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That Passport Life with Kevin McCullough

Mousetrap: The New Disney Glow Up

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If there is one thing Disney understands better than almost anyone on earth, it’s anticipation. And in 2026, the House of Mouse is preparing one of the most ambitious years of upgrades, expansions, and immersive storytelling experiences the parks have seen in over a decade.

For travelers, families, and Disney adults who secretly still cry during fireworks shows, 2026 may be the perfect time to plan a return trip.

At Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, the biggest buzz surrounds the continued transformation of Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios. Disney has confirmed major expansion plans inspired by Cars and Disney Villains, finally giving some of the darker and more mischievous characters their own dedicated experiences. Imagineers are reportedly creating immersive environments that feel less like rides and more like stepping directly into a film.

Meanwhile, EPCOT’s multi-year overhaul finally comes fully into focus in 2026. New nighttime entertainment, upgraded festival spaces, and enhanced interactive attractions are designed to restore EPCOT as Disney’s most sophisticated and visually stunning park. Families can still enjoy the nostalgia, but adults traveling without kids may quietly admit EPCOT has become Disney’s crown jewel again.

Over on the west coast at Disneyland Resort, Disney is leaning heavily into expansion and capacity upgrades. The long-awaited DisneylandForward initiative begins visibly reshaping the resort footprint, allowing for entirely new attractions, entertainment districts, and immersive storytelling lands. Fans are also expecting additional Marvel experiences at Disney California Adventure, continuing Disney’s strategy of integrating blockbuster franchises into park life in increasingly cinematic ways.

At Disneyland Paris, perhaps the most dramatic visual transformation is taking place. Walt Disney Studios Park is evolving into Disney Adventure World, anchored by the hugely anticipated Frozen-themed land complete with Arendelle architecture, mountain scenery, and a massive lagoon centerpiece. New nighttime spectaculars and upgraded dining concepts are also helping Paris quietly become one of Disney’s most beautiful resorts anywhere in the world.

In Asia, Tokyo Disney Resort continues its remarkable run as arguably the finest-operated Disney property globally. The spectacular Fantasy Springs expansion—which introduces worlds themed to Frozen, Peter Pan, and Tangled—will be fully integrated into guest experiences by 2026, making Tokyo an absolute bucket-list destination for Disney fans.

At Hong Kong Disneyland, the enormously successful World of Frozen continues drawing global visitors, while Shanghai Disney Resort keeps expanding its cutting-edge attraction lineup with technology-forward ride systems and immersive environments Disney has increasingly used as a testing ground for future innovation.

But perhaps the biggest change coming in 2026 is less tangible.

Disney parks are becoming more personalized, more immersive, and more experiential than ever before. The line between attraction, film, live theater, and luxury travel continues to blur. Visitors are no longer simply riding rides. They are entering worlds.

And whether you’re standing beneath the fireworks at Cinderella Castle, sailing past Arendelle in Paris, or wandering the lantern-lit pathways of Fantasy Springs in Tokyo, Disney’s greatest talent remains unchanged:

Making grown adults feel like kids again.

 

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