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Last Updated on 28/05/2026 by OfficialGuides Editorial Team

Last updated: May 2026 · By Official Guides Editorial Team

Planning a visit in 2026? Europe’s most-visited theme park resort sits in Marne-la-Vallée, about 32 km east of central Paris, and has two parks — the classic Disneyland Park with the Sleeping Beauty Castle, and the newly reimagined Disney Adventure World (formerly Walt Disney Studios Park), which relaunched on 29 March 2026 with the new World of Frozen land. The single most useful thing you can do is book a dated admission ticket online in advance instead of buying at the gate: prices are dynamic (the same day can cost €56 booked early or €130+ at the booth), online tickets secure a guaranteed park reservation, and most are refundable up to 3 days before your visit. Children under 3 enter free. Coming from central Paris? You can also book a package that includes transport — either ticket + train or ticket + shuttle from Paris.

Large crowd waiting in long queues at a themed land entrance in Disneyland Paris

On peak days the queues at Disneyland Paris build fast — booking a dated ticket online lets you skip the ticket booths and head straight to the security check.

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Disneyland Paris Admission Ticket → check live prices and availability
Dated 1-Park or 2-Park entry, instant mobile delivery, free cancellation up to 3 days before visit.

Disneyland Paris ticket types — which one should you buy?

Disneyland Paris sells four main families of ticket. The right choice mostly depends on how many days you have and whether you want access to one or both parks. All children under 3 enter free; children 3–11 pay a reduced child rate; from age 12 the adult rate applies. For most international visitors a dated 1-Day admission ticket is the right starting point.

Disneyland Paris ticket options on Tiqets — 1-Day 2-Park, 1-Day 1-Park and Multi-Day prices

Choosing your ticket on Tiqets — 1-Day 2-Park, 1-Day 1-Park and Multi-Day options shown side by side with live prices. Tap any option to see the available dates.

1-Day / 1 Park

Cheapest option, from around €56 adult on Eco/Mini dates. Access to either Disneyland Park or Disney Adventure World — not both. Best for budget visits, focused first-timers, or anyone returning who only wants to see one park.

1-Day / 2 Parks

From €89 adult on Eco/Mini dates. Hopper access to both parks the same day. The standard choice for visitors with only one day who want to see both Disneyland Park and the new Disney Adventure World.

2-Day / 2 Parks

From €142 adult on Eco/Mini dates. Two consecutive days with unlimited hopping between parks. Genuinely the sweet spot for most international visitors — enough to see the highlights at a sustainable pace.

3-Day or 4-Day / 2 Parks

From €189 (3-day) or €229 (4-day) adult. Best for families with younger children who need afternoon breaks, Disney superfans, or guests staying at a Disney hotel using Extra Magic Time.

1-Day Flexible (undated)

From €114 adult. Valid for any day within 12 months of purchase; park reservation required before visiting, but can be made later. Non-refundable. Useful as a gift or when your travel dates are not yet fixed.

Same-day at the gate

From €130+ adult. Always the highest tier and risks being sold out during school holidays. Avoid if at all possible — every other option is cheaper.

Disneyland Paris ticket prices in 2026

Disneyland Paris uses dynamic pricing across six demand tiers: Eco/Mini → Low → Medium → Regular → Peak → Same-Day. Prices change daily based on demand, and peak dates (summer holidays, Easter, Christmas, French school breaks) can cost 50–80% more than off-peak weekdays in January or September. The table below shows indicative starting prices for 2026. Always check the live price for your specific date before booking.

Ticket typeAdult (from)Child 3–11 (from)Notes
1-Day / 1 Park (dated)€56€51Cheapest entry option
1-Day / 2 Parks (dated)€89€81Most popular single-day option
2-Day / 2 Parks€142€132Best balance of value and experience
3-Day / 2 Parks€189€175Comfortable family pace
4-Day / 2 Parks€229€212For Disney as main trip purpose
1-Day Flexible (undated)€114€105Valid 12 months from purchase
Same-day at the gate€130+€120+Avoid — always book ahead

Prices last verified May 2026. Children under 3 always free. Guests with documented disabilities receive a 25% reduction online.

