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Disney World’s Summer Dining Overhaul Impacts More Than 20 Restaurant Menus

There was a time when Disney World dining mostly meant grabbing a quick burger before running to the next attraction. That version of Disney dining feels long gone now.

Today, food is one of the biggest parts of the Walt Disney World experience, and Disney just proved that again with a huge wave of menu changes that rolled out across the resort this week.

Cinderella Castle and the Partners statue in Disney World's Magic Kingdom park
Credit: Disney

Restaurants inside the parks, resorts, pool bars, and Disney Springs locations all saw updates. Some items vanished completely. Others were replaced with trendy desserts, plant-based offerings, colorful drinks, and snacks that feel specifically designed for social media attention.

For Disney food fans, it was one of the busiest menu update weeks in recent memory.

Magic Kingdom probably had the most noticeable snack refreshes. Auntie Gravity’s Galactic Goodies in Tomorrowland suddenly transformed its menu by removing older items like the Brownie Sundae and Asteroid Shake.

Tomorrowland’s iconic arch welcomes guests at Disney World
Credit: Erica Lauren, Disney Fanatic

In their place, Disney added several new treats including the Space Ranger Float, Zurg Overload Shake, Chocolate-Salted Caramel Cold Brew Float, and a Churro Shake.

These new items feel much more connected to Tomorrowland itself, which is probably intentional. Disney has spent years making snacks feel more immersive and themed instead of generic.

The company also knows that unique-looking drinks and desserts generate huge attention online. A bright green Zurg-themed shake is going to attract far more photos than a standard sundae ever would.

Elsewhere in Magic Kingdom, Prince Eric’s Village Market quietly dropped its Frozen Fanta Blue Raspberry Slushy from the menu.

EPCOT’s iconic geodesic sphere towers over World Showcase Lagoon, surrounded by lush trees and park buildings, under a clear sky. EPCOT Food & Wine Festival 2026
Credit: Erica Lauren, Disney Fanatic

EPCOT’s updates were more limited, but even small changes stand out there because food is such a massive part of the park’s identity. Akershus Royal Banquet Hall removed its carrots and green beans side dish from the menu, continuing Disney’s steady pattern of refining offerings throughout the World Showcase restaurants.

Animal Kingdom also joined the menu refresh trend.

Eight Spoon Cafe added Bluey’s Berry Lemonade shortly after Bluey experiences debuted at the park. Disney is clearly leaning heavily into Bluey right now as the company tries to create more offerings tied to popular family entertainment brands.

At the resorts, though, the menu changes became much larger.

Contempo Cafe at Disney’s Contemporary Resort saw a long list of removals that included breakfast items, desserts, pastries, and sandwiches. Disney then replaced them with new pastries, seasonal desserts, and updated plant-based breakfast offerings.

Contemporary Resort outside water view
Credit: Disney

Disney’s Saratoga Springs Resort also received major additions at The Artist’s Palette, including new soups, salads, cheesecakes, sandwiches, and specialty desserts.

One thing becoming very noticeable across Disney dining is the company’s continued expansion of plant-based options. Nearly every major menu refresh now includes multiple vegetarian or plant-based additions.

Disney is clearly trying to appeal to a wider range of guests while also modernizing some older menus that had become repetitive.

Port Orleans Riverside and French Quarter probably experienced the biggest overall dining shakeups this week.

Disney World Resort's Port Orleans Resort - River Side during the day.
Credit: Disney

Food courts and lounges removed large portions of their older offerings and replaced them with items like Four-Meat Pizza, Cajun Chicken Salad, Honey Mustard Chicken Wraps, assorted macarons, Cookie Butter Cheesecake, Mickey-shaped Peanut Butter Brownies, and Totcho Bowls.

Disney seems to be moving away from simpler quick-service menus and toward larger selections that feel more like modern casual dining.

Even resort pool bars got refreshed.

Several added new cocktails and snack offerings, including Cheeseburger Spring Rolls and Kiwi-Watermelon Spritz drinks.

That shift reflects how Disney resorts themselves have changed over time. Guests now spend far more time at the hotels than they once did, especially during longer vacations or summer trips when midday pool breaks are essential.

Disney Springs also saw changes when Amorette’s Patisserie introduced Mickey and Minnie Cookie Art kits featuring edible watercolor paints.

The iconic Disney Springs water tower. Disney Springs transformation
Credit: SJ Grant, Flickr

That addition feels very Disney. It combines desserts, entertainment, and interactive activities all in one product.

At this point, Disney menu changes create almost as much online discussion as ride updates. Fans immediately debate removed items, rank new desserts, and build lists of what they want to try next.

And after seeing just how many restaurants changed this week, it is obvious Disney plans to keep evolving its food lineup constantly moving forward.

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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