About

How It Works

What we do with your plan.

A friendly walk-through of the thinking behind every recommendation you'll see.

The big idea

Disney and Universal trips reward planning. Different parks have different access systems, line-skip products, and unwritten rules. Make the right call at 7 AM when your booking window opens and you'll save hours of standing in lines. Miss it, and you'll wonder where the day went.

You tell us about your trip — where you're staying, when you're going, the rides you can't miss, any special events you've booked. We turn that into a day-by-day plan: what to reserve first, what to rope-drop, what to save for after-hours, and what to skip. And once you're in the park, the plan adapts as you go.

How we rank rides

Every attraction across all seven parks falls into one of five priority levels. This ranking shapes everything else — what we recommend first, what we suggest you rope-drop, what we'll cheerfully tell you to skip if you're running low on time.

Super-Headliner

The marquee experiences. 60+ minute waits are typical. Rope-drop, paid access, or late-day strategy territory.

Headliner

Popular thrill rides and signature dark rides. 30–60 minute waits in the middle of the day. Lightning Lane Multi Pass or Express Pass material.

Major

Solid attractions with meaningful midday waits. Manageable with a touring plan; can soak up extra Lightning Lane or Express slots.

Minor

Walk-on or short waits most of the day. Slot in between bigger picks; rarely worth a paid skip.

Diversion

Filler, kids' rides, rotating shows. Bonus content if you have time — never the reason to plan around a park.

Your must-do list comes first

During onboarding (and any time you visit Settings), you star the rides you'd hate to miss. Starred rides get a big push in the rankings — even a Major-tier ride you've starred can outrank an unstarred Headliner.

Translation: the plan we hand back is your plan, not a generic "here's what's popular" list. If your kid is obsessed with the Three Caballeros and you star it, that's what we'll recommend you book first at EPCOT.

Disney's Lightning Lane window

At Walt Disney World, the biggest leverage you have over your trip is the moment your Lightning Lane booking window opens. Resort guests can pre-book Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations seven days ahead of check-in; off-property guests get a three-day window. Bookings open at 7:00 AM Eastern Time on that first eligible day.

For popular rides, the difference between booking at 7:00:30 AM and 7:15 AM can be the difference between a 10-minute wait and an hour of standby. We show you the exact date and time your window opens, plus the booking order for each park day.

Multi Pass tiers matter. At tiered Disney parks, your advance set can include one Tier 1 pick and the remaining slots must come from Tier 2. Extra Tier 1 rides become day-of follow-ups after you tap into your first selection. At untiered parks, the choices are labeled Multi Pass and any three listed attractions can fill the advance slots.

We also distinguish between the two flavors of Lightning Lane: Multi Pass for up to three reservations across most attractions, and Single Pass — paid à la carte for a handful of the top-tier rides (Rise of the Resistance, TRON, Flight of Passage, Cosmic Rewind). Single Pass recommendations come with their own per-day timing guidance.

Already booked something?

Tell us. Anywhere you see an 'Already booked' block, log the Lightning Lane / Express / offered Virtual Queue reservations you've made and we'll stop suggesting them as primary picks. Free up the recommendation slots for the rides you haven't covered yet.

Universal's Express Pass (and the Epic Universe twist)

Universal Orlando works differently from Disney. There's no advance booking window — Express Pass is either a paid daily add-on or a perk included with certain hotel stays. The strategy implications of which hotel you pick are huge.

Three hotels include free unlimited Express Pass: Hard Rock, Portofino Bay, and Royal Pacific. Stay at any of these and the lines effectively disappear at Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure for your entire stay.

But here's the trap nearly everyone falls into: free Express only works at USF and Islands of Adventure — never at Epic Universe. The newest park has its own separately-priced Express Pass, and it's never included with any hotel. If you've booked a Premier hotel and assumed you're set for the whole resort, your Epic Universe day is going to be a rude awakening.

We track all of this. Tell us which hotel you're staying at, and we'll show you your real Express coverage for each park — separately for USF/IoA and for Epic Universe — with strategy adjustments that account for the difference.

Universal VIP Tours

The standard group VIP Tour includes single-use Express on every Express-eligible ride at that park for the rest of the day after the tour ends. Mark a VIP tour as a special event on your trip and we'll automatically treat that day as having Express coverage — no need to also pay for an Express Pass on top.

How we pick what to recommend

For each park day, we run every attraction through a ranking that considers a handful of common-sense factors:

  • Priority tier

    Super-Headliners bubble to the top, Diversions stay near the bottom — that's just how popular attractions work.

  • What you've starred

    Your must-do list gets a strong boost. Starred Major-tier rides can outrank unstarred Headliners.

  • Lightning Lane / Express eligibility

    At Disney, Multi Pass recommendations respect the park's advance-booking rules: one Tier 1 plus Tier 2 picks at tiered parks, or any three Multi Pass picks at untiered parks. At Universal, Express-eligible rides bubble up if you have Express coverage that day.

  • Your party

    If a ride is taller than your shortest guest, we deprioritize it (we can't pick what you can't ride). If you said you're skipping intense thrills, those drop too.

