Tag: Park Data

  • Daily Park Report: May 10, 2026

    Space Mountain’s Rough Sunday Left Magic Kingdom Surprisingly Calm

    Space Mountain went down three separate times on Sunday, totaling more than four hours offline across the afternoon and evening. For a park headliner that typically anchors Tomorrowland’s crowd, that kind of repeated downtime reshapes how guests tour — and it shows in the data. Magic Kingdom came in at a 4/10 despite being a Sunday in May, with a median wait of just under 14 minutes. Whether guests gave up and left, or simply redistributed across the park, the net effect was one of the calmer Sundays Magic Kingdom has seen lately.

    Conditions were warm but manageable — a high of 91 degrees with enough cloud cover to keep things tolerable. A brief rain band passed through just after park opening, triggering weather-protocol closures on a handful of outdoor attractions from 9:00 to 9:24 AM, and a second cluster hit in the mid-afternoon around 3:42 PM. Neither event lasted long enough to meaningfully deflate afternoon crowds, but both contributed to an already choppy operational day.

    Magic Kingdom: A Headliner Down, A Park Adrift

    The Space Mountain situation was the defining story of Magic Kingdom’s Sunday. The ride closed from 12:24 PM to 2:06 PM — two hours during peak lunch traffic — then went down again from 4:36 PM to 5:50 PM, and a third time from 6:18 PM to 8:25 PM. That’s nearly the entire back half of the operating day with Tomorrowland’s marquee ride unavailable.

    TRON Lightcycle / Run added to the disruption, going offline twice: once from 10:43 AM to 11:35 AM during the morning build, and again from 5:11 PM to 6:35 PM. With two of the park’s highest-demand rides simultaneously unavailable during peak hours, guests had fewer obvious destinations to chase — which likely explains why crowd-level indicators stayed soft even on a Sunday.

    Haunted Mansion also had two separate closures in the 4–8 PM window, and Country Bear Musical Jamboree was down three times in the evening, ultimately not reopening for the night. That’s a lot of operational disruption concentrated in one park’s afternoon and evening. The outlier data reflects this: several Fantasyland rides posted below-typical waits — Barnstormer, It’s a Small World, and Mad Tea Party all ran at or below 5 minutes — suggesting guests weren’t clustering anywhere in particular. Peak hour came at noon with a 20-minute median, but the day never built much beyond that.

    Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was caught in the early morning weather closure from 9:00 to 9:38 AM, consistent with outdoor ride protocols — not a mechanical issue.

    EPCOT: The Festival Effect Takes Hold

    EPCOT was the busiest park on the property Sunday, landing at a 5/10 with a median of just over 18 minutes — up roughly 21% against its 30-day baseline. The Flower and Garden Festival is drawing guests, and the data shows it. Peak hour arrived at 1:00 PM with a 25-minute median, later than most parks peak, which tracks with a festival crowd that grazes through the morning and hits rides in the afternoon.

    The Seas with Nemo & Friends ran at three times its typical wait, and Living with the Land doubled its baseline — both consistent with festival guests treating World Discovery and World Nature as afternoon touring stops after working through the outdoor kitchens. Gran Fiesta Tour also ran well above its norm, suggesting Future World crowds were moving through EPCOT’s full footprint rather than concentrating in any single area.

    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure had a difficult afternoon: it closed from 11:07 AM to 11:56 AM, then went down again from 3:20 PM to 6:53 PM — over three and a half hours during the heart of the afternoon. The France Pavilion lost its headliner for the majority of the day’s prime touring window. With festival foot traffic already elevated, Remy’s absence almost certainly pushed some of that demand toward other World Showcase attractions.

    Test Track was caught in the 3:42 PM weather closure and remained offline until 4:47 PM as a result — about an hour lost to the afternoon storm system.

    Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom: Both Calm, Different Stories

    Hollywood Studios posted a 3/10 — its median of under 29 minutes sits well below its 30-day average of 35 minutes, making Sunday one of the lighter days this park has seen recently. Peak came early at 11:00 AM with a 40-minute median. Fantasmic! was scheduled for the evening, which typically draws guests in but doesn’t dramatically reshape daytime patterns.

    Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway was offline from 4:05 to 4:51 PM — just under an hour during the afternoon wind-down. With the park already running light, the operational impact was limited, but it was the only notable disruption in an otherwise smooth day at Studios.

    Animal Kingdom came in at 4/10, with a median of 28.5 minutes — close to its baseline and consistent with a comfortable Sunday. It peaked at 11:00 AM alongside Hollywood Studios, with a 45-minute median at that hour. Expedition Everest was briefly taken offline by the afternoon weather closure from 3:46 to 4:08 PM, as was Kali River Rapids. Neither closure lasted long enough to meaningfully affect the day’s overall profile.

    Downtime Report

    Magic Kingdom bore the brunt of Sunday’s operational problems. Beyond the Space Mountain situation described above, TRON’s two closures and the Haunted Mansion outages in the evening created a park where several of the most-anticipated rides were off the board for significant stretches. Guests who arrived in the afternoon expecting to close out the night on Space Mountain or TRON were largely out of luck.

    EPCOT’s Remy closure was the most consequential single incident outside of Magic Kingdom. A 213-minute window during prime afternoon and evening touring hours is a significant loss for a ride that typically carries long waits. Guests who hadn’t ridden in the morning faced a long wait to do so when it eventually came back online around 6:53 PM.

    The two weather clusters produced short but simultaneous multi-ride closures — the morning event lasted under 25 minutes and the afternoon event roughly 26 minutes. Both resolved quickly and fall into the category of normal Florida summer weather behavior rather than operational failures.

    Monday Outlook: After Hours at Magic Kingdom

    Yesterday’s predictions were graded strong overall — EPCOT and Animal Kingdom landed exactly on target, while Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios came in lower than called. That MK miss is worth noting: Sunday’s downtime-driven softness may have made the park look quieter than it actually felt for guests whose plans centered on Space Mountain or TRON.

    For today, Disney After Hours runs at Magic Kingdom tonight, with early entry at 7:00 PM. This is a late-night add-on — it does not close the park early to day guests and should have no effect on daytime crowd patterns. Plan your daytime touring as normal.

    The bigger variable is Soarin’ Around the World, which continues its final days at EPCOT. Expect EPCOT to draw guests motivated to ride it before it closes, which will keep that park at elevated levels. Factor the Flower and Garden Festival on top of that, and EPCOT is likely to run in the 5-6/10 range again today.

    Magic Kingdom should recover from Sunday’s downtime pattern and operate more normally — predict a 4-6/10 depending on whether the operational picture improves. Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom look to remain in the 3-5/10 range for a Monday in May with no school break overlap.

    The afternoon carries a 40% precipitation chance, so expect possible weather holds on outdoor attractions between roughly 2:00 and 5:00 PM. Plan your major outdoor rides for the morning or early afternoon to reduce risk of being caught in a closure window. Temperatures will be similar to Sunday — high near 89 degrees — so morning touring remains the most comfortable strategy regardless of weather.

    Plan Smarter With Lightning Brain

    Sunday’s Space Mountain situation is a perfect example of why real-time data matters. Three closures across seven-plus hours — that’s information that changes your entire Tomorrowland strategy. Lightning Brain tracks exactly this kind of pattern so you’re not showing up at a closed ride when you could be at one that’s running. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: May 9, 2026

    EPCOT Led the Resort on Saturday — and the Data Shows Why

    Saturday, May 9 delivered the most interesting crowd story of the week, and it wasn’t at Magic Kingdom. EPCOT ran nearly 40% above its 30-day baseline, landing at a 6/10 with a 20.8-minute median — the sharpest relative spike of any park on the day. Meanwhile, Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom held closer to their norms, and Magic Kingdom ticked up modestly. The Flower & Garden Festival is clearly pulling guests in real numbers, not just foot traffic through the turnstiles. People are queueing.

    Temperatures hit 93.5°F under partly cloudy skies with a bit of afternoon rain — warm enough to push guests toward indoor relief, but not the kind of weather that dramatically reshapes touring decisions. The heat mattered most at EPCOT, where climate-controlled attractions drew longer-than-usual lines from guests looking for a break between festival food booths.

