EPCOT's Lightning Lane Premier Pass Sells Out for the First Time in 2025

Feb 13, 2025 in "Disney Genie"

Posted: Thursday February 13, 2025 10:04am ET by WDWMAGIC Staff

For the first time this year—and the first time since Lightning Lane Premier Pass became available to all guests—EPCOT's Premier Pass has sold out for February 15, 2025. This marks a notable shift, as EPCOT has previously seen consistent availability, even while Magic Kingdom frequently sold out.

Additionally, Disney's Hollywood Studios has now sold out for February 14, 15, 16, and 17, while Magic Kingdom's Premier Pass has extended its sell-out streak to include February 20.

What's Causing the Increased Sell-Outs?

Several factors are contributing to these growing Premier Pass sell-outs across multiple parks:

  • Valentine's Day & Presidents' Day Weekend Crowds – With February 14 (Valentine's Day) and February 17 (Presidents' Day) bringing higher attendance, demand for shorter wait times is increasing.
  • Rising Awareness of Premier Pass – Now that all guests (not just resort guests) can purchase Premier Pass, more people are factoring it into their trip planning.
  • EPCOT's Attraction Lineup & Lower Price Point – At $149-$249, EPCOT's Premier Pass is cheaper than Magic Kingdom's and provides access to high-demand rides like Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, Remy's Ratatouille Adventure, and Frozen Ever After.
  • Hollywood Studios Demand Growing – With Rise of the Resistance, Slinky Dog Dash, and Mickey & Minnie's Runaway Railway, Hollywood Studios is emerging as the second-most in-demand park for Premier Pass behind Magic Kingdom.

Current Premier Pass Sell-Out Dates by Park

Here's where things stand for the upcoming week:

  • Magic Kingdom: February 12-20 (nine consecutive days)
  • EPCOT: February 15 (first sell-out in 2025)
  • Hollywood Studios: February 14, 15, 16, 17
  • Animal Kingdom: Still available for all dates

How This Compares to Past Trends

EPCOT's last Premier Pass sell-out was in late December, 2024—during peak Christmas week crowds. This is the first time it has sold out in 2025 and the first time it has sold out under the new expanded purchasing rules.

  • Hollywood Studios sell-outs are becoming more frequent, suggesting it may follow Magic Kingdom in seeing more consistent sell-outs on busy dates.
  • Magic Kingdom continues to lead in demand, now selling out for nine straight days, the longest stretch on record.

What This Means for Future Availability

As more parks begin to see Premier Pass sell-outs, guests should expect:

  • More frequent EPCOT and Hollywood Studios sell-outs – These parks are now selling out, not just Magic Kingdom.
  • Earlier sell-outs for lower-priced days – Guests securing passes in advance means even non-peak dates could become competitive.
  • Potential for pricing adjustments – If demand continues at this level, Disney could introduce price increases to manage availability.

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tanc11 days ago

I used Lightning Lane for 3 days (EPCOT, MK, HS) on my trip, since this will be the last time I go I think until villains land opens. On EPCOT, I found it to be not that worth it honestly. It was nice being able to ride everything but walking half way across the park for one attraction really made it feel like it wasn't a super great value to begin with. Unless you methodically route a path around it, which imo kind of kills the entire purpose then I wouldn't get it for that park again. Or, I would just get normal lightning lanes and just deal with the fact I'd probably miss an attraction or two that day. For MK, it definitely felt like a much better experience overall. I was able to ride every single ride I wanted with minimal waits. It was one of the best days I've ever had at MK, practically as good as August 2020 waits and I had a total blast. But the price is so steep that I would likely only do this for a really big trip or if I know I'm not going back for a while. $400 is not cheap at all, but I can't say how good it felt to just walk past every line that had like an hour long wait, which many of them had reached. Basically was done MK by like 2:00 and rode like everything, was nice to go back to the resort and relax for a bit. For HS, I honestly felt like it was the park that it felt the most worth it. Since many attractions at HS are very close, it was a complete homerun and again the time save felt amazing. The price is even less than MK and I rode just about everything and you get passes for the shows as well.