Disney Adventure World — what opened on 29 March 2026

The reimagined second park officially became Disney Adventure World on 29 March 2026 — the biggest transformation in Disneyland Paris history. The park is now organised into five distinct areas: World of Frozen, Worlds of Pixar, Marvel Avengers Campus, World Premiere Plaza and the new Adventure Way promenade. A fourth themed land inspired by The Lion King is already under construction and will join the park later, with a water-based attraction featuring next-generation Audio-Animatronics. To experience both Disneyland Park and Disney Adventure World on the same day, choose the 2-Park option when you book your admission ticket.

The North Mountain and Elsa's ice palace inside the new World of Frozen land at Disney Adventure World, Paris

World of Frozen at Disney Adventure World opened on 29 March 2026. The 36-metre (118 ft) North Mountain with Elsa’s ice palace is the new park’s headline landmark.

The headline addition is World of Frozen, a fully immersive recreation of Arendelle from the Frozen films. Guests can ride Frozen Ever After, a boat journey alongside Anna, Elsa and Olaf, and meet the sisters inside the royal castle — though for the meet-and-greet you must join a virtual queue on the day via the official Disneyland Paris Mobile App, subject to availability. Adventure Way also introduces Raiponce Tangled Spin, a new family attraction inspired by Tangled, and The Regal View Restaurant & Lounge overlooking Adventure Bay. A new nighttime drone spectacular, Disney Cascade of Lights, runs on the lake. Up to 15 new dining locations are opening gradually through 2026, so not all are available from day one.

Skip the line with Disney Premier Access

Disneyland Paris’s paid fast-lane system is called Disney Premier Access, and it comes in two formats. Both are purchased through the official Disneyland Paris Mobile App after you have entered the park — not before. On busy days, standby queues for top rides routinely hit 90–120 minutes, and a Premier Access purchase can save 5–6 hours of waiting across a full day.

A Premier Access fast-lane entrance at Disneyland Paris with a much shorter queue

A Premier Access fast lane next to a 90-minute standby queue. On busy days the Ultimate pass saves most visitors 4–6 hours of waiting.

Premier Access One

Pay to skip the queue for a single ride, one time. You are assigned the next available return time slot and join the priority lane during that window. Prices range from around €5 up to €18–23 for the most popular rides on busy days. Up to 3 per guest per day. Best if you only want to prioritise one or two rides.

Premier Access Ultimate

An all-day bundled pass — one fast-lane entry on each of the 18 participating attractions, no fixed time slots. Pricing is dynamic: roughly €90 on low-demand days, €120 mid, €160 high and €190 on peak dates. To get full value you really need a 2-park ticket, since the eligible rides are split across both parks.

The 18 Premier Access Ultimate rides include Big Thunder Mountain, Phantom Manor, Peter Pan’s Flight, Buzz Lightyear Laser Blast and Star Tours in Disneyland Park, plus Crush’s Coaster, Spider-Man W.E.B. Adventure, Avengers Assemble: Flight Force, the new Frozen Ever After and Raiponce Tangled Spin in Disney Adventure World. On a low-season weekday in January or September, standby queues are usually short enough that you do not need Premier Access at all — save the money for snacks and souvenirs.

How to get to Disneyland Paris from central Paris

Disneyland Paris is in Marne-la-Vallée, about 32 km east of central Paris. There are four main ways to get there, each with different trade-offs in price, comfort and predictability. If you would rather not deal with planning transport separately, two combined products solve everything in one purchase: a Disneyland Paris ticket + train transportation from Paris bundle, or a Disneyland Paris ticket + shuttle round-trip from Paris package. Both include park entry, so you don’t need a separate admission ticket.

The RER A train platform at Marne-la-Vallée / Chessy station next to the Disneyland Paris entrance

The RER A platform at Marne-la-Vallée / Chessy is literally at the park entrance — 35 to 40 minutes from central Paris for around €7.

RER A train — cheapest

The RER A line runs directly from central Paris (Châtelet–Les Halles, Gare de Lyon, Nation, Auber) to Marne-la-Vallée / Chessy / Parcs Disneyland in about 35–40 minutes. Single ticket around €7. Crowded during morning rush hour and tiring with luggage and small children, but unbeatable on price.

Ticket + train combo — easiest

A bundled Disneyland Paris ticket + train transportation package from Paris. Includes a dated park entry plus your train ticket from central Paris to the park station — no separate metro/RER tickets to figure out, no queueing at the booth on arrival.