    EPCOT

    The Flower & Garden Festival is in full swing, and Saturday showed its clearest crowd signature yet. A 6/10 is solidly busy for EPCOT, and the 1:00 PM peak — with a 30-minute median — tells you the midday rush hit hard. Living with the Land ran double its typical wait at 20 minutes, which tracks: on a 93-degree afternoon, a slow boat ride through air-conditioned greenhouses becomes a lot more appealing. That’s not a festival effect so much as a comfort effect, and it’s visible in the numbers.

    Gran Fiesta Tour also ran at twice its usual pace — until it didn’t. The attraction was offline for nearly two hours during prime afternoon time, from 1:01 PM to 2:57 PM. That closure coincided with the park’s peak hour window, so guests who wandered into Mexico Pavilion for a shaded sit-down found the boats unavailable. World Showcase is light on ride alternatives, so most of those guests likely rejoined the food booth crowds or drifted to other pavilions.

    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure was also offline for about an hour, from 2:52 PM to 3:50 PM — right as the post-lunch wave was building. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind and Journey Into Imagination with Figment both had shorter closures in the evening. Four notable downtimes in a single park on a busy Saturday made EPCOT’s afternoon harder to navigate than the overall crowd number suggests.

    Hollywood Studios

    Hollywood Studios ran at a 6/10 with a 38.1-minute median — slightly above its 30-day average and within the expected range for a busy Saturday. The 11:00 AM peak was sharp, with a 45-minute median across the park, which means early-arriving guests who weren’t through the headliners by 10:30 AM faced meaningful queues at the top of the hour.

    Rise of the Resistance had a difficult morning: it was offline from 8:35 to 9:21 AM, then went down again at 1:33 PM and didn’t reopen until 2:25 PM. That’s two separate closures totaling about an hour and a half for the park’s premier attraction. Any guest who anchored their morning plan around boarding passes or an early queue would have been scrambling to rebuild their day around Smugglers Run and Tower of Terror. On a day when Studios was already running busy, losing Rise twice compressed demand onto everything else.

    Magic Kingdom

    Magic Kingdom held at a 6/10 with a 17.5-minute median — above baseline but not dramatically so. The 12:00 PM peak at 25 minutes is fairly typical for a spring Saturday; this was a crowded day, not a chaotic one. A few Fantasyland staples actually ran lighter than usual — Barnstormer, Magic Carpets of Aladdin, and Tomorrowland Speedway all came in below their norms, which may have reflected crowd distribution shifting toward newer or more popular headliners rather than any broader softness.

    The evening told a different story. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train was offline twice — first from 2:27 PM to 3:50 PM, then again from 6:45 PM to 8:23 PM. The second closure ran nearly an hour and a half during prime evening hours. That’s Fantasyland’s top-tier draw unavailable when most families are making their final ride push before fireworks. Space Mountain went down briefly at 6:30 PM, TRON Lightcycle / Run had a short closure near 8:00 PM, and Jungle Cruise was offline for a half-hour in the evening. The Barnstormer also missed about 70 minutes during the morning, though that’s a lower-stakes closure. The Magic Kingdom evening felt choppier operationally than the daytime crowd level suggested.

    Animal Kingdom

    Animal Kingdom was the steadiest park of the day — a 5/10 with a 32.1-minute median, roughly in line with its 30-day average. The 11:00 AM peak at 55 minutes is the highest peak number of any park, but that reflects Animal Kingdom’s structure: a handful of major attractions carry most of the load, and Avatar Flight of Passage and Expedition Everest can spike hard at peak hours even on moderate-crowd days. No notable downtimes here, which made it the most reliable touring option of the four parks on Saturday.

    Downtime Summary

    Saturday’s downtime picture was dominated by Magic Kingdom in the evening and EPCOT in the afternoon. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train’s two closures totaling more than three hours were the most guest-impactful outages of the day — losing Fantasyland’s headliner twice in one afternoon and evening reshuffled a lot of plans. At Hollywood Studios, Rise of the Resistance’s dual closures disrupted what should have been a strong morning touring window. EPCOT’s four closures, spread across Gran Fiesta Tour, Remy’s, Guardians, and Figment, made the afternoon feel more fragmented than the crowd level alone would imply.

    Prediction for Sunday, May 10

    Yesterday’s prediction called for MK at 6-7/10, EPCOT at 5-6/10, Studios at 4-5/10, and Animal Kingdom at 4-5/10. Actuals came in at 6/10 across the board — a strong result overall, with Studios slightly underestimated.

    For today, expect a Sunday crowd pattern: a bit softer than Saturday, but not dramatically so. Soarin’ Around the World is drawing last-chance visitors while it’s still operating, which should keep EPCOT running busier than its baseline — expect 5-6/10 there. Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios should land in the 5-6/10 range. Animal Kingdom, absent any major events, is likely the lightest option at 4-5/10.

    The weather adds one meaningful variable: a roughly 50% chance of afternoon storms from midday through 5:00 PM. That’s real storm potential, not a background threat. Outdoor queueing at Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom becomes uncomfortable if showers arrive during the 1-3 PM window. Guests planning for the afternoon should build in flexibility, and EPCOT’s covered World Showcase walkways and indoor attractions make it a reasonable fallback if the skies open up.

    Big Thunder Mountain is back in operation, and it will draw attention — expect it to be a popular stop throughout the day as guests who delayed a visit finally show up. At Hollywood Studios, keep an eye on Rise of the Resistance; after yesterday’s two closures, guests may be more cautious about anchoring a morning plan around it, which could actually make early queues slightly shorter if confidence is low.

    Best strategy: arrive at your first park at rope drop, hit your priority attractions before 11:00 AM, and have a flexible midday plan that accounts for possible afternoon weather. Sunday typically sees a crowd shift by late afternoon as some weekend visitors head home — touring after 4:00 PM tends to improve if you’re staying late.

    Track Today’s Parks in Real Time

    Saturday’s EPCOT surge and the wave of evening closures at Magic Kingdom are exactly the kind of patterns that are hard to anticipate without live data. Lightning Brain tracks wait times, downtime alerts, and crowd trends across all four parks so you can adjust your day as conditions change — not after the fact. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: May 8, 2026

    Magic Kingdom Ran Quieter Than It Should Have — And the Data Shows Why

    Friday, May 8 delivered something unusual for a late-spring Friday at Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom posted a median wait of just 16 minutes — 20% below its 30-day average. That is a meaningful gap. On a day when temperatures hit 94°F and guests are typically pushing into summer-mode volume, the park ran like a comfortable mid-week morning. The explanation is partly operational, partly bad luck — and entirely worth understanding before you head out today.

    Conditions were warm and partly cloudy, with a brief burst of rain totaling just under half an inch across the day. Heat was a factor by midday, but it was not the story. The story was a parade of mechanical issues that pulled the most popular rides off the board during prime touring hours — and a crowd that, in their absence, simply spread out across lighter attractions rather than queuing up for alternatives.

    Magic Kingdom: Mechanically Rough, Surprisingly Walkable

    The 5/10 crowd rating at Magic Kingdom is accurate but incomplete. The light-feeling day came with real costs. Space Mountain was offline for nearly two hours spanning noon and the early afternoon — precisely when families are building their post-lunch touring plans. TRON Lightcycle / Run went down for nearly an hour in the mid-afternoon, one of the higher-demand windows of the day. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad closed twice: a brief 16-minute outage at rope drop, then again for a full hour in the early evening starting at 6:32 PM, right as guests who had saved it for a cooling-off period arrived at the queue.

    The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh was offline three separate times — totaling roughly 145 minutes of lost operating time across the day. That is not a single incident; that is a ride that never fully stabilized. When Pooh is down in Fantasyland and Space Mountain is closed in Tomorrowland simultaneously, you end up with guests drifting toward lower-demand options. That explains why Dumbo, Mad Tea Party, the PeopleMover, and it’s a small world all ran well below their typical wait times. Guests were not choosing those rides because the park was empty — they were choosing them because the headliners were unavailable.