Chip ChippersonMay 12, 2025

I used LLPP for the first time last week - Sunday in Epcot and Friday in MK (bookending a Wish sailing). It was certainly convenient to not have to worry about return times selling out or conflicting with other plans - and since Friday was our debarkation day, it allowed us to do a lot in a relatively short amount of time. We were celebrating a family member's graduation, so this fit the "special occasion" rule my wife and I enacted when LLPP was announced. With the cruise eating into our park time, it worked out well for us. We didn't arrive at MK until after 11 AM and still hit everything we wanted to. We started in Adventureland and worked our way around and did Jungle Cruise, Pirates, TBA, lunch break for some of us while the teens rode Tron and Space Mountain), Buzz, MILF, 7DMT, Pooh, Peter Pan, Small World, and Haunted Mansion all before 6 PM. After that we had dinner at Be Our Guest and decided to skip the last few remaining rides because thunder storms were moving in and we decided to not chance getting soaked. By my count tracking our waits vs the posted wait times, we saved 267 minutes (closer to 350 minutes for those who rode Tron and SM while us creaky-backed people ate lunch). I know posted wait times are often overstated, but at least 7DMT and HM had lines that looked much longer than their posted waits based on my previous experience (and we had experienced multiple standby wait times earlier in the trip at DAK that were longer than posted). In Epcot the previous Sunday, my estimated time savings was 220 minutes total for Spaceship Earth, GotG, Mission: Space, Soarin', Frozen, and Remy leaving us plenty of time for all of the festival food booths, topiary displays, and photos we wanted. Frozen went down at least twice that day and we managed to squeeze it in between those issues, so I'm not sure how much that impacted the wait time's accuracy. Overall, it was worth it for this trip - the prices weren't near their max and this was a special occasion for our group. It's definitely not something I would make a habit of doing as someone who visits multiple times per year, but it definitely made the trip better. Had we been staying at WDW all week instead of just before and after a cruise, we likely wouldn't have bought LLPP since we would have had EEH at both parks. We probably would have just added park hoppers to the tickets for the non-passholders in our party and added 2-3 days to the tickets with LLMP for DHS (skipped this time to avoid the May the Fourth crowds).

Splash4evaApr 22, 2025

Than Thank you! Will take a look

PurduevianApr 22, 2025

https://forums.wdwmagic.com/threads/lightning-lane-drop-times.984387/ I haven't updated it in months so I don't know if it is still accurate. Not going to lie, I did the work for it for my trip last November and figured I would share it with the forums (I also put it on Reddit), but I don't plan on updating it regularly. It's not to hard to do though if anyone wants to try to to update it. Using thrill data, it's pretty easy to spot trends. This is TSM for example. Anytime there is a consistent jump to Yellow or Green on most of the days, that's a drop time.

Splash4evaApr 22, 2025

Yes TP i was a member of and it worked like a charm each trip this past one in February was not at all successful only finding a few openings during the trip

Splash4evaApr 22, 2025

Thank you will take a look

nickysApr 21, 2025

Touring Plans “liners” keep an updated list. And for a while here I think @Purduevian had one running.

MickeyLuv'rApr 21, 2025

there's thrill ride Data. Some rides have a long list of potential drop times, but only some of them happen. TRD appears to have updated their list since just a few weeks ago. Previously, they had some of the drop times highlighted, which I took to mean the more likely drop times.

MickeyLuv'rApr 21, 2025

Android here

JD80Apr 21, 2025

This is not how you do statistics.

Splash4evaApr 21, 2025

Do we have an updated list and inventory drops?

Splash4evaApr 21, 2025

Disney has their reasons and whatever they are we will never know. We can guess but most likely never know but imo no wait line posted 60 minutes should never be off more than 10. No wait time of 45 should be off more than 5. Anything 30 and below should be accurate. So on and so forth with longer yet every person i talk with who goes all say same with more inflated wait times. Even if its to make the guest “feel good” its still a “deceptive” practice. And honestly. If you are a multi billion dollar corporation with a name like Disney (at least what it use to mean) and you need to inflate wait times to increase guest satisfaction you better re think your strategy Robert…

Splash4evaApr 21, 2025

Apple here if that helps…

MickeyLuv'rApr 21, 2025

A number of forum members thought reforming/reducing DAS would fix the problem. I also think how much times are off can be characterized in different ways. If the posted wait is 10minutes, and actually is 5, ten we could characterize the posted wait as only off by 5minutes, or we could say the posted wait was half the actual wait. Both would be correct. There is also the challenge of how to characterize some of the pre-shows like GoG and Rise. How often are any of us here willing to test the wait for accuracy when it is over 60minutes? I think most of us here know basic park touring strategy, so we don't get in line for 7D when standby waits are at their daily peaks.
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