Lightning Lane Tips & Strategy
Disney’s new Lightning Lane Multi Passes and Lightning Lane Single Passes have the potential to save you significant time in line, but are they worth the money? And how can you maximize their potential, so you get every last bit of value for your dollar? Our comprehensive Lightning Lane strategy guide will help you get more rides with less waiting!
There’s so much to cover about Lighting Lane Multi Pass and Lightning Lane Single Pass that we split the information onto two pages:
- This page has tips and strategy to help you maximize the value you get from purchasing Lightning Lane Multi Pass and/or Lightning Lane Single Pass.
- If you haven’t already, we suggest you also read our main Disney Genie & Lightning Lane page, which covers the basic rules and procedures for all these technologies.
Jump to:
- Are Lightning Lane Multi Pass, Single Pass or Premier Pass Worth the Money?
- Basic Strategy Tips
- Advanced Strategy Tips
- Top Picks For Lightning Lane Multi Pass & Single Pass
Are Lightning Lanes Multi Pass, Single Pass or Premier Pass Worth the Money?
This is a highly subjective question, and it greatly depends on how busy the parks are, how much you value your time, and your personal vacation style.
How Busy Are The Parks?
If you’re visiting during a very low-crowd period, like midweek in September, you may want to hold off on buying any kind of line-skipping upgrade until you see what the lines look like. Even on a slow day, there will be some lines, but you may feel like they’re totally reasonable, even for the big draws like Rise of the Resistance.
During mid-crowd periods like early and late summer, the lines will be starting to get more daunting, but with careful planning and getting to the park early, you can avoid many of them. That said, Lightning Lane Multi Pass will still save you time, and that’s time you could be spending trying on every kind of limited-edition Mickey ears.
During high-crowd periods, like spring break or Christmas, the lines get long early and stay long. Paying for Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Lightning Lane Single Pass reservations for your must-do rides should add significant value. Keep in mind that on a high-crowd day, you may only be able to get 3 or 4 Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations before the most popular reservations are sold out. However, 3 or 4 well-chosen Lightning Lane reservations can absolutely save you multiple hours of waiting.
What’s Your Time Worth?
Here’s one way to think about it: if you look at what you’re spending to go to Walt Disney World, including transportation, tickets, food, etc., and then how many total minutes you’re spending in the park, most families are spending at least $1/minute (per family, not per person). That’s not true for everyone – locals with annual passes typically spend much less per minute, for example, while people who go VIP all the way might be spending $2 or more per minute. But it’s a nice round figure that’s not too far off, and makes it easy to make a ballpark estimate of what a particular amount of time saved is “worth”.
If you go with the $1/minute figure, then paying to skip rides is often going to be worth it. We’re a family of four, so buying Lightning Lane Multi Pass costs us $64-$92/day. It’s not hard to save 64 minutes of waiting by using Multi Pass, even on slower days, so that seems to pencil out. And while in busy seasons the price goes up, the amount of time you can save goes up as well.
With the Lightning Lane Single Pass, you can do similar math. Four Lightning Lane reservations for Space Mountain cost around $30 (more or less depending on demand). Can you save 30 minutes with those reservations? Yes, on a busy day, but not so much on a low-crowd day. It’s not hard to save 60 minutes or more with a Rise of the Resistance Lightning Lane reservation, even during less busy days, so that’s going to pay off more often.
There are also, of course, intangible factors. If you just hate paying for add-ons in general, then the annoyance of spending additional money after you’ve already spent so much might loom really large. Or skipping line waits may feel great to you – so great that you’d pay even more to get that feeling of living like a VIP. If $1/minute feels wrong to you, substitute your own value, but make it a nice round number so you can calculate it in your head and answer questions like, “How much should I be willing to pay to skip a 1 hour wait?”
What Kind of Vacation Do You Want?
If you prefer to mostly wander and soak in the atmosphere, riding a favorite ride here and there or taking in a show or two, then buying Lightning Lane access might not offer you as much value. If you want to ride as many headliner rides as possible, paying for shorter lines should let you get more rides in with less stress.
Another factor is how much you value being able to sleep in longer. Everyone knows that getting to the parks early will save you a lot of waiting, but less than 25% of the guests actually arrive at opening. Clearly, lots of people feel like “sleeping in” is a key part of vacationing, and if you’re one of those people, you should embrace it and vacation the way you want. If you want to be able to roll into the parks at 11:00 am and still get a lot done, then Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Lightning Lane Single Pass are going to help quite a bit!
