NewsUniversal Studios

Epic Universe Guests Will Notice a Big Shift Starting in February

Epic Universe mornings haven’t always matched the scale of the park itself.

Early Park Admission existed, but it felt cautious — almost restrained. Guests could ride a few headliners, but much of the park remained just out of reach, waiting behind invisible lines until official opening time.

power blocks in SUPER NINTENDO WORLD at Universal Orlando Resort
Credit: Universal

In February, Universal starts loosening that grip.

Beginning February 1, Early Park Admission expands beyond select attractions and into entire portals, giving guests early access to SUPER NINTENDO WORLD, How to Train Your Dragon – Isle of Berk, and the Wizarding World of Harry Potter – Ministry of Magic.

That shift matters, because it changes how guests experience Epic Universe before the day really begins.

Instead of funneling everyone toward the same small set of rides, Universal is opening the morning experience outward. Guests will have choices — real ones — about where to go, what to explore, and how fast or slow they want to move. And in a park built around immersion, that freedom is everything.

Still, Universal is being careful with its wording. While these lands will be accessible, the company hasn’t confirmed which attractions will be running during Early Park Admission. Some rides may open immediately. Others may wait until the official park opening. That uncertainty keeps expectations flexible and prevents the kind of over-promising that can sour guest experiences.

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter inside of Universal's Epic Universe
Credit: Andrew Boardwine, ITM

The Ministry of Magic joining early entry is a notable step. This land isn’t designed for rushing. It’s layered, detailed, and meant to be absorbed. Opening it during early admission suggests Universal believes the environment can handle guests when staffing is leaner and operations are still ramping up.

Isle of Berk feels like a natural fit for early hours. The land’s openness, sightlines, and kinetic design may benefit most from lower crowd levels. Experiencing it before the park fills could shape how guests remember it — and how they talk about it afterward.

How To Train Your Dragon: Isle of Berk at Epic Universe in Universal Orlando
Credit: Andrew Boardwine, ITM

What remains unclear is whether this February expansion is the new normal or part of a broader testing phase. Epic Universe is still young, and Universal appears willing to adjust strategies in real time rather than lock itself into rigid systems.

For guests planning trips, that means opportunity mixed with unpredictability. Early mornings may offer something rare: Epic Universe at its calmest, before it becomes the spectacle everyone expects.

And that version of the park might not last forever.

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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