    Peak hit at noon with a 20-minute median, modest even by Magic Kingdom’s scale. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure was also offline for about 30 minutes at rope drop, which would have redirected early-morning guests before the park fully ramped up. Country Bear Musical Jamboree — not typically a crowd-pressure valve — was closed for nearly three hours from mid-morning into the early afternoon.

    Despite all of this, the overall experience was manageable. The flip side of widespread downtime is that nothing concentrates demand: no single working attraction became an emergency bottleneck.

    Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom: Steady and Consistent

    Hollywood Studios posted a 4/10 day with a 32.9-minute median, slightly below its 30-day baseline, and peaked at 11:00 AM with a 50-minute median. Rise of the Resistance was offline for nearly an hour during the late afternoon — roughly 4:53 to 5:52 PM — which is a brutal window given that the pre-Fantasmic! crowd surge typically builds through that exact period. Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway also closed for about 40 minutes around lunchtime. Neither outage appears to have dramatically reshaped the day’s distribution, which suggests Hollywood Studios was operating with enough slack that guests absorbed the disruptions without major queue pile-ups elsewhere.

    Animal Kingdom came in at 4/10 with a 29.2-minute median, essentially flat against its 30-day average. Peak was also 11:00 AM at 55 minutes — the standard morning surge pattern that most Animal Kingdom veterans know to work around. Expedition Everest was closed for 85 minutes during late morning, which is a significant loss in the park’s most reliable headliner slot. Kilimanjaro Safaris ran lighter than usual, likely a combination of the heat and timing relative to the Everest closure pulling guests toward shade. Nothing alarming here, just an ordinary warm Friday at the most consistent park in the resort.

    EPCOT: Festival Traffic Staying in the Food Lanes

    EPCOT landed at 5/10 with a 17.7-minute median, running about 11.5% below its 30-day norm despite the ongoing Flower and Garden Festival. Festival attendance continues to translate into garden walk-through and food booth traffic more than ride queue volume — a pattern that has held consistently this spring. Peak was at noon with a 25-minute median, brief and well-contained.

    The bigger issue was on the attraction side. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure closed twice: once in the morning for just over an hour (10:09 to 11:15 AM), then again in the evening from 6:33 to 8:29 PM — nearly two hours during what should be prime dinner-and-rides time. Test Track was also offline from 4:50 to 7:18 PM, a 148-minute window that covered the entire late-afternoon and dinner rush. The Seas with Nemo and Friends ran at 5 minutes average — half its typical pace — though on a day when Test Track and Remy are both unavailable in the evening, any World Showcase diversion would have looked attractive by comparison.

    Downtime Report

    Friday’s downtime picture was unusually broad. Magic Kingdom dealt with the most operational turbulence: Space Mountain, TRON, Big Thunder Mountain, Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Winnie the Pooh, Country Bear, and Mickey’s PhilharMagic all had significant closures. EPCOT lost Test Track and Remy’s in overlapping evening windows, effectively gutting two of the park’s four major E-ticket experiences during the 5–8 PM window. Hollywood Studios lost Rise of the Resistance for an hour in the late afternoon. Animal Kingdom lost Expedition Everest for the bulk of the pre-lunch period.

    None of these appear weather-related — conditions were hot and partly cloudy, not stormy. The concentration of mechanical issues across all four parks on the same day is notable, even if the individual causes are unknowable from the outside.

    Prediction for Saturday, May 9

    Yesterday’s prediction called for Magic Kingdom at 6–7/10 and EPCOT at 5/10. MK came in at 5/10 — a good call in direction if slightly high in magnitude. EPCOT was exactly right. Overall, a strong read on the day.

    Today is Saturday, and the crowd pressure context has shifted: Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is back in operation after its reopening. That alone will pull more guests toward Magic Kingdom than yesterday’s data reflects. Saturdays in May consistently run hotter than adjacent Fridays, and the forecast is nearly identical to yesterday — highs near 94°F, mostly cloudy, no rain risk through afternoon.

    Expect Magic Kingdom in the 5–7/10 range. With BTM restored and no party suppressing the day, MK should run noticeably busier than Friday. Arrive at rope drop if you want TRON and Tiana before the heat and crowds compound. EPCOT should land in the 5–6/10 range — festival foot traffic and Saturday volume push it up modestly. Hollywood Studios will likely hold at 4–5/10; Fantasmic! adds evening energy but doesn’t dramatically reshape the daytime pattern. Animal Kingdom should be in the 4–5/10 range as well, with Expedition Everest presumably operational — confirm before building your touring plan around it.

    The restored Big Thunder Mountain is the clearest scheduling signal today: guests who avoided Magic Kingdom yesterday knowing it was in a rougher state may specifically target it today. Front-load your MK must-dos before noon.

    Track It in Real Time

    Friday’s split between operational headliners and mechanical closures is exactly the kind of pattern that’s hard to see without live data — and easy to fall into without it. Lightning Brain tracks attraction status and wait times across all four parks in real time, so you can route around closures as they happen rather than discovering them at the queue entrance. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store.

  • Daily Park Report: May 7, 2026

    Thursday at Walt Disney World: Magic Kingdom’s Mechanical Marathon and a Calm Before the Big Thunder Storm

    Magic Kingdom welcomed back Big Thunder Mountain Railroad on Thursday — and then watched it sit offline for nearly five and a half hours. The newly reopened headliner went down at 9:02 AM and didn’t return until 2:37 PM, consuming the entire peak touring window. If you built your morning around finally riding the “wildest ride in the wilderness” after its absence, Thursday delivered a frustrating answer. The park’s median wait still came in at 14.6 minutes — well below its 30-day average — and that number tells its own story about how much the closures redistributed guest energy rather than concentrated it.

    Clear skies and a high of 95.6°F made Thursday one of the hotter May days on record for the resort. That kind of heat tends to compress touring into early morning and late evening, which likely sharpened the 1:00 PM peak at Magic Kingdom rather than spreading demand through the afternoon.

    Magic Kingdom — 4/10 (Comfortable)

    The downtime list at Magic Kingdom on Thursday reads like a bad morning for maintenance crews. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad closed at 9:02 AM. Tiana’s Bayou Adventure followed three minutes later and stayed offline for nearly three hours. Enchanted Tales with Belle was unavailable from 10:31 AM through 2:04 PM. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh closed twice — once in the early morning and again for two and a half hours through mid-afternoon. Space Mountain shut down at 5:18 PM and stayed dark until 7:01 PM, cutting off the evening crowd right as the heat eased and guests wanted to move.

    With so many attractions simultaneously offline through the morning, guests had fewer options, and that compressed demand onto what remained. Haunted Mansion was briefly unavailable from 9:02 to 9:31 AM — a 29-minute window that stacked on top of everything else. Yet the park-wide median of 14.6 minutes, down from a 30-day baseline of 20 minutes, suggests the crowd volume itself was genuinely light. This wasn’t a day where long waits masked the closures — it was a day where guests either adapted early, shifted parks, or simply kept hitting refresh on the My Disney Experience app.

    Space Mountain’s closure deserves specific mention. Going down at 5:18 PM on a hot day, right when the sun drops below the berm and guests stream back in from dinner breaks, meant Tomorrowland absorbed that pressure unevenly. Buzz Lightyear and Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover — already posting unusually short waits — took on whatever demand filtered through. The PeopleMover closed at 8:29 PM and did not reopen for the evening.

    EPCOT — 5/10 (Moderate)

    EPCOT was the busiest park on Thursday by relative terms, with a 19-minute median against its 30-day baseline of 20 minutes — essentially in line with normal. The Flower and Garden Festival continued drawing guests who split their time between the outdoor kitchens and the attraction queue. That split-attention dynamic tends to keep EPCOT’s waits more manageable than pure crowd volume would suggest, and Thursday held to that pattern.

    The peak came at 8:00 AM with a 30-minute median — early even for EPCOT, likely reflecting Early Theme Park Entry guests moving through World Discovery and World Nature before the general crowd arrived. Spaceship Earth averaged just 10 minutes on the day, then closed from 3:35 to 4:27 PM, a 52-minute window during the afternoon when guests would have naturally sought air conditioning.