The Bottom Line
We don’t really recommend buying Lightning Lane Multi Pass for every theme park day, unless you’re going at a peak time of year. Most of the time, it’s worth picking a few days and just paying for it on those days. It’s easy to just buy Lightning Lane Multi Pass for the days where you know you’re going to try to hit a lot of popular rides. You can also wait until you get to the park and see how long the waits are and how much time you can save. Don’t wait too long — every hour that goes by reduces the value you can get from Lightning Lane Multi Pass, but the price stays the same. The one situation where you really need to buy in advance is if you really want to get a Lightning Lane reservation for a super-popular Multi Pass ride or a ride that just opened within the last year.
Whether to buy a Lightning Lane Single Pass reservation is probably a simpler decision. All of the rides that have Single Pass are hugely popular and generate massive lines, so if it’s super important to you to ride those rides, getting Single Pass will almost certainly save you time. Even for the rides that have virtual queues, buying a Single Pass in advance means you don’t have to try to get a Virtual Queue slot during the 30 seconds the queue is open. The Lightning Lane Single Passes for the newest, hottest rides can sell out several days in advance, so if you want to get on one of those, definitely be ready to book on the first day you’re eligible. The least popular Single Pass rides will still be available on the morning you arrive in the park (and might stay available for much of the day).
Lightning Lane Premier Pass is really not a good value for most people. For the kind of money the Premier Pass costs, you can get a whole extra park day, plus Lightning Lane Multi Pass and all the Single Passes for both days, and have money left over. Even at high season, two full park days with the regular Lightning Lane passes should get you on everything you care about. But you will need to plan at least a little, and you’ll need to be on your phone regularly, snagging new passes, looking for better times for your existing passes, and so forth. So if you have the money and want to spend it to make your vacation smoother and more relaxing, Premier Pass may be a great choice. It’s a luxury, and almost by definition luxuries aren’t really about “value.”
In the end, it’s a personal decision. If you like to splurge on your Disney trip and go first-class all the way, then definitely get Lightning Lane Multi Pass and all the Lightning Lane Single Pass reservations for rides you want to experience. Or go big and get Lightning Lane Premier Pass! You only live once! On the other hand, if you like to “beat the system,” you can definitely get on all of these rides with fairly reasonable waits by going early or late in the day, going to the parks at low season, or both. It’s your call.
Basic Strategy Tips
These are all simple techniques that will help optimize your usage of Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Lightning Lane Single Pass, with minimal extra work. You do not need a degree in Advanced Lightning-ology to use these. (Lightning Lane Premier Pass doesn’t really require any strategy – you just buy it and go to the park. You don’t have to reserve anything or book anything once you have the Premier Pass.)
Please note: These strategies are not all documented, and were worked out via extensive testing. Disney can change them without warning, though we have no reason to think they will. If you notice a discrepancy between what we say about the way Lightning Lane Multi Pass and Single Pass work and your experience in the parks, please let us know.
Before Your Trip
- Make sure to read and understand the Lightning Lane Multi Pass booking rules. There are some edge cases and subtleties, and if you understand the rules clearly you’ll have an easier time.
- Take some time to go over the list of Lightning Lane Multi Pass attractions and Lightning Lane Single Pass attractions and figure out which are your must-do’s. If no one in your family wants to go on Big Thunder Mountain Railroad, you don’t have to waste any time on it. And if everyone wants to ride Flight of Passage or Rise of the Resistance, you’ve got some planning to do.
- Designate one member of your party to be the “Lightning Lane Master” and let them handle My Disney Experience and deal with all your reservations. This is a great job for someone tech-savvy, as long as they are conscientious and good at keeping times straight. This person is going to be using their phone a lot, so you may want to invest in a portable charger for them.
- If you’re traveling in a large group of more than 10 people, we recommend breaking your group up into sub-groups of 10 or fewer. Technically speaking, Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations can be made for up to 20 people at a time, but it is a huge hassle to manage. Each group will need a “Lightning Lane Master” to book Lightning Lanes. At times (mostly at the beginning of the day) it may be hard to get the same Lightning Lane times, so it may be advantageous to have the two groups operate independently for the first hour or two, then hook back up (if desired) to finish out the day together.
- Whoever is managing Lightning Lanes should get the My Disney Experience app, get logged in, make sure everyone in the group is linked, everyone’s tickets are linked, etc. Also they should spend some time with the app, and figure out how to get to the Tip Board and the My Day sections, because those screens are going to get a lot of use. Have them test going through the booking process all the way until final confirmation. You can’t really see all the booking screens until you have tickets and a park reservation, but you can get a feel for where everything is.
