.

    See Tomorrow’s Patterns Before They Happen

    Yesterday’s 30-point crowd swing between parks isn’t visible from Disney’s app—but it’s exactly what Lightning Brain tracks in real time. Know where the crowds aren’t before you commit to a park. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: January 5, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Hit 10/10 Crowds on a Monday—Here’s What Happened

    A 52-minute median wait at Hollywood Studios. On a Monday. In January. That’s not a typo—it’s a 30% surge above the 30-day average and the highest crowd level possible on our scale. While the rest of Walt Disney World saw elevated but manageable crowds, Hollywood Studios absorbed something unusual: post-holiday guests who apparently all had the same idea.

    Cloudy skies and 74-degree highs created ideal touring weather yesterday, and the lack of any special events meant all four parks operated at full capacity with no crowd-splitting dynamics. The result was a revealing snapshot of where guests gravitate when given equal access to everything.

    Hollywood Studios: A Capacity Crisis

    The numbers are stark. A 52-minute median wait translates to extreme conditions where even secondary attractions demand significant time investments. Peak hour hit at 2:00 PM with a 65-minute median—meaning half of all attractions exceeded that threshold during the afternoon crush.

    What drove this? January’s first full week back from the holidays tends to concentrate guests at Hollywood Studios, where Galaxy’s Edge and Toy Story Land create must-do pressure. Without a party night or After Hours event pulling guests toward Magic Kingdom, Hollywood Studios became the default destination for thrill-seekers.

    Star Tours posted waits 100% above its typical 5 minutes—a normally reliable walk-on attraction turned into a 10-minute queue. When Star Tours backs up, it signals system-wide saturation. Toy Story Mania’s 30-minute afternoon closure (2:25-2:55 PM) during peak hours created additional pressure, pushing guests toward already-strained attractions.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed but Predictable

    Magic Kingdom registered a 9/10 crowd level with a 23.5-minute median wait—17.5% above its 30-day average. The noon peak hour saw 35-minute medians across the park, concentrated heavily in Fantasyland.

    The outlier story here centers on family attractions. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel tripled its typical wait to 15 minutes. Dumbo and Barnstormer both doubled to 30 minutes. Under the Sea hit 30 minutes against a 15-minute baseline. This pattern points to families with young children flooding Fantasyland—exactly the demographic that returns in early January before school resumes.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure commanded 45-minute waits, 125% above its 20-minute typical. The attraction’s continued novelty combined with yesterday’s crowds created persistent queues throughout the day.

    Seven Dwarfs Mine Train’s 75-minute closure (1:43-2:58 PM) during peak afternoon hours forced Fantasyland guests to redistribute. With the headliner offline, families pivoted to secondary options—explaining some of the elevated waits at Dumbo and Barnstormer during that window.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Hold Steady

    EPCOT matched its 30-day average exactly at 25 minutes median, registering a 7/10 crowd level. The stability is notable given elevated crowds elsewhere—Festival of the Holidays guests continue to prioritize food booths over attraction queues.

    But EPCOT’s morning was chaotic. Soarin’ went down twice before noon: 8:31-9:37 AM and again 10:31-11:22 AM, totaling nearly two hours of downtime during rope drop and late morning. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure added another 57-minute closure (9:25-10:22 AM). Guests arriving for World Showcase touring found two major attractions unavailable during prime hours.

    Journey Into Imagination with Figment’s evening closure (5:22-6:25 PM) had less impact, occurring as crowds naturally thinned toward park close.

    Gran Fiesta Tour and Seas with Nemo both doubled their typical waits—guests treating these air-conditioned boat rides as rest stops between festival booths, a pattern we see consistently during food festivals.

    Animal Kingdom: The Moderate Middle

    Animal Kingdom posted the day’s most manageable conditions at 5/10 with a 33.7-minute median. The noon peak reached 50 minutes—busy but not overwhelming for guests prioritizing Pandora.

    DINOSAUR’s numbers tell two stories. The 40-minute average wait (double typical) reflects genuine demand, but two closures totaling nearly two hours (10:28-11:19 AM and 6:06-7:01 PM) constrained capacity. Wildlife Express Train’s doubled waits to 10 minutes suggest Rafiki’s Planet Watch drew more traffic than usual—possibly families seeking lower-intensity experiences away from packed parks.

    Today’s Forecast: Pressure Shifts

    Today brings near-perfect conditions: 78 degrees, mostly clear skies, and zero precipitation chance. No special events are scheduled, meaning yesterday’s crowd distribution patterns will likely repeat—with one key difference.

    Monday crowds historically exceed Tuesday crowds in early January as weekend visitors extend trips by one day. Today should see modest relief across all parks, with Hollywood Studios remaining the pressure point. If yesterday’s 10/10 rating deterred any guests from returning, expect slight improvement to 8-9/10 range.

    The strategic play: Rope drop Animal Kingdom for Pandora, then park hop to EPCOT for afternoon World Showcase touring. Hollywood Studios demands either early arrival (before 9 AM) or late entry (after 5 PM). Magic Kingdom’s Fantasyland will remain congested with families—adults without children should prioritize Tomorrowland and Adventureland in early morning hours.

    Track the Patterns

    Yesterday’s Hollywood Studios surge wasn’t random—it’s a predictable post-holiday compression pattern. Lightning Brain identifies these dynamics before you arrive, showing you where capacity pressure builds and where relief exists. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: January 4, 2026

    Hollywood Studios Hit Extreme Crowds While Three Parks Stayed Comfortable

    Hollywood Studios surged to a 10/10 crowd level yesterday—the only park in extreme territory—while Animal Kingdom, EPCOT, and Magic Kingdom all remained manageable. The 30% spike above Hollywood Studios’ 30-day average created a stark divide across the resort, with guests at one park waiting nearly twice as long as those who chose differently.