    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure had a genuinely difficult day. The attraction went offline three separate times — 9:18 to 10:20 AM, 11:32 AM to 12:27 PM, and 5:49 to 6:38 PM — for a combined downtime of roughly 166 minutes spread across the full operating day. Guests who planned around Remy’s faced uncertainty throughout; there was no clean window where the ride stayed consistently available. Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind closed from 6:20 to 7:07 PM, shortening the early-evening ride window right when heat eased and demand builds.

    Hollywood Studios — 4/10 (Comfortable)

    Hollywood Studios posted a 31-minute median, down slightly from its 35-minute 30-day baseline — a comfortable day by Studios standards, with a 10:00 AM peak at 50 minutes that relaxed through the afternoon. The park had two notable downtime incidents late in the day. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway closed from 4:37 to 6:26 PM, a 109-minute absence during the pre-Fantasmic! window when guests typically start positioning. Tower of Terror was offline from roughly 4:35 to 5:22 PM — two overlapping log entries that effectively represent one incident — pulling a second Sunset Boulevard headliner offline simultaneously.

    Losing both Runaway Railway and Tower of Terror in the same late-afternoon stretch compressed demand onto what remained on Sunset Boulevard and Echo Lake. Guests who timed their day around an easy late-afternoon run through those two attractions had to adjust quickly. Fantasmic! ran as scheduled, giving the evening structure even on a disrupted day.

    Animal Kingdom — 4/10 (Comfortable)

    Animal Kingdom was the quiet park on Thursday. A 28.8-minute median, down modestly from its 30-day average, with a clean 10:00 AM peak and no significant downtime incidents. No outlier attractions, no operational surprises. On a day when three other parks were managing closures, Animal Kingdom simply ran. Guests who chose it on Thursday got a straightforward experience — which, given what was happening across the resort, was meaningful in its own right.

    Downtime Report

    Thursday’s downtime story was concentrated at Magic Kingdom, where the morning was operationally chaotic. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad — back in service after a refurbishment — was unavailable for 335 minutes, effectively skipping the entire morning touring period. Guests who arrived at rope drop specifically for BTMR faced a closed queue from the start. Combined with Tiana’s Bayou Adventure going offline at almost the same moment (9:05 AM), the park lost two of its most in-demand attractions before the first hour of regular operation ended.

    Enchanted Tales with Belle added a 213-minute closure through the mid-morning, removing a key Fantasyland draw during the window when families with young children typically tour that area. The net result was a Fantasyland that operated at reduced capacity for most of the day, with Winnie the Pooh’s multiple closures adding to the disruption. Peter Pan’s Flight, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, and Under the Sea — Journey of the Little Mermaid would have absorbed the redistributed guests who stayed in the area.

    At EPCOT, Remy’s three-incident day was the clearest operational story. No single closure was catastrophic, but the pattern made the ride unreliable throughout the day. The 5:49 PM closure hit during the dinner hour when guests returning from World Showcase outdoor kitchens often circle back for one more ride before close.

    Prediction Self-Score

    Yesterday’s post predicted Magic Kingdom at 6-7/10; the park came in at 4/10. That’s a meaningful miss — the combination of light general crowds and operational disruptions kept waits lower than the model anticipated. EPCOT landed exactly at the predicted 5/10, and both Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom matched their forecast ranges. On balance, a strong day for the model with one notable overestimate at Magic Kingdom.

    Today’s Outlook — Friday, May 8

    Friday brings a different calculation. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad is expected to be operational today, and its return from yesterday’s extended closure will pull guests back to Magic Kingdom who may have redirected on Thursday. The reopened attraction draws crowd on its own, and Fridays tend to see arrival-day traffic that builds through the afternoon as weekend visitors check in. Expect Magic Kingdom in the 5-7/10 range — a material step up from Thursday, with peak waits hitting headliners like BTMR, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure harder than yesterday’s suppressed numbers would suggest.

    EPCOT’s Flower and Garden Festival continues, and Friday afternoon should see steady traffic as the week’s festival-goers make one more pass through the outdoor kitchens before heading home. The morning carries a 53% precipitation chance, which could push guests indoors early and compress demand on covered attractions. Look for EPCOT in the 4-6/10 range, with waits spiking on Guardians and Test Track if rain forces guests under cover. By midday the forecast clears, and afternoon should run normally before a 29% chance of afternoon showers arrives.

    Hollywood Studios and Animal Kingdom should both track in the 4-5/10 range. Fantasmic! running at Hollywood Studios gives the evening a reliable anchor. Animal Kingdom historically underperforms on Friday afternoons as resort visitors prioritize Magic Kingdom on arrival day — it remains the best bet for a lower-wait touring experience if you’re willing to shift plans.

    The moderate crowd pressure floor holds at 3/10 for all parks, but the realistic range for Magic Kingdom today is higher. Don’t count on Thursday’s 14-minute median repeating — BTMR’s return alone reshapes the morning.

    Strategy for today: Hit Magic Kingdom before 10:00 AM if you want Big Thunder Mountain without a long wait. The post-reopening demand will be highest in that first hour. If you’re EPCOT-bound, morning may be slightly slower due to the rain chance pushing some guests to covered parks — time your arrival for the 10:00–11:00 AM window after any early showers pass.

    Plan Smarter

    Thursday’s park-wide downtime story — five major attractions offline at Magic Kingdom alone — is exactly the kind of day where real-time data changes your decisions. Knowing that BTMR went down before 10:00 AM gives you a pivot window; not knowing means you waste the morning in a closed queue. Lightning Brain’s live operational data helps you see those shifts before they cost you touring time. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: May 6, 2026

    Magic Kingdom’s Troubled Day: Big Thunder Down Twice, Tea Party Gone for Good

    Magic Kingdom drew a crowd level of 6/10 on Wednesday — right in line with prediction — but the experience on the ground was rougher than that number suggests. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad was offline twice during the afternoon, Mad Tea Party was pulled at 11:35 AM and never returned, and Winnie the Pooh cycled through three separate closures. Guests touring Fantasyland and Frontierland in the afternoon faced a landscape of yellow signs and frustrated looks. The wait times stayed manageable in the aggregate, but the operational turbulence made for a frustrating day for anyone with specific plans.

    Wednesday’s heat — a high of 92°F under mostly clear skies — kept things moving but also pushed guests toward air-conditioned attractions, which likely contributed to some of the bottlenecks during the midday hours.

    Magic Kingdom — 6/10 (Busy)

    The headline number at Magic Kingdom was a 17-minute median, running about 14% below the 30-day average. That sounds fine until you look at what happened to Frontierland. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad went down three times: a 36-minute closure at open (9:01–9:37 AM), then a 77-minute stretch from 2:46–4:03 PM, and finally a 167-minute closure from 5:17–8:04 PM that cut deep into the evening. For many guests, the headliner of that corner of the park was simply unavailable for the bulk of the day.

    Mad Tea Party closed at 11:35 AM and never reopened — a 550-minute outage. The spinner’s low position on the must-do list limited the cascading impact, though its average wait of just 5 minutes (well below the typical 10) reflects a ride that was barely operating before it closed for good. Winnie the Pooh added to the Fantasyland frustration with closures at 12:22, 2:26, and 4:08 PM, the last running over two hours.

    Space Mountain posted a 25-minute average against a typical 40 — one of the more notable bright spots — and the park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 25-minute median before easing somewhat through the afternoon. The operational disruptions at Big Thunder likely nudged guests toward other Adventureland and Tomorrowland options during the early evening.

    Hollywood Studios — 4/10 (Comfortable)

    Hollywood Studios came in at a 34.8-minute median — 13% below its 30-day average — landing squarely in comfortable territory. The Disney After Hours event starting at 9:30 PM had no effect on daytime operations; regular guests moved through the park without restriction all day. Peak hit at noon with a 45-minute median, consistent with the park’s typical lunchtime surge.

