Summer 2028 is two years away, and most people planning Orlando theme park vacations are not thinking about it yet. That is completely understandable. Two years is a long time. A lot has changed. Plans shift. Nobody is booking a June 2028 Walt Disney World trip in May 2026 unless they are extremely organized or extremely anxious about availability.
But there is something happening in Orlando in June 2028 that the theme park community needs to start talking about right now, because the families who find out about it after they have already booked are going to have a very different summer than the ones who knew in advance.
Here Is What Is Coming to the Theme Park Areas
The International Olympic Committee announced on May 7 that Orlando, Florida, has been selected as one of four international host cities for the Olympic Q-Series, a multi-sport qualifying event that sends the final wave of athletes to the 2028 Los Angeles Games. The other three cities are Tokyo, Shanghai, and Montreal. Orlando is the last stop on the circuit.
The Orlando portion of the Q-Series runs June 8 through June 11, 2028.
Those four days are going to be unlike anything Central Florida has experienced during a typical summer peak season. Approximately 600 athletes from more than 150 countries are expected to descend on the region, along with coaches, support staff, officials, international media, and fans. More than 100 competitors will earn their Olympic spots through the series, which means the stakes attached to this event are about as high as they get in international sport.
The events will be centered around Camping World Stadium, which is currently in the middle of a 400 million dollar renovation designed to bring the venue up to the standard required for exactly this kind of global competition. Orange County approved 15 million dollars in tourist development tax funding earlier this year to cover the operational costs of hosting, including staffing, security, and public safety.
The confirmed Q-Series sports include 3×3 basketball, beach volleyball, BMX freestyle, climbing, flag football, and skateboarding. Which of those sports land specifically in Orlando has not been announced yet.
Why This Is a Theme Park Problem
Six hundred athletes from 150 countries do not travel alone. They bring their support systems, families, national federations, and media. Every hotel room in Central Florida absorbed by the Q-Series is unavailable to a family trying to book a Disney World vacation. Every restaurant reservation, every Uber, every rental car, every inch of highway between the airport and the parks gets compressed by an event of this scale landing in the middle of summer peak season.
The theme park with the biggest direct stake in all of this is Universal Orlando Resort. Earlier this year, NBCUniversal announced that Universal Destinations and Experiences is the official theme park partner of the LA28 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Comcast, Universal's parent company, is a founding partner of the Olympic movement. That relationship is not a logo on a banner. It is a structural partnership that will almost certainly appear in Universal's parks in some form as 2028 approaches. The details have not been announced yet, but the foundation is already in place.
Walt Disney World is worth watching, too. The geographic overlap between Q-Series host cities and Disney Parks locations is not a coincidence that Disney's planning teams are going to ignore. Tokyo and Shanghai are hosting earlier Q-Series stops, Orlando is hosting the final one, and Los Angeles is hosting the Games themselves. Disney Parks exist in meaningful proximity to all of those cities. Whether that translates into Olympics-adjacent programming inside the parks has not been confirmed, but the conditions are clearly in place.
What to Do Right Now
June 8 through 11, 2028, is a specific and avoidable window. Anyone with flexibility in their 2028 Orlando travel planning should treat those four days as a hard no and build their itinerary around them rather than into them.
Hotel rates during that window are going to reflect the demand. Anyone who books without knowing the Q-Series is happening is going to pay more and get less than they expected.
Two years feels like a long time. In Orlando theme park planning terms, it is not. The dates are public. The event is confirmed. The Universal partnership with LA28 has already been announced.
The people who plan around this now are going to have a better summer in 2028 than the ones who find out about it at check-in.