  • Refurbishments

    Closed for refurb on this date? Removed from recommendations entirely. We show 'Reopens MM/DD' on the ride detail page.

  • What you've already covered

    Rides you've marked done (without 'ride again'), rides you've already booked a reservation for, or rides you covered on an earlier day at the same park — all drop down so we suggest something new.

  • What's broken

    If you mark a ride as down for the day, or a fresh live snapshot says it is down, closed, or in refurbishment while the park is open, we exclude it from primary recommendations and surface other options instead.

The result is a short, ordered list per day: a valid Disney advance-booking set, day-of follow-ups, what to rope-drop, what to single-rider at Universal, and what's worth slotting in if you have time.

Visiting the same park twice?

Spending three days at Magic Kingdom isn't unusual. Without any extra thinking, we'd recommend the same headliner as your "first pick" on every one of those days — which isn't useful.

Instead, we rotate. Day 1's first pick becomes day 2's "you already covered this — re-ride only if waits are short." Day 2 features the next-best option. Day 3 the one after. Across three Magic Kingdom days, you'd see Peter Pan's Flight day 1, Big Thunder Mountain day 2, Tiana's Bayou Adventure day 3.

Prefer to re-ride your absolute favorites every single day? Turn rotation off in Settings. We'll go back to recommending the top pick regardless of repeats.

Late arrivals and early departures

Travel day, flight day, mid-trip event — not every park day is a full park day. Tell us when you'll first be in the park or when you have to leave, and the strategy adapts.

  • Late arrival (especially after 4 PM): rope-drop drops out entirely — you're not there at open. We keep the day compact and treat booked access, dining, and planned entertainment as the anchors.
  • Early departure (especially before noon): rope-drop becomes critical. Paid Single Pass picks are de-emphasized until you verify a return window that lands before departure.
  • Tight mid-day window (e.g., a wedding obligation): protect the window, reservations, and transfers before chasing every ranked recommendation.
Special events change everything

Three event types are dramatic enough to reshape the day's strategy:

Universal VIP Tour

A guide handles the headliners on a 5–7 hour tour, and you have single-use Express for the rest of the day. We treat the day as Express-covered automatically — rope-drop fades, and the focus shifts to rides outside the tour's typical scope.

Orlando Informer Meetup

Separately-ticketed Universal after-hours event at USF and Islands of Adventure. The parks close to the regular crowd at 7 PM Friday or 9 PM Saturday — after that, waits drop to near walk-on through midnight or later. Daytime strategy can skip the longest-line rides; the evening window handles them.

Disney After Hours

Paid Disney event after a single park's regular close. Three hours of near-walk-on access. Lightning Lane Single Pass rides drop way down in priority for the day — you'll knock them out at night instead of paying $25 each.

We know what's closed

Every attraction in our catalog has its known refurbishment dates. When your trip date falls inside a closure window, that ride simply doesn't appear in recommendations. The detail page shows the closure dates and the projected reopening so you can plan around it.

Reopening dates are always projections — Disney and Universal can and do shift them without notice. We'll keep our dates current, but the parks' own apps remain the source of truth on the day.

In the parks: the Today page

All the planning so far is preparation. The Today page is the in-park version: built for your phone, organized around what's next, designed to update in real time as your day unfolds.

Tap a ride to mark it Done (we'll ask whether you want to ride it again), Skip it, mark it Down (broken), or Postpone it. As you mark, the plan reshuffles. Ride VelociCoaster first thing and we'll move Spider-Man up next. Mark Hagrid's as down and we'll suggest the Forbidden Journey instead.

There's also an "Already booked" section where you can log Lightning Lane, Express Pass, or offered Virtual Queue reservations as you snag them. The plan respects what you've locked in, and warns when a return time or dining reservation collides with your arrival, departure, or planned events.

Getting between places

We track the usual transit options between every common pairing — your resort to each park, park to park, park to Disney Springs or CityWalk. Each option includes the typical end-to-end minutes including waits, so you know whether the Skyliner is faster than the bus from Pop Century to Hollywood Studios (it is) or whether the walking path to Magic Kingdom from the Contemporary beats the monorail (also yes, most days).

These are typical-day estimates, not real-time. A holiday-weekend bus will be slower; rope-drop on the monorail will be quicker.

Where we're cautious

We're not the official app

Live waits, hours, weather, and downtime can appear when the snapshot is fresh. Strategy still starts from structural rules — priority tiers, access systems, hotel benefits — and Today is the operational view once you're in the park.

The official apps still win

For booking, return times, ride downtime, and same-day inventory: trust the Disney and Universal apps. We help you plan around them; we don't replace them.

Policies do shift

Disney has changed Lightning Lane rules multiple times since launch. Universal's lineup at Epic Universe is still settling in. Our policy descriptions reflect what's currently published — but verify before you set an alarm for the booking-window 7 AM.

Tier rankings are our take

The five priority tiers are our editorial calls. Reasonable people disagree about whether Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway is a Headliner or a Major, and whether Yoshi's Adventure deserves a different bucket. Take our rankings as a starting point, not gospel.