Should You Stay in a Disney World Resort Hotel?
Photo by Brian Kendig, from Wikipedia
If you’ve ever booked a trip to Walt Disney World Resort, you’ve probably wondered if you should stay in an official Disney World hotel. You can find significantly cheaper hotels throughout the Orlando area, and if budget is your primary concern you won’t really be able to beat the prices you’ll find outside the resort. Staying in an official Disney resort offers a few advantages you won’t find off resort, though, beyond just the convenience of staying closer to the theme parks. I can’t say if they make the hotels worth the extra money—that’s a discussion you’ll have to have with your budget—but I can let you know what you’ll be getting for that money.
If you stay in a Disney World hotel, you’ll get more time in those Disney World parks, and presumably that’s why you’re there in the first place. They have a program called Extra Magic Hours where every day one of the four Disney World theme parks will open one or two hours early or stay open one or two hours late, and it’s exclusively for resort guests. An hour or two may not sound like much, but it greatly reduces the amount of people in the park during that time, which can have a huge impact on how long you’ll wait for the most popular rides. Extra Magic Hours are especially useful for cutting down the wait on the newest additions to the resort, like the Toy Story Land expansion at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. That park is opening an hour early every day through the end of August just for resort guests, which is probably the best chance you’ll get to ride the Slinky Dog Dash roller coaster without waiting for at least an hour. Regular Extra Magic Hours are still in effect at one of the other three parks every day, too, so for the next few weeks, at least, you’ll be able to enter Hollywood Studios early and stay at another park late.
Another benefit to staying on resort is Disney’s Magical Express, a shuttle bus service that picks you up at the Orlando airport and takes you straight to your hotel. If you checked a bag on your flight, you don’t even have to pick it up yourself—Disney will get it from the airport to your room. This is free for anybody staying on property in a Disney-owned hotel. All you have to do is add your flight information to your itinerary plans on Disney’s website and note that you’d like to take the Magical Express. It won’t be the fastest way to get to your hotel—there will almost definitely be a wait for your bus to leave the airport—and if you take it to the airport when you leave you’ll have to depart earlier than you might expect, with a pickup time four hours before your flight is scheduled to depart. Still, it’s cheaper than taking a cab or rideshare to the resort, which will set you back at least $30 (and usually a good bit more). It may not be the fastest line from your flight to your hotel room, but it’s the cheapest and involves the least amount of thought. You just follow the signs when you land at MCO and then once you get to the check-in desk Disney cast members will do the rest.
You also can book your FastPass+ reservations earlier if you’re staying in a Disney World hotel. If you’re off-site you can only pick your FastPass+ attractions 30 days before your day at the park. If you’re staying on resort, though, you can get those reservations locked twice as far in advance, with FastPass+ selections opening up 60 days before your trip. FastPasses for the newest and most in-demand rides (like Avatar Flight of Passage at Animal Kingdom, Seven Dwarves Mine Train at Magic Kingdom, or Frozen Ever After at Epcot) disappear fast, so those extra 30 days can be significant.
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- Should You Stay at Walt Disney World's Swan and Dolphin and Swan Reserve Resorts? By Garrett Martin December 19, 2023 | 12:00pm
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