    Rise of the Resistance was offline for 39 minutes at open (9:13–9:52 AM), which is a rough way to start the day for guests who rope-dropped it. That said, once it came back online, the park settled into a manageable rhythm. Fantasmic! ran its evening shows as scheduled. For guests looking for a low-friction day in an uncrowded park, Hollywood Studios delivered.

    EPCOT — 5/10 (Moderate)

    EPCOT ran at a 17.7-minute median, about 11% below its 30-day average, with the Flower & Garden Festival adding foot traffic around the outdoor kitchens without dramatically inflating ride queues. The festival draws guests who spend their time grazing between topiaries rather than queuing — Spaceship Earth averaged just 10 minutes, and Journey Into Imagination With Figment came in at 5 minutes, both well below typical.

    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure had a rough operational day, logging two separate closures: 58 minutes in the morning (9:41–10:39 AM) and another 70 minutes over lunch (12:57–2:08 PM). Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind was also offline for 50 minutes in the late afternoon. Neither closure appeared to trigger major spillover into other EPCOT queues, which speaks to the generally light crowd level. The park peaked at noon with a 30-minute median — elevated but not punishing.

    Animal Kingdom — 3/10 (Light)

    Animal Kingdom was the quietest park in the resort by a significant margin. An 18.1-minute median against a 30-day average of 30 minutes represents a nearly 40% reduction — the kind of gap that turns a normally competitive day into a walk-on experience at most attractions. Expedition Everest averaged 15 minutes. Kilimanjaro Safaris averaged 15 minutes. Even Avatar Flight of Passage came in at 40 minutes against its typical 65, which is about as approachable as that attraction gets on any operating day.

    The park peaked at 11:00 AM with a 42.5-minute median — early, as is typical for Animal Kingdom — then eased off through the afternoon. Zootopia: Better Zoogether! had a brief 28-minute closure near midday but otherwise the park ran cleanly. Wednesday midweek in early May, with no major school breaks in play, produced exactly the kind of Animal Kingdom day savvy guests plan around.

    Downtime Report

    The biggest operational story of the day was at Magic Kingdom, where Big Thunder Mountain Railroad was unavailable for nearly four hours across two afternoon closures. Guests who arrived at Frontierland between 2:46 and 8:04 PM — with only a brief 74-minute window of operation in between — found the mine train largely off the board. The Country Bear Musical Jamboree also closed at 7:23 PM and did not reopen, which is a quieter loss but still eliminates an air-conditioned option for evening guests.

    At EPCOT, Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure was closed for over two hours across its two outages. Given that it’s one of World Showcase’s most popular draws, those closures likely pushed some guests toward Frozen Ever After (which itself had a brief 28-minute closure at open). Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind’s 50-minute afternoon closure was notable for a ride that regularly generates long queues, though wait times at EPCOT were mild enough that the impact was limited.

    Rise of the Resistance opening offline for 39 minutes at Hollywood Studios is always painful for rope-droppers, but the park recovered quickly.

    Today’s Prediction — Thursday, May 7

    Yesterday’s predictions were solid: Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom were called correctly, EPCOT was within one point, and Hollywood Studios came in two points lighter than forecast. A strong overall grade heading into Thursday.

    Today’s conditions look similar to Wednesday — clear skies, high of 94°F, no rain in the forecast. The Flower & Garden Festival continues at EPCOT, and Fantasmic! runs at Hollywood Studios. The major variable is Big Thunder Mountain Railroad: after three closures Wednesday, guests will be watching closely, and if it operates cleanly today, Frontierland will likely draw stronger demand than yesterday’s data implied.

    • Magic Kingdom: Expect a 6-7/10 range. If Big Thunder runs reliably, expect Frontierland to be busier than yesterday. The absence of Mad Tea Party and Country Bear for the full day will be felt in Fantasyland pacing.
    • EPCOT: 5-6/10. The festival continues to keep foot traffic elevated without significantly inflating queue demand. Remy’s will need a clean operational day to avoid repeat frustrations.
    • Hollywood Studios: 4-5/10. Comfortable again, with no major events affecting daytime operations. A reliable choice for guests seeking predictable touring.
    • Animal Kingdom: 3-4/10. Another light day likely, with the same mid-morning peak pattern. Arrive at open, hit Expedition Everest and Flight of Passage early, and you’ll be done with the headliners before the lunch crowd builds.

    Best park for Thursday: Animal Kingdom remains the clear low-pressure choice. If you’re heading to Magic Kingdom, build flexibility into your Big Thunder plans and have a Frontierland backup.

    Stay Ahead of the Data

    Downtime patterns like Wednesday’s — multiple closures on the same attraction, rides not reopening before park close — are exactly the kind of operational turbulence that can derail a day if you don’t know they’re coming. Lightning Brain tracks live attraction status so you can adjust your plan in real time rather than walking up to a closed sign. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: May 5, 2026

    Tuesday, May 5: Animal Kingdom Went Quiet While Big Thunder Came Back

    Big Thunder Mountain Railroad returned to Magic Kingdom on Tuesday, and if you were looking for the guests who specifically showed up for that reopening, Animal Kingdom is probably where they weren’t. The park posted a 3/10 crowd level — 20-minute median waits across the board, with Expedition Everest averaging just 20 minutes and Kilimanjaro Safaris barely nudging past that. For a clear Tuesday in May with temperatures in the low 80s, that’s a remarkably quiet day at a park that typically runs closer to 30-minute medians. Three of four parks came in below their 30-day averages. No school breaks in play, no separate-ticket events. Just a mid-week Tuesday with one significant variable: a popular attraction returning to service at a competing park.

    Animal Kingdom: 3/10 — The Quietest Park on the Day

    Animal Kingdom’s 20-minute median was its most comfortable recent showing. Expedition Everest, which typically posts around 35 minutes, averaged just 20. Kilimanjaro Safaris matched that. Kali River Rapids ran well below its own baseline — on a warm afternoon where getting splashed wouldn’t have been unwelcome, waits were minimal. Whether BTMRR’s return actively drew guests toward Magic Kingdom or Animal Kingdom simply had a soft Tuesday is hard to isolate from the data alone, but the combined picture suggests at least some crowd redistribution. Either way, guests who chose Animal Kingdom on Tuesday found an unusually open park.

    Hollywood Studios: 6/10 — Steady, But the Headliner Had a Long Day

    Hollywood Studios was the busiest park on the day, holding at a 38.5-minute median and peaking at 50 minutes around 11:00 AM — essentially on par with its 30-day average. That’s a 6/10, manageable but not light, and consistent with HS’s characteristically high baseline pressure.

    What complicated Tuesday at HS was Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway going offline twice. It was unavailable from 10:00 to 10:59 AM, pulling the park’s flagship during the morning ramp-up. Then it closed again from 5:21 to 6:25 PM, right as guests were looking for evening anchor experiences ahead of Fantasmic. Neither window was short enough to simply wait out. Slinky Dog Dash also missed the first 35 minutes of the day, though it was back before the park hit full swing.

    Tower of Terror was one of the day’s better surprises. It averaged 30 minutes when it typically runs 45 — and with Runaway Railway unavailable at key moments, some guests who would otherwise have anchored on the headliner likely spread across the park instead. In this case, that worked in their favor.

    Magic Kingdom: 5/10 — BTMRR is Back, Parks Still Ran Light

    Magic Kingdom posted a 17-minute median — below its 30-day average — despite Big Thunder Mountain Railroad’s reopening. Guests clearly came for it, but Tuesday’s volume was measured enough that it didn’t push the park into uncomfortable territory. Noon was the peak hour at 25-minute medians, which leaves plenty of room to tour effectively.

    The morning, however, tested early arrivals. Haunted Mansion was offline from 9:13 to 10:23 AM. Seven Dwarfs Mine Train missed its first hour, down from 8:42 to 9:41 AM. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh was unavailable from 8:40 to 10:04 AM. Three of the park’s highest-demand attractions were either closed or just recovering during the first 90 minutes of operation. Rope-drop guests who planned to stack early credits had a narrow menu to work with.