- On the first day your party is eligible to book Lightning Lanes, the Lightning Lane Master and any assistants should be ready to go at 7am Eastern. If you’re staying in a Disney resort, you can book all the Lightning Lanes for the whole trip in one go. If you’re staying in a non-Disney resort, you can book just one day at a time, so you’ll need to do the same thing each morning until you get everything booked.
During Your Trip
- Every morning before 7 am, run through the free Genie setup and choose your top priorities for the in-park choices (the ones you want after you use your three pre-booked rides), so they will be pinned to the top of the tip board. If you will have one or more members of your party that won’t be joining you first thing, now is a good time to remove them from your party list, so you won’t have to do it every time you make a reservation. You can add them back when they arrive at the park and join everyone else.
- The #1 Lightning Lane Multi Pass tip: make reservations as soon as possible. There are a limited number of Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations available, so make sure you get your fair share!
- Be sure to book your first three Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservation before arrival, preferably the first day of eligibility. If you are trying for a big, popular ride reservation, getting a time as soon as possible after park opening is really valuable. You can make your next one as soon as you tap into the first, which means your next reservation will be earlier, and the next and the next. Getting that first ride even 20-30 minutes earlier can really make a big difference by the end of the day.
- Any time you tap into a ride, make sure to immediately make another reservation.
- If one of your Lightning Lane Multi Pass reserved rides goes down during or just before your return window, you’ll automatically be given a multi-attraction Lightning Lane pass AND will get another selection immediately. So make that new selection!
- For a ride with a virtual queue, you may want to try to get a FREE virtual queue boarding group first, before spending money on Lightning Lane Single Pass reservations. Only do this for rides that you know are typically still available on the morning of arrival. The newest and hottest ride or two will often be already sold out by the time the virtual queue opens up. If you succeed and get an early group, it’s extremely likely you’ll be able to ride with relatively short wait. If you don’t get a boarding group, or your group number is very high, it may be worth your while to pay for the Single Pass, if riding that ride is important. Alternatively, you can divide and conquer – have one person in your party get a boarding group for everyone, and someone else get a Single Pass for everyone. You’ll definitely be able to ride with the Lightning Lane, and if you succeed in getting a boarding group, you can ride twice.
- Whenever you have 30 minutes or more before your next Lightning Lane reservation, see if you can fill the gap by riding something with a short wait. If you pop open the Tip Board in My Disney Experience, you should be able to find something nearby with a minimal wait, even at noon on New Year’s Eve. If the nearby attraction is a show, be sure to ask when the next show will let out before getting in line. You don’t want to miss the beginning of your next Lightning Lane reservation if you can help it.
- If you have less than 30 minutes until your next Lightning Lane reservation, you may want to take a moment to relax. Check out the amazing theming. Have a churro. Stroll. Buy that t-shirt you’ve been eyeing. Having an enjoyable Disney trip doesn’t have to be all about ride, ride, ride.
Advanced Strategy Tips
These are strategies aimed at the hard-core optimizer who wants to get on as many headline rides as possible with the smallest wait times. If these strategies make your eyes glaze over, don’t worry about them. You don’t need them to have a great day in the parks. Keep in mind that not everyone in your group has to understand them, just the person managing your Lightning Lanes.
Jump to:
Refreshing To Get Earlier Times
Sometimes you can get an earlier reservation than usual if your luck holds up. People can now cancel their Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations, which they couldn’t with FastPass. Those cancelled reservations get put back into the booking pool, and can be booked by you! This section is about maximizing your ability to get those earlier reservations.
- We want to note right off the bat that this technique is hit-or-miss, and using it all the time seems like overkill. We make occasional use of it when it could make a significant difference, but never for more than a couple minutes or so, generally when we need a break for some other reason (bathroom, water, Mickey bar…). Most of the time just taking the next available return time works out fine. That said, clearly some people really enjoy this; it’s sort of like playing the slot machines, which could be good or bad depending on how much you like slot machines.
- First off, make a reservation immediately, even if it’s not the time you want. You want to get something in place as quickly as possible. You’ll then use the Modify feature to try to get an earlier time for that ride or one of your other favorites.
- Once you have a reservation made, tap that reservation and select “Modify” on the details screen, or tap the three dots on the attraction tile in the Tip Board screen and select “Modify”.
- Now keep pulling down on the screen to force a refresh of the available times. If a better time comes up, tap it immediately, then check to make sure you got the time you wanted. If you didn’t tap the “back arrow” in the corner and continue refreshing.
