Disney has made numerous attention-grabbing moves in 2025, but none have had a greater impact than the changes affecting Annual Passholders. This group is made up of some of the company’s most loyal fans—people who come back over and over again, buy the souvenirs, stay at the resorts, and know the parks better than most cast members.
But lately, that loyalty feels like it’s being taken for granted. What was once a golden ticket is starting to feel more like an expensive hassle.

The Appeal of the Annual Pass
For years, owning a Disney World Annual Pass meant more than just unlimited entry. It was about perks. Different pass tiers—Pixie Dust, Pirate, Sorcerer, and Incredi-Pass—offered varying levels of flexibility. Out-of-state guests had access only to the Incredi-Pass, the most expensive option.
But the investment made sense. Perks like early reservations, PhotoPass, merchandise discounts, hotel deals, and the freedom to visit whenever created a sense of belonging. Fast forward to 2025, and that value has slowly eroded.

1. Locked Out When You’ve Already Paid
It’s hard to justify a pricey pass when you can’t even get in the park. Blockout dates have become more frustrating than ever. And the reservation system, while less strict than before, still gets in the way of those last-minute park days that passholders used to love.
What once felt like an open invitation now feels like standing in line for something you already bought.
2. PhotoPass Paywall
PhotoPass used to be one of those small but meaningful perks that passholders adored. Free photos made visits feel more personal. But in 2025, Disney made it an extra charge.
It’s a subtle change with a big impact. What was once automatic now feels like another fee on top of an already steep price.

3. Discounts Drying Up
Passholder discounts have always been a selling point, but they’re shrinking. Fewer seasonal offers. Lower percentages. It’s not as exciting to “save” when the savings barely make a difference.
When passholders notice fewer perks but higher costs, the frustration builds fast.
4. Hotel Prices That Don’t Make Sense
Passholders used to feel special when booking rooms. Now, they’re often paying more than people using public promos. That flips the entire logic of having a pass on its head.
If passholders have to shop around to find better deals elsewhere, it weakens the entire value of the program.

5. A More Expensive Disney Experience
The overall cost of being a Passholder continues to rise. Food, snacks, merchandise, and add-ons are more expensive. Lightning Lane is still not discounted for Disney World passholders, unlike in Disneyland, and that’s rubbing people the wrong way.
For out-of-state guests, especially, the math just doesn’t work anymore. It takes a lot of visits to make a pass worth it—and for many, that’s not realistic.

A Way Forward for Disney
Disney has the power to fix this. Bringing back PhotoPass as a perk would be a great start. Offering Lightning Lane discounts, increasing consistency with offers, and loosening blockout rules would go a long way in rebuilding the trust that has been chipped away.
Passholders Are Paying Attention
Passholders are loyal—but that loyalty isn’t endless. These fans have spent years investing in Disney experiences. If the company doesn’t start meeting them halfway, 2025 could be the year more fans walk away than renew.




I have to agree with this article. As a very loyalty family to Disney we have discussed letting all our passes go. We would do 2/4 day trips spur of the moment and it always felt so special. Not so much anymore due to prices and less perks.