    “It’s a small world” added a longer mid-afternoon closure — offline from 3:27 to 5:39 PM, a 132-minute stretch that removed one of Fantasyland’s most accessible and high-capacity rides during peak touring hours. Neighboring Fantasyland attractions likely absorbed that displaced foot traffic, though you wouldn’t see it in the park-wide median, which remained flat.

    EPCOT: 5/10 — Festival Guests Prefer Food Booths to Queues

    Flower & Garden Festival continued to drive foot traffic to EPCOT on Tuesday without driving queue demand. The park ran at a 5/10 with 17.7-minute median waits, slightly below its 30-day average, peaking around 11:00 AM at 30 minutes. Festival guests consistently come for outdoor kitchens and topiaries — not to anchor on rides — and Tuesday’s data reflected that pattern clearly.

    Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure had a rough evening. It was closed from 4:51 to 6:03 PM and again from 7:44 to 8:34 PM — two separate outages totaling close to two hours on one of the park’s most popular attractions. Frozen Ever After also missed the first hour of the day, and Mission: SPACE was unavailable for 40 minutes in early afternoon. The Seas with Nemo & Friends averaged just 5 minutes, reflecting genuinely thin demand in Future World East. With Remy down during both evening windows, there wasn’t a clear alternative drawing similar pressure.

    Downtime Report

    Tuesday was a high-downtime day across the resort. Magic Kingdom took the worst of it: Haunted Mansion, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, and Winnie the Pooh were all offline within roughly the same 90-minute morning window, then “it’s a small world” was unavailable for over two hours in the afternoon — removing Fantasyland’s most reliable crowd-absorber during the busiest touring stretch. Hollywood Studios lost its headline attraction twice. EPCOT lost Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure twice and Frozen Ever After for an hour at park open. By any measure, it was an above-average downtime day, and guests touring without a backup plan likely felt it.

    Today’s Prediction: Wednesday, May 6

    Yesterday’s forecasts held up well — EPCOT and Hollywood Studios landed exactly where called, and Magic Kingdom came in slightly lighter than the 6-7/10 range, finishing at 5/10. A strong overall read.

    For today: Big Thunder Mountain Railroad remains newly reopened, and guest interest in a returning attraction typically sustains for a few days. Disney After Hours runs tonight at Hollywood Studios — but that’s a late-night event starting after regular park close, with early entry at 7:00 PM. It has no meaningful effect on daytime touring at HS. Flower & Garden Festival continues at EPCOT. Temperatures push to 89°F this afternoon, which tends to compress guest energy into morning and evening windows and shift midday demand toward indoor, air-conditioned attractions.

    Park Predicted Range Notes
    Magic Kingdom 5–6/10 BTMRR draw continues; manageable mid-week volume
    Hollywood Studios 5–6/10 After Hours is evening-only; daytime unaffected
    EPCOT 4–5/10 Festival sustains foot traffic, not queue pressure
    Animal Kingdom 3–4/10 Tuesday’s light pattern may carry; strong morning option

    Best move for today: Animal Kingdom in the morning while temperatures are still in the low 70s. If Tuesday’s trend holds, waits should be minimal before 11:00 AM. For Magic Kingdom guests targeting Big Thunder, get there at rope drop — freshly reopened attractions draw their sharpest interest in the first several days, and afternoons at 89°F will push crowds toward shade and air conditioning anyway.

    Spotting these cross-park patterns before you arrive is exactly what Lightning Brain is built for. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: May 4, 2026

    Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance Struggled All Day — and Animal Kingdom Quietly Surged

    Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance went down three separate times on Monday, May 4 — losing a combined three hours of operating time across a busy afternoon and evening. For a park that leans heavily on its Galaxy’s Edge headliner, that kind of operational turbulence on May the Fourth is about as bad timing as it gets. Meanwhile, over at Animal Kingdom, crowds climbed more than 30% above the 30-day average with guests seemingly unaware they were walking into one of the heavier days that park has seen recently.

    Conditions were close to ideal — clear skies, a high of 80°F, and low humidity by Florida standards — so weather kept guests in the parks and moving all day. That context matters when reading the numbers below.

    Animal Kingdom: The Quiet Surge

    Animal Kingdom posted a 7/10 crowd level with a 39-minute median wait — well into Heavy territory for a park whose comfortable range tops out around 32 minutes. More striking: the 11:00 AM peak hit a 60-minute median across the park’s attractions. That’s a significant pile-on for a Monday with no major school break overlap and no special event driving attendance.

    The most likely explanation is simple: Monday is Animal Kingdom’s strongest recurring day relative to expectations. Guests who avoided the weekend scramble show up Monday, and without a clear crowd narrative pushing people elsewhere, Animal Kingdom absorbs a disproportionate share. The 30% gap above the 30-day average isn’t catastrophic touring-wise, but it means guests who expected an easy morning got something closer to a peak Saturday experience instead.

    Hollywood Studios: Reliable but Rougher Than It Looked

    Hollywood Studios posted a 41-minute median — right at the 30-day average, and a 7/10 crowd level by the park’s own calibration. On paper that’s a normal day. In practice, Rise of the Resistance’s three separate closures shaped the experience for anyone in Galaxy’s Edge.

    The afternoon closure, from roughly 1:53 PM to 2:46 PM, fell during the park’s build toward peak hour. The evening closure, 7:40 PM to 8:37 PM, hit when Fantasmic! was drawing guests toward the amphitheater and Galaxy’s Edge was fielding its second evening wave. Each time the ride went offline, guests already in the area had nowhere obvious to redirect — Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run was their only in-land alternative. Star Tours, normally a five-minute walk-on, averaged 20 minutes across the day — four times its typical wait — which tracks with guests cycling through the area looking for options during downtime windows.

    Toy Story Mania also went offline for 46 minutes in the early evening (6:31 PM to 7:17 PM), tightening Toy Story Land’s capacity at a time when Slinky Dog Dash was already carrying the load. It wasn’t a day that broke Hollywood Studios, but it was a day that required flexibility from guests.

    Magic Kingdom: A Very Heavy Monday

    Magic Kingdom earned its 8/10 crowd rating the hard way. The park’s 21-minute median places it firmly in Very Heavy territory, and the 11:00 AM peak at 30 minutes median reflects the typical late-morning compression that happens when rope-drop guests and late-arrivals converge. After Hours at Magic Kingdom started at 10:00 PM — a late-night-only event that had no effect on daytime traffic.

    Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, newly reopened, generated its own crowd dynamics. The ride went down twice in the morning — 9:00 AM to 9:40 AM and then again 10:27 AM to 11:23 AM — for a combined 96 minutes offline during the exact window when guests were most eager to ride it. Given that the reopening is drawing guests who have waited weeks, those back-to-back closures landed especially hard. Prince Charming Regal Carrousel saw twice its typical demand — likely picking up overflow from the surrounding Fantasyland area during the Big Thunder outages.

    The Hall of Presidents was offline for 100 minutes during mid-morning, which during a heavy crowd day means the queue-relief valve that attraction normally provides in Liberty Square simply wasn’t available. Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress closed twice in the late afternoon, for 29 and then 73 minutes — another loss of a crowd-absorbing attraction during evening build.

    EPCOT: Festival Traffic with an Operational Hiccup

    EPCOT’s 7/10 crowd level and 23.7-minute median reflects a park elevated by the Flower & Garden Festival but not overwhelmed by it. The 8:00 AM peak at 40 minutes is the most notable data point — that early spike suggests guests who knew the festival would get busy pushed hard at rope drop and loaded up the headliners immediately.

    Spaceship Earth was offline twice in the morning — a 23-minute closure followed by a 51-minute closure — right during that peak window. For guests planning to use it as a low-wait starter attraction while the rest of the park filled in, the back-to-back closures were a real inconvenience. Gran Fiesta Tour was running double its typical wait, which in absolute terms is modest (10 minutes), but signals that even lighter attractions were absorbing displaced demand during the morning Spaceship Earth outages.

    Living with the Land’s overnight downtime (12:12 AM to 1:06 AM) had no meaningful guest impact — the park was effectively closed by then.

