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Why Disney’s New Lightning Lane Rules Make Animal Kingdom a Total Waste of Money

Every time Disney updates its skip-the-line rules, vacation planning becomes a game of strategy. Under the current Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Single Pass structure, guests are encouraged to buy peace of mind by reserving rides days before their trip. But if you apply this strategy to Animal Kingdom, you quickly realize the math is totally skewed. The new pricing architecture makes the Multi Pass feel completely obsolete because Animal Kingdom’s unique layout and crowd patterns already allow you to beat the lines for free.

A young guest at Animal Kingdom in front of the tree of life
Credit: Disney

Think about how a typical day at Animal Kingdom flows. The park usually opens earlier than the other three Disney World parks, and it also empties out much earlier. By 3:00 PM or 4:00 PM, a huge portion of the crowd heads back to their hotels or hops over to Epcot or Magic Kingdom for fireworks. Because of this mass exodus, standby wait times for major rides like Kilimanjaro Safaris and Expedition Everest plummet late in the afternoon.

Furthermore, if you are a Disney Resort guest utilizing Early Theme Park Entry, you can walk right onto Naʻvi River Journey first thing in the morning with virtually no wait at all. When you can easily knock out the park's top rides during the first two hours or the last two hours of the day, paying for a Multi Pass just to skip a midday line feels like a waste of money.

Pandora: The World of Avatar in Disney's Animal Kingdom
Credit: Disney

The real kicker is that the park's absolute most popular ride, Avatar Flight of Passage, requires a separate Single Pass purchase anyway. The Multi Pass won't help you there. Therefore, the absolute best strategy for a day at Animal Kingdom is to buy that single à la carte pass for Flight of Passage to bypass its notoriously brutal queue, and then rely entirely on standby lines for the rest of the park.

Tree of Life at Animal Kingdom
Credit: Theme Park Tourist, Flickr

By saving the money you would have spent on the Multi Pass, you can fund a fantastic lunch at Tiffins, buy some great souvenirs, or save those credits for a park like Magic Kingdom or Hollywood Studios, where a deep lineup of thrill rides actually justifies the extra expense. At Animal Kingdom, the standard Multi Pass simply isn’t necessary.

Brittni Ward

Brittni is a Disney and Universal fan; one of her favorite things at both parks is collecting popcorn buckets. While at Disney World Resort, Brittni meets the princesses and rides Kilimanjaro Safaris. At Universal, Brittni enjoys the Minions and watching Animal Actors on Location! When not at Disney World Resort or Universal Orlando, Brittni spends time with her family and pets.

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