    Sunday’s weather played a supporting role in the crowd dynamics. Overcast skies and a comfortable 62°F average kept outdoor touring pleasant, though 90% humidity made enclosed queue environments feel stuffier than usual. The light drizzle (0.05 inches) wasn’t enough to deter anyone but may have nudged guests toward covered attractions.

    Hollywood Studios: A Perfect Storm of Demand and Downtime

    The 51.8-minute median wait at Hollywood Studios tells only part of the story. What made Sunday brutal was the cascade of headliner downtimes during peak hours. Rise of the Resistance vanished for 96 minutes starting at 10:51 AM. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway followed almost immediately, down for 72 minutes starting at 11:03 AM. Toy Story Mania joined the outage party at 11:30 AM.

    The result: guests who arrived for a normal Sunday found three major attractions simultaneously unavailable during the busiest window. Slinky Dog Dash absorbed the displaced demand, hitting 120-minute waits—84% above its typical 65 minutes. Even Star Tours, normally a reliable walk-on alternative, climbed to 13-minute waits, triple its baseline.

    Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster added insult to injury with a 69-minute afternoon closure starting at 2:06 PM, and Runaway Railway went down again at 4:57 PM for another 51 minutes. For a park already running hot, these operational issues turned challenging into exhausting.

    Magic Kingdom: Packed But Predictable

    Magic Kingdom registered a 9/10 crowd level with a 22.8-minute median wait—14% above the 30-day average. The 11:00 AM peak hour pushed medians to 30 minutes, standard for a January Sunday with holiday crowds still lingering.

    Fantasyland bore the brunt of the surge. Under the Sea held at 30 minutes (double its typical wait), The Barnstormer matched that number, and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel—usually a 5-minute commitment—stretched to 10. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure continued drawing premium demand at 35 minutes, 75% above baseline.

    Under the Sea’s 189-minute morning downtime (8:30 AM to 11:39 AM) created an early bottleneck in Fantasyland. When the attraction finally reopened, pent-up demand kept waits elevated for the rest of the day. Small world’s two separate downtimes—48 minutes in the morning and 96 minutes in late afternoon—added further pressure to the land’s already strained capacity.

    EPCOT: Festival Crowds Find Their Rhythm

    EPCOT’s 7/10 crowd level and 24.2-minute median actually came in 3% below the 30-day average. Festival of the Holidays continues to draw guests primarily interested in food booths rather than attractions, creating a predictable pattern where World Showcase stays packed while Future World attractions remain accessible.

    Spaceship Earth’s 141-minute morning closure (10:06 AM to 12:27 PM) plus an additional 30-minute afternoon outage pushed guests toward alternatives. Journey Into Imagination with Figment absorbed some of that demand, hitting 15-minute waits—triple its typical 5 minutes. The Seas with Nemo & Friends doubled to 20 minutes, and Gran Fiesta Tour climbed to 10.

    The 11:00 AM peak hour saw medians hit 50 minutes, but this concentrated heavily on headliners rather than spreading across the park.

    Animal Kingdom: The Comfortable Alternative

    Animal Kingdom delivered exactly what its 30-day average promised: a 30-minute median wait and a 4/10 crowd level. For guests who chose this park over Hollywood Studios, the reward was dramatic—waits averaging 22 minutes shorter.

    Wildlife Express Train showed unusual demand at 15 minutes (triple its typical 5-minute wait), suggesting families discovered the Rafiki’s Planet Watch experience as a low-stress option. DINOSAUR’s brief morning downtime (27 minutes starting at 7:30 AM) had minimal impact given the early timing.

    The Downtime Cascade

    Yesterday’s operational issues concentrated heavily in the late-morning window:

    Time Simultaneous Closures
    11:00-11:30 AM Rise of the Resistance, Runaway Railway, Spaceship Earth
    11:30 AM-12:09 PM Rise of the Resistance, Runaway Railway, Toy Story Mania, Spaceship Earth

    Guests at Hollywood Studios during this window faced a choice: wait 120 minutes for Slinky Dog, pivot to Tower of Terror, or leave the park entirely. The data suggests many chose to stay and absorb the pain rather than park-hop.

    Today’s Outlook: Monday, January 5

    The post-New Year exodus begins in earnest today. Holiday crowds typically clear rapidly once the calendar flips past January 4, and Monday historically sees significant drop-offs across all four parks.

    Today’s forecast favors outdoor touring: highs near 75°F, partly cloudy skies, and zero precipitation chance. This 13-degree warm-up from yesterday should spread crowds more evenly across outdoor attractions rather than concentrating demand on climate-controlled queues.

    The strategy is straightforward: Hollywood Studios carries the highest risk given yesterday’s extreme crowds and operational issues. If those technical problems persist, you’re looking at another brutal day. EPCOT and Animal Kingdom offer safer bets—both ran below or at baseline yesterday despite being a peak holiday Sunday. Magic Kingdom should see meaningful improvement from yesterday’s 9/10 as weekend warriors head home.

    For those committed to Hollywood Studios, arrive at rope drop and prioritize Rise of the Resistance and Runaway Railway before 10:00 AM—yesterday’s downtime window. If either shows operational issues early, pivot immediately rather than waiting.

    Plan Smarter

    Yesterday’s Hollywood Studios situation—three headliners down simultaneously during peak hours—is exactly the scenario that catches guests off guard. Lightning Brain’s real-time status monitoring shows you operational issues as they develop, so you can pivot before queues cascade. Available now at lightningbrain.app, and coming soon to the iOS App Store.