    Today’s Prediction: Tuesday, May 5

    Tuesday follows a Heavy Monday with no major new crowd driver entering the picture. The forecast is warmer — highs near 85°F, partly cloudy — and the EPCOT Flower & Garden Festival continues. Big Thunder Mountain Railroad remains a notable draw at Magic Kingdom, though yesterday’s repeated early closures may temper rope-drop enthusiasm slightly for guests who were burned.

    Expect Magic Kingdom in the 6-7/10 range. Tuesday typically sees a modest step down from Monday at MK, and the After Hours event last night didn’t suppress daytime traffic, so there’s no artificial floor to clear. The Big Thunder reopening continues to attract guests who missed it on the weekend.

    Hollywood Studios should land in the 6-7/10 range. Fantasmic! runs again tonight, which draws guests toward an evening visit. Whether Rise of the Resistance runs cleanly will define the experience — yesterday’s pattern is worth watching.

    Animal Kingdom’s 30%-above-average Monday suggests some pent-up guest interest. Expect it to hold in the 5-7/10 range — slightly lower than yesterday as the Monday surge dissipates, but don’t count on a quiet day.

    EPCOT should ease to the 5-6/10 range, with the Flower & Garden Festival maintaining a steady baseline. Morning rope drop will again be the best window before festival crowds and the midday heat push waits upward.

    Best strategy for today: target Animal Kingdom or EPCOT in the morning, aim for Hollywood Studios in the late afternoon ahead of Fantasmic!, and treat Magic Kingdom’s Big Thunder as an early-day priority given yesterday’s operational questions.

    Plan Smarter With Live Data

    Yesterday showed how fast a park’s story can change when headliner rides go down repeatedly — and how quickly Animal Kingdom can load up without obvious warning signs. That’s exactly the kind of real-time signal that Lightning Brain tracks, now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store. If you’re heading to the parks today, check live wait times and attraction status before you commit to a plan.

  • Daily Park Report: May 2, 2026

    Haunted Mansion Was Closed All Day. Magic Kingdom Barely Noticed.

    The headline from Saturday at Walt Disney World isn’t a wait time — it’s an absence. Haunted Mansion never reopened. The ride went down at 8:01 AM and stayed offline for the entire 12-hour operating window, a 724-minute closure that pulled one of Magic Kingdom’s most reliable crowd-eaters out of rotation on a Saturday in May. And yet Magic Kingdom’s median wait still landed at 17.9 minutes, slightly below the 30-day average. That tells you something about how the day distributed itself: guests scattered, the afternoon storm rerouted everyone, and Animal Kingdom — of all parks — was the one running hot.

    Park-by-Park: A Lopsided Saturday

    Animal Kingdom ran the busiest relative day of the four, posting a 6/10 with a median nearly 20% above its 30-day baseline. The 11:00 AM peak hit 60 minutes — rope drop momentum colliding with Flight of Passage and Avatar standby demand before the afternoon weather scrambled plans. For a park that often sees guests arrive late and leave early, holding heavy waits through midday is the real shift.

    Hollywood Studios sat at a 7/10 with a 40.8-minute median, essentially flat against the 30-day norm but heavy in absolute terms. The 12:00 PM peak of 55 minutes is textbook Studios — Slinky, Tower, and Rise all stacking demand before lunch. Then Slinky Dog Dash went down at 6:37 PM and never came back, capping the evening early for guests who’d been holding that ride for last.

    Magic Kingdom turned in the most counterintuitive number of the day: a 6/10 crowd label on a 17.9-minute median that was actually down from baseline. Buzz Lightyear had two separate multi-hour closures, Jungle Cruise was offline more than three hours in the afternoon, and Tiana’s Bayou Adventure went down for two and a half hours during the rain window. Under the Sea quietly absorbed the displacement, climbing to a 25-minute average against a typical 15. Meanwhile, the Tomorrowland and Fantasyland spinners (Astro Orbiter, Dumbo, Magic Carpets) ran roughly half their usual waits — guests were either avoiding the rain bands outside or piling into indoor rides that were still operating.

    EPCOT was the calmest of the four at a 5/10 with a 19.6-minute median, slightly under baseline despite Flower & Garden in full swing. Festival crowds are food-booth crowds, not queue crowds — that pattern held. Living with the Land doubled its usual wait to 20 minutes, which during a partly cloudy 87°F afternoon reads as guests grabbing an air-conditioned boat ride between Frushi stops. The Seas with Nemo & Friends ran half its usual wait, the kind of quiet pocket that rewards anyone willing to walk to the back of Future World.

    The 3:08 PM Rain Band

    A short rain cluster between roughly 3:08 PM and 5:05 PM triggered weather-protocol closures across five outdoor attractions: Journey of Water at EPCOT, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train and both Walt Disney World Railroad stations at Magic Kingdom, and Kali River Rapids at Animal Kingdom. These weren’t mechanical failures — they were a single weather event hitting outdoor coasters and water rides simultaneously. Indoor rides absorbed the shift, which is part of why Under the Sea spiked. Separately and unrelated to weather, Test Track was down for nearly five hours through the afternoon and evening at EPCOT, and Haunted Mansion’s all-day closure remained the single biggest guest impact of the day at Magic Kingdom — anyone with a Lightning Lane for it had to reschedule on the fly.

    Today’s Prediction: Sunday, May 3

    Yesterday’s call was on the money across all four parks, so we’ll keep the framework but adjust for Sunday rhythms. Today’s forecast is genuinely pleasant — a 79°F high, low humidity, no rain on the radar — which removes the afternoon-storm wildcard that scrambled Saturday’s afternoon. Expect waits to flow more predictably through the day with later peaks than yesterday.

    • Magic Kingdom: 5-6/10. Sunday locals plus Saturday arrivals shifting parks. Watch whether Haunted Mansion is back online — if not, Pirates and Under the Sea will run hot again.
    • EPCOT: 4-5/10. Flower & Garden Saturday spillover is mild; Sundays at festival EPCOT are reliably comfortable.
    • Hollywood Studios: 6-7/10. Still the highest-pressure park. Rope drop Slinky or Rise; do not save them for evening.
    • Animal Kingdom: 5-6/10. Slight cooldown from Saturday but Flight of Passage will still command 60+ minutes by late morning.

    If you have one park today, make it EPCOT — the weather is built for World Showcase walking and the crowd level supports it.

    Plan Around the Closures You Can’t See Coming

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  • Daily Park Report: May 1, 2026

    Four Parks, One Crowd Level, Four Different Stories

    Yesterday every Disney park landed on a 5/10 — but that’s where the similarities ended. Friday, May 1 produced the rarest thing in WDW data: a perfectly even distribution where Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom all registered moderate crowds, yet each park got there through completely different mechanics. Animal Kingdom ran hot above its baseline. The other three came in below average. And the longest single downtime of the day — nearly six hours on Expedition Everest — explains a lot about why.

    The weather was a textbook Florida May day: 92°F high, mostly clear skies, and zero precipitation. Warm enough to drive guests toward indoor queues, but not punishing enough to reshape touring patterns.

    Animal Kingdom: The Outlier Park

    Animal Kingdom was the only park trending above its 30-day norm, with a 33.5-minute median running roughly 12% hot. The 9:00 AM peak of 45 minutes tells the rope-drop story — guests piling into Pandora and Asia early, exactly as you’d expect. But here’s the wrinkle: Expedition Everest went down at 7:32 AM and stayed offline until 1:26 PM. Nearly six hours without a major Asia headliner during the busiest stretch of the day. That redirected demand straight into Flight of Passage, Na’vi River, and Kilimanjaro Safaris — though Safaris itself ran unusually light at 15 minutes (well below its 35-minute typical), suggesting the heat may have pushed guests toward shaded queues instead.

    Hollywood Studios: Quietly Comfortable

    HS landed at 5/10 but with a 35.8-minute median that’s actually 10% below its 30-day average. The 8:00 PM peak (45 min) reflects the post-Fantasmic and evening Galaxy’s Edge surge rather than any daytime pressure. Three notable downtimes hit the park — Rise of the Resistance offline nearly two hours mid-morning, Runaway Railway down for over an hour at lunchtime, and Toy Story Mania closing briefly in the early evening — yet waits stayed manageable across the board. When a park can absorb that much rolling downtime without the median spiking, it’s a sign attendance was genuinely soft.