- If you have two or three rides that you have a roughly equal desire to get a Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservation for, go through the regular Genie setup process and select those two or three as your “favorites.” Don’t select any others. Those favorite rides will come to the top of the list when you modify an existing Multi Pass reservation, so if an early time comes up for any one of them, you’ll be able to see it easily and can switch your reservation.
- Even after a ride seems to be sold out of Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations, enough refreshing can sometimes get you a reservation that someone cancelled. Again, quick fingers and patience are necessary to make this pay off.
- Remember: when refreshing for earlier times, look at the return time window before you confirm and verify that it’s the time you expected. If you didn’t get the time you wanted, cancel out and go back to refreshing, or give up and drown your sorrows with a Mickey bar.
- We believe, based on watching the return times change, that Disney batches up a bunch of cancelled return times and dumps them all into the system at once. If you watch the return times, sometimes it will be showing a later time, like 5:00 pm, and then suddenly it switches to 11:00 am, then 11:10 am, 11:30 am, 11:35 am, 12:00 pm, etc. in a very short time. This batch dump seems to happen about every 5-10 minutes in the morning, but is harder to predict later in the day.
Using Grace Periods
As mentioned in our overall guide to the rules of Lightning Lane Multi Pass, there is some flexibility in when you arrive to your Lightning Lane reservation. Our tests indicate that you can tap in up to 5 minutes before the beginning of your arrival window or 15 minutes after the end of your arrival window. For example, if your window is 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm you could tap in as early as 1:55 or as late as 3:15. The strategies that took advantage of the late grace period have all been removed by Disney (as we expected), but there are still some points worth noting:
- Take advantage of the 5 minute early grace period as often as you can. For popular rides, the available arrival windows move forward in time quite quickly, especially during peak season. If you tap into your first ride 5 minutes earlier, you might get an arrival time for your second reservation that’s 15 minutes earlier than you would have. That means you can tap into the second reservation 20 minutes earlier (the 15 minutes just mentioned plus 5 more from the grace period). Each of these savings adds up over the course of the day, and by the afternoon you could be an hour or more ahead, compared to a day where you didn’t tap in 5 minutes earlier every time.
- If you miss your window, show up to the ride anyway and explain what happened. Cast members tend to be very forgiving about the paid Lightning Lane Single Pass reservations, and you will very likely be allowed to use it later than your window. With Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservations, it’s hit and miss, but usually if you have a good reason for missing your window they’ll let you on. We would not recommend planning around showing up late to a reservation – people have been turned away! But if something happens beyond your control, definitely try to use the reservation and see what happens.
Getting More Tier One Rides
The toughest “gets” for Lightning Lane Multi Pass are often your second-choice and third-choice tier one rides. For example, at Epcot, there are three super-popular Tier 1 rides: Test Track, Remy and Frozen Ever After, and you can only pre-book one of them. If you’re clever and the parks aren’t completely packed, you can often get a Lightning Lane for one or even both of the other two, by following this strategy.
The key is that as soon as you’ve badged into your first Lightning Lane of the day, you open up a reservation slot, and at that point tiers are no longer relevant – any ride in the park that still has Lightning Lane reservations available can be booked. So you want to book one of your Tier 2 rides as early in the day as possible, so you’ll be able to get a Lightning Lane for another Tier 1 ride while there are still some left. If you want to try for three Tier 1’s (which is not easy), you can do it, but you might be missing out on valuable Lightning Lanes you could be using sooner. It’s a trade-off.
Here’s an example:
- Let’s say your two top Tier 1 Lightning Lane priorities for Epcot are Remy and Frozen. And if it works out, you’d like to try to get a Lightning Lane reservation for Test Track as well.
- Our Top Picks list below is organized by time of first sellout, so you can see that Remy is the first Tier 1 Multi Pass ride that will sell out each day. So on the morning of your first pre-booking day, you book the earliest Remy you can get, let’s say 2:00 pm.
- With your second pre-book slot, you just book the earliest Tier 2 reservation you can get, even if it’s not something you care to ride. Let’s say it’s Pixar Shorts Festival, and you get 9:10 am. You’re going to replace that with Frozen on the day you actually visit Epcot.
- With your last slot, you should book your highest-priority Tier 2 ride, even if you think you’re going to try to replace it with Test Track. If Test Track is sold out or you can’t get an acceptable slot, you’ll be glad to have a decent alternative pre-booked.
- On your Epcot day, you enter as early as possible (during Early Entry if you’re eligible), and if you have enough time, ride Soarin or whatever else is important to you. As close to 9:05 as possible (remember the 5 minute grace period), badge into that first Lightning Lane. Now you can book anything in the park without regard to tier, so immediately book Frozen as your new reservation. Hopefully you can get something in the early afternoon.