Ticket + shuttle round-trip

The Disneyland Paris ticket + shuttle bus package: door-to-park transport on a comfortable coach with a guaranteed seat both ways, plus park entry. Best if you want to avoid the RER crowds and skip the morning rush-hour chaos with kids and luggage.

Taxi or rideshare

€70–110 from central Paris depending on time of day and traffic. Convenient on the way back; unpredictable on the way out — Paris morning traffic on the A4 can double the journey time. A pre-booked combo package with a fixed price is usually more reassuring.

🚆 Easiest All-in-One
Disneyland Paris Ticket + Train Transportation from Paris
Dated park entry plus your train from central Paris to the park station — one booking, one mobile voucher, no queue at the booth.

🚌 Skip the RER Crowds
Disneyland Paris Ticket + Shuttle Round-Trip from Paris
Park entry plus a comfortable coach with guaranteed seats both ways — best for families travelling with kids and luggage.

How many days do you really need at Disneyland Paris?

One day is possible but tight. With a 1-Day 2-Park ticket you can technically visit both parks, but you will have to prioritise — you cannot do everything. The keys to a successful single day are arriving 30 minutes before official opening, using Standby Passes through the app, buying Premier Access for 2–3 top rides, and skipping the parade to ride big attractions while the crowds are watching. Realistic for adults and older children; harder with toddlers or older relatives.

Two days is the sweet spot for most international visitors — enough to see the highlights of both parks at a sustainable pace, plus one evening for the nighttime show. This is what we’d recommend if you are flying specifically for Disneyland Paris.

Three or four days makes sense for families with very young children who need afternoon breaks, Disney superfans who want to ride everything multiple times, or guests staying on-site at a Disney hotel using Extra Magic Time — one hour of early park access available only to Disney hotel guests.

Opening hours and best time to visit

Disneyland Paris is open 365 days a year. Standard 2026 opening hours are 09:30 to 23:00, but exact times vary by season — peak summer days often run later into the night, while quiet January weekdays may close earlier. Always check the official Disneyland Paris calendar for your specific date before booking transport. Both parks open at the same time; Disney hotel guests get one hour of early entry (Extra Magic Time) to Disneyland Park.

Cheapest and quietest: mid-January to early February (outside French school holidays), and the first three weeks of September after European schools have gone back. Ticket prices drop to the Eco/Mini tier and standby queues for popular rides can be 20–40 minutes instead of 90+. Weather is cold in January–February but the parks are decorated for the post-Christmas season into early January.

Best weather, manageable crowds: late April to mid-May (avoiding Easter), and the last week of September into the first half of October. Mild temperatures, long daylight, and no major holiday peaks.

Most magical, most expensive: mid-November to early January for the Christmas season (illuminations, Christmas parade, seasonal shows), and Halloween season from late September through early November. Prices and crowds are high, but the seasonal overlays are genuinely impressive.

Avoid if you can: July and August (summer holidays — hottest, busiest, most expensive), Easter week, French All Saints’ break in late October/early November, and the week between Christmas and New Year.

Practical tips for visiting Disneyland Paris

The daily parade rolling down Main Street USA at Disneyland Park, Paris

The daily parade on Main Street USA. Big rides empty out during parade time — that’s exactly when you should ride them.

Download the official Disneyland Paris app before you arrive. Real-time wait times, mobile food ordering, virtual queues for Anna and Elsa, Premier Access purchases, park maps and show schedules all live in the app. Without it you are flying blind.

Arrive 30 minutes before official opening. Security and ticket checks take time. The first 90 minutes of the day are the lowest-wait window — use them on the biggest queues like Big Thunder Mountain, Crush’s Coaster or Frozen Ever After.

Bring your own food and water. France is one of the few places where you are allowed to bring food and water into a Disney park (no glass containers, no alcohol, no oversized coolers). Free water fountains are available throughout both parks. This can save a family of four €40–60 a day.

Use lockers near the main entrance. Carrying coats, shopping bags and extra layers all day is miserable. Lockers at the entrance of Disneyland Park cost a few euros and save real energy.

Eat at off-peak hours. Restaurants are mobbed between 12:00–13:30 and 19:00–20:30. Eat lunch at 11:30 or 14:00 and you can walk straight in.

