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If You Lose Something at Disney World, You Might Never Get It Back… Even if It’s Found

Disney cast members locate thousands of forgotten items throughout Walt Disney World Resort every year, but not every discovery leads to a happy reunion between guests and their belongings. Certain categories of lost and found property trigger immediate law enforcement involvement, resulting in permanent confiscation regardless of the item's legal status outside Disney property or its sentimental value to the owner.

How Disney World Lost and Found Normally Works

Most forgotten items at Walt Disney World Resort follow a predictable recovery path. Guests missing belongings should first contact Guest Relations at Magic Kingdom Park, EPCOT, Disney's Hollywood Studios, or Disney's Animal Kingdom Theme Park. Disney Resort hotel guests should visit the front desk.

Spaceship Earth as seen from across the World Showcase Lagoon at EPCOT.
Credit: Steven Miller, Flickr

Found items typically stay at their discovery location—whether an attraction, restaurant, or other venue—until closing time. Disney cast members then deliver these objects to Guest Services as part of end-of-day procedures.

Guest Relations doesn't keep items indefinitely. Eventually, accumulated lost property transfers to Walt Disney World Resort's central lost and found warehouse. The facility operated at the Transportation & Ticket Center for decades before recently moving to the Town Center section of Disney Springs.

Third-party service Chargerback manages the digital side of lost item recovery. Guests complete online forms describing missing property, and the system sends email notifications when matches are found. Chargerback facilitates both onsite pick-ups and shipping arrangements, allowing guests to recover items long after returning home from vacation.

The Final Destination for Forgotten Objects

kids play in the Nemo pool at Disney's Art of Animation hotel
Credit: Disney

Storage space limitations prevent Walt Disney World Resort from permanently warehousing unclaimed items. After exhausting recovery attempts, most sunglasses, plush toys, wallets, Mickey ear hats, and miscellaneous forgotten objects get donated to the Boys & Girls Club of Central Florida Thrift Store.

The arrangement has turned the thrift store into a treasure trove for bargain-hunting Disney fans. Social media videos showcasing Disney merchandise finds at rock-bottom prices have driven increased traffic to the organization in recent years.

But some discovered items never appear at the Town Center lost and found facility or the Boys & Girls Club thrift store. These objects vanish into a completely different system the moment Disney cast members see them.

Sheriff's Deputies Handle Prohibited Property

Disneyland police officers and their K9 partners
Credit: Disney

Disney cast members who discover certain items—predominantly in Disney Resort hotel rooms—immediately contact the Orange County Sheriff's Department through “found property” calls. Deputies arrive to confiscate objects that violate Walt Disney World Resort policies or Florida law.

Common confiscated items include firearms, ammunition, illegal drugs, drug paraphernalia, and controlled substances. These discoveries cannot be included in the standard lost and found workflow because possessing them on Disney property violates established rules or breaks criminal statutes.

Disney security would rather intercept prohibited items while guests are still on property, allowing for trespass bans and immediate consequences. However, the company maintains protocols for handling contraband discovered after guests depart, ensuring proper disposal through law enforcement channels.

Legal Items That Still Get Confiscated

A modern Pop Century hotel room with a double bed, wooden desk and chair, wall-mounted TV, small kitchenette, and an open bathroom area featuring a sink and mirror visible through a sliding door.
Credit: Disney

Not everything deputies confiscate is illegal to own. Walt Disney World Resort bans numerous items that Florida residents can legally carry elsewhere. Knives and firearms fall into this category—legal to possess with proper permits but absolutely prohibited anywhere on Disney property, including inside Disney Resort hotel rooms.

Legally prescribed controlled substances create particularly frustrating situations. Guests traveling with prescription medications have every right to possess them, but if housekeeping discovers abandoned pills in a hotel room, deputies must confiscate them.

Guests who submit Chargerback forms for these confiscated items receive no assistance. The objects are gone permanently, with no recovery option available.

Staggering Number of Forgotten Prohibited Items

The Tower of Terror as seen from down Sunset Blvd at Disney's Hollywood Studios
Credit: Hazel Kenady, Flickr

Orange County Sheriff's Department records reveal the scope of the problem. Deputies responded to more than 40 found property calls across Walt Disney World Resort during November and December 2025 alone. Disney Resort hotels generated the vast majority of these calls, with afternoon hours seeing the highest concentration of reports.

The afternoon spike corresponds with housekeeping schedules. Disney cast members cleaning hotel rooms after morning checkouts routinely discover prohibited items guests either forgot or intentionally abandoned because they couldn't legally transport them home.

Forty-plus calls in just two months suggest hundreds of guests annually lose items to permanent confiscation at Walt Disney World Resort. Many likely have no idea their forgotten belongings triggered law enforcement responses.

Protecting Your Property

'The Little Mermaid' pool area at Disney's Art of Animation Resort
Credit: jared422_80, Flickr

The simplest prevention strategy involves reading Walt Disney World Resort's prohibited items list before packing. Remove any banned objects from luggage before leaving home, eliminating the risk of accidental abandonment.

Have you ever recovered a lost item at the Disney parks? Share your experience with Disney Fanatic in the comments!

Jess Colopy

Jess Colopy is a Disney College Program alum and kid-at-heart. When she’s not furiously typing in a coffee shop, you can find her on the hunt for the newest Stitch pin.

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