- If you want to try to get a third Tier 1 Lightning Lane, say Test Track, go in at this point and try to modify that third Lightning Lane to Test Track. If it’s sold out or has only unacceptable times, you may want to spend 5 minutes refreshing, just to see if something opens up or you can improve your times for your other two reservations.
- Keep in mind that following this plan, you’ll often end up with three reservations that are all in the afternoon and evening. You won’t be able to reserve Lightning Lanes for any other rides until you badge into your first one (Remy at 2:00 pm), at which point the pickings will be slim. So you’ll get three Tier 1 Lightning Lane reservations, but you might find that for almost all the other rides you’ll be waiting in the standby line. For Epcot, where the lines for most of the Tier 2 rides just never get very long, this might be a perfectly workable strategy. For Magic Kingdom, it might end up not saving you as much time as just grabbing the next available slot for a ride that you care about. But if things work out well and you get that first Remy reservation for the mid-morning, this strategy works great.
Top Picks For Lightning Lane Multi Pass & Single Pass
Listed below are our suggestions for attractions that will give you the biggest bang for the buck, so to speak, from Lightning Lane Multi Pass and/or Lightning Lane Single Pass. They’re in priority order, mostly based on the maximum line waits we typically see and how quickly they tend to hit their maximum wait.
Abbreviations guide
- SP = Lightning Lane Single Pass
- VQ = Virtual Queue
- SR = Single Rider
- PB = Pre-book Priority (i.e. book as early as you can)
Our Top Selections
- Magic Kingdom
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Tron (PB)
- Tiana’s Bayou Adventure (VQ, PB)
- Seven Dwarfs Mine Train (SP, PB)
- Jungle Cruise (PB)
- Peter Pan
- Space Mountain
- Tier 2:
- Haunted Mansion
- Pirates of the Caribbean
- Winnie the Pooh
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Hollywood Studios
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Rise of the Resistance (SP, PB)
- Slinky Dog Dash (PB)
- Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway
- Millennium Falcon: Smuggler’s Run (SR)
- Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster (SR)
- Tier 2:
- Tower of Terror
- Toy Story Mania
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Epcot
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Guardians of the Galaxy (VQ, SP, PB)
- Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure (PB)
- Test Track (SR, PB)
- Frozen Ever After (PB)
- Soarin’ Around The World
- Tier 2:
- Spaceship Earth
- Turtle Talk
- Mission Space
- Tier 1/Single Pass:
- Animal Kingdom
- Flight of Passage (SP, PB)
- Na’vi River Journey
- Kilimanjaro Safaris
- Expedition Everest (SR)
- Kali River Rapids (if the weather is hot)
Lightning Lane rides marked PB are ones where Lightning Lane times are likely to get claimed very quickly. The next available return time could be hours in the future fairly early, possibly even before the park opens. A few of them could be completely sold out, maybe even before park opening on a busy day. If it’s super important to you to get a Lightning Lane reservation for one of them early in the day, it’s a good idea to get it pre-booked on the first day you’re eligible to book. In a few cases we’ve marked multiple Tier 1 rides as PB, and obviously you can’t pre-book them all. The recommendation is to book the one highest in the list, and then try to get the others on the same day after tapping into your first ride of the day.
For Hollywood Studios in particular, both Rise of the Resistance and Slinky Dog Dash can sell out very quickly. If those are important to you, get them booked ASAP.
All the rides in the list generate longer lines fairly quickly, and are good choices to save you a bunch of waiting time. Once you’re in the park and ready for a new Lightning Lane Multi Pass reservation, choosing the next ride on the list is a good rule of thumb. We’ve organized these into priority order based on how long their lines get and how quickly they get long, so start at the top and work your way down. If you don’t want to ride one, skip it and get the next one.
If a ride has a Single Rider queue, that’s a good alternative to Lightning Lane if you want to save your Multi Pass reservations for other rides. Everyone in your party will be called individually to fill in a single space, so you won’t be riding together, but you’ll be on and off the ride at almost the same time. On busy days, the single rider line can still have a significant wait, but almost always much less so than the main standby line.
All the other rides that aren’t on our list could be perfectly fine choices for Lightning Lane Multi Pass or Single Pass, but depending on how busy the parks are, you can probably ride many of them standby while you’re waiting for your next Lightning Lane reservation to come up. If you knock off all your high-priority reservations early in the day, well, the rest of the day is gravy! At that point just grab any Lightning Lane reservation that looks like it would save you some time.