Don’t queue twice for the same parade. The daily Main Street parade has a fixed time and crowds gather an hour before. Big rides empty out during the parade — ride them then, catch the nighttime drone show at the end of the day instead.

Check height requirements before you go. Several headline rides have minimum heights (typically 102–120 cm). If you are travelling with small children, plan around what they can and cannot ride — Disney offers a “Rider Switch” service so two adults can take turns without queuing twice.

While you’re in Paris

If Disneyland is part of a wider Paris trip, the two other landmarks almost everyone wants to see are the Louvre and the Eiffel Tower — both also work best with a timed online ticket bought in advance. Have you already planned your visit to the Louvre Museum and the Eiffel Tower? Each guide covers 2026 prices, opening hours, skip-the-line options and how to get there the same way as this page.

Frequently asked questions about Disneyland Paris tickets

How much does a Disneyland Paris ticket cost in 2026?

A 1-Day 1-Park dated ticket starts from €56 adult / €51 child on Eco/Mini dates. A 1-Day 2-Park ticket starts from €89 adult / €81 child. Multi-day options begin at €142 (2-Day) and €189 (3-Day). Same-day tickets at the gate are €130+ adult — always book online in advance. Children under 3 always enter free.

Is Disney Adventure World a different park from Disneyland Paris?

No — Disney Adventure World is the new name for the second park within the Disneyland Paris resort, formerly Walt Disney Studios Park. It officially launched on 29 March 2026 with World of Frozen, Worlds of Pixar, Marvel Avengers Campus, World Premiere Plaza and Adventure Way. The resort still has two parks: Disneyland Park (the castle park) and Disney Adventure World.

How do I get to Disneyland Paris from central Paris?

The cheapest way is the RER A train (35–40 minutes, around €7 each way) to Marne-la-Vallée / Chessy / Parcs Disneyland station — the platform is at the park entrance. The easiest way is a bundled ticket + train or ticket + shuttle package from Paris, which combines park entry and transport in one booking.

Is Premier Access worth it at Disneyland Paris?

On busy days, almost always yes — especially Premier Access Ultimate if you have a 2-park ticket. Standby queues for top rides routinely hit 90–120 minutes in peak season, and the Ultimate pass typically saves 5–6 hours of waiting across the day for €90–190 per person depending on date. On low-season weekdays in January or September, queues are short enough that you probably don’t need it.

Can I visit both Disney parks in one day?

Yes, with a 1-Day 2-Park ticket you can hop between Disneyland Park and Disney Adventure World freely. But you will not be able to do everything in both parks in one day — pick 4–5 priority rides and accept that the rest will have to wait. Two days is genuinely a much better experience.

What are Disneyland Paris opening hours?

Standard 2026 opening hours are 09:30 to 23:00, but exact times vary by season. Peak summer days often extend later into the night, while quiet January weekdays may close earlier. The resort is open 365 days a year. Always check the official Disneyland Paris calendar for your specific date before booking transport.

Do I need to book Disneyland Paris tickets in advance?

Yes, strongly recommended. Disneyland Paris currently requires park reservations linked to your ticket, and during school holidays the parks regularly reach capacity. Booking online in advance is also 30–50% cheaper than buying at the gate. Dated tickets (except basic Eco) can be cancelled free of charge up to 3 days before your visit.

Can I bring my own food and water into Disneyland Paris?

Yes. Unlike most other Disney parks worldwide, Disneyland Paris allows guests to bring their own food and water into the parks (no glass containers, no alcohol, no oversized coolers). Free water fountains are available throughout both parks. For a family of four this can save €40–60 a day.

What is the cheapest way to visit Disneyland Paris?

Book a 1-Day 1-Park dated ticket online during the Eco/Mini tier (mid-January to early February or first three weeks of September), take the RER A train from central Paris, bring your own packed lunch and water, and skip Premier Access — wait times during those weeks are short enough that you don’t need it. Total cost for two adults can come out under €150 including transport.

Is Disneyland Paris suitable for very young children?

Yes — Disneyland Park in particular (the castle park) is built around gentler, more child-friendly attractions like “it’s a small world”, Peter Pan’s Flight, Dumbo, Mad Hatter’s Tea Cups and the Disneyland Railroad. World of Frozen in Disney Adventure World is also designed to be accessible for younger guests. Several headline thrill rides have height minimums of 102–120 cm, so check ride requirements before going if you have toddlers.

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