    EPCOT: Flower & Garden Without the Heat

    Despite hosting Flower & Garden Festival, EPCOT’s 17.9-minute median came in 10% below average. The 12:00 PM peak (35 min) lines up with festival foot traffic, but it’s clear guests were eating and walking, not queuing. Spaceship Earth ran at 10 minutes against a 20-minute typical — half its usual draw. Frozen Ever After’s 84-minute outage between 4:06 and 5:30 PM is worth flagging for anyone who toured late: that’s prime dinner-hour, and Norway pavilion guests had to pivot. Gran Fiesta Tour, conveniently next door in Mexico, doubled to a 10-minute wait during the same window.

    Magic Kingdom: The Lightest of the Four

    MK’s 16.9-minute median ran 15% below its 30-day baseline — the largest negative gap of any park. The 12:00 PM peak topped out at just 20 minutes, which is borderline lunch-hour empty by Magic Kingdom standards. Fantasyland staples like “it’s a small world,” Dumbo, and Prince Charming Regal Carrousel all underperformed their typicals by 33-50%. Pirates of the Caribbean was offline 5:40-7:14 PM, pushing some early-evening demand toward Haunted Mansion and Big Thunder, but the park had so much overhead that nothing meaningfully spiked.

    Downtime Report

    The headline incident was Expedition Everest’s nearly six-hour morning closure at Animal Kingdom — the kind of outage that genuinely changes your touring plan if you arrived for rope drop expecting to bag it early. Hollywood Studios saw the most rolling disruption with three separate headliner closures (Rise, Runaway Railway, Toy Story Mania) totaling over three and a half hours of combined downtime, though staggered enough that no single window felt catastrophic. EPCOT’s Frozen Ever After closure at dinner hour was the most strategically painful for guests on tight schedules. MK’s Pirates outage came during the dinner lull and had the smallest practical impact.

    Today’s Prediction: Saturday, May 2

    Saturdays typically run busier than Fridays at WDW, especially in early May before summer vacation crowds arrive. With a 90°F high, windy afternoon conditions, and a 35% afternoon precipitation chance, expect the heat to push guests toward indoor and shaded queues by 2:00 PM.

    • Magic Kingdom: 5-6/10 — Saturday lift on top of yesterday’s soft baseline. Tour Fantasyland before 11 AM.
    • EPCOT: 4-6/10 — Flower & Garden continues; expect slightly heavier festival foot traffic but waits should stay reasonable.
    • Hollywood Studios: 5-7/10 — Saturday is HS’s biggest day. Rope-drop Slinky or Rise, and plan around the 8 PM peak.
    • Animal Kingdom: 5-6/10 — If Everest is back to normal operation, expect Asia to absorb a healthy chunk of demand. Mornings still beat afternoons by a wide margin in this heat.

    The afternoon storm risk means flexible touring wins today. If radar lights up around 3 PM, indoor headliners (Spaceship Earth, Haunted Mansion, Living with the Land) will see waits jump fast.

    Yesterday’s prediction nailed all four parks at 5/10, so the day-of-week framework is calibrated. The wildcard for Saturday is the wind and precipitation chance — neither significant enough to reshape demand, but enough to nudge guests indoors.

    Plan Smarter Today

    When every park reads “moderate” but each one tells a different story, headline crowd levels stop being useful — you need attraction-level intelligence. Lightning Brain’s live data finds the touring opportunities buried inside an average day. Now available at lightningbrain.app and on the App Store!

  • Daily Park Report: April 30, 2026

    Magic Kingdom Ran 36% Below Average on a 91-Degree Thursday

    Yesterday, Thursday, April 30, was the kind of day that quietly tells you something about the resort’s rhythm: all four parks landed at a 4/10, but they got there from very different directions. Magic Kingdom posted a 12.7-minute median wait — more than a third below its 30-day average and the lowest of the bunch by a wide margin. With temperatures climbing to 90.9 degrees and humidity at 67%, this looked like a classic late-spring weekday where guests touring outside spring break weeks found unusually short lines almost everywhere they went.

    Park-by-Park: Same Crowd Level, Different Stories

    Magic Kingdom (4/10, 12.7 min median) was the headline. Peak hour didn’t hit until 1:00 PM at 20 minutes, which is a soft peak even by MK standards. Multiple Fantasyland kid-mover attractions ran half their typical waits — Dumbo at 5 minutes, Prince Charming Regal Carrousel at 5 minutes, Under the Sea at 10 minutes (normally 20). Both Walt Disney World Railroad stations averaged just 5 minutes, suggesting low overall foot traffic rather than a single attraction story. If you had park-hopped to MK after lunch, you basically had a walk-on day in Fantasyland.

    Animal Kingdom (4/10, 31.9 min median) tells the opposite story. The peak hit early — 50-minute median at 10:00 AM — driven heavily by Expedition Everest’s repeated mechanical issues. Everest went down four separate times across the day for a combined 7+ hours offline, and you can see the demand redistribute: morning waits everywhere else in the park ran hot before normalizing in the afternoon. By midday, AK was the calmer park it usually is on a sub-headline crowd day.

    Hollywood Studios (4/10, 32.5 min median) ran nearly 19% below its 30-day baseline. Peak hour was 11:00 AM at 45 minutes, which is the typical morning rope-drop wave for Star Wars and Toy Story Land. After lunch, the park drained in the heat — a familiar pattern when temperatures push 90.

    EPCOT (4/10, 16.7 min median) hosted Flower & Garden Festival, but the queue data was unfazed. Spaceship Earth ran 10 minutes (half its norm), Living with the Land at 5, and The Seas with Nemo & Friends at 5 — guests were drifting through World Showcase food booths and topiaries, not riding rides. Peak hour was 8:00 AM at 27.5 minutes, which is just early-entry headliners doing their thing before the day softened.

    Downtime: Everest Stole the Headlines

    Expedition Everest was the day’s operational story. Four separate closures — 60 minutes starting at 7:45 AM, another 60 at 9:16 AM, 128 minutes from 10:59 AM, and 205 minutes from 2:36 PM — meant the ride was unavailable for roughly half its operating hours. Animal Kingdom guests counting on Everest as a midday anchor had to pivot.

    Magic Kingdom had its own afternoon problem: The Barnstormer went down at 4:35 PM and never reopened, leaving Storybook Circus without its kid-coaster for the entire evening. Test Track was offline for two hours starting at 10:06 AM — painful timing for morning guests. Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure was unstable all afternoon, racking up three separate closures totaling nearly three hours, which explains some of EPCOT’s softer France queue activity.

    Today’s Prediction: Friday, May 1

    Today’s forecast calls for 89°F with mostly cloudy skies and zero precipitation chance — almost identical to yesterday. With Flower & Garden continuing and Fantasmic! running at Hollywood Studios, but no holiday or break-week pressure, expect the resort to follow its standard early-May Friday rhythm. Yesterday’s prediction landed cleanly across all four parks (we called every level within range), and today’s setup suggests more of the same.

    • Magic Kingdom: 4-5/10. Friday typically runs slightly hotter than Thursday on arrivals. Still a strong tour day.
    • EPCOT: 4-5/10. Festival weekends start Friday evening — expect World Showcase to fill after 4 PM but morning rides to stay light.
    • Hollywood Studios: 4-6/10. Fantasmic! draws evening crowds; rope drop is your best window.
    • Animal Kingdom: 3-5/10. Watch Everest’s status before committing — yesterday’s reliability issues may persist.

    Strategy: if you have one park day, Magic Kingdom in the morning before heat peaks remains the easiest tour right now. Avoid afternoon Animal Kingdom unless you’re at the water rides.

    Tour Smarter With Live Data

    Yesterday’s Expedition Everest closures and the surprise Barnstormer outage are exactly the kind of operational surprises that derail a tour plan. Lightning Brain’s live attraction status and wait-time intelligence help you pivot in real time instead of finding out at the queue entrance. We’re now available on the iOS App Store — grab it at lightningbrain.app or directly from the App Store.