Best Starlight Night Parade Viewing Spots & Tips to Beat Magic Kingdom Crowds!

Disney Starlight Night Parade is drawing crowds to Magic Kingdom in the evenings, with Main Street packed over an hour in advance. Our guide covers best & worst views, so you can spend less time waiting, see the parade and Happily Ever After fireworks, make a quick exit, or photograph it from the #1 location. These field-tested tips & tricks help you show up 30 minutes or less and still score a spectacular last-minute spot.
This is Walt Disney World’s first night parade in roughly a decade, and first new night parade since I was a kid. And I’m not young. Consequently, the parade route is packed with people. We cannot overstate how busy Main Street in Magic Kingdom is on certain evenings for Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away and the Happily Ever After fireworks.
Starlight is going to have that “new parade smell” for a long time. This shouldn’t really come as a surprise to fans, as even the mediocre Disney Enchantment was still drawing massive crowds towards the end of its run as Walt Disney World’s 50th Anniversary wound down. Starlight is much better than that. For the best view, guests are currently camping out approximately two hours in advance to see Starlight on busier dates.
This was especially true during the recent Party Season, when Magic Kingdom closed at 6 pm on several nights per week for Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party. That meant the park was only performed on 3-4 nights per week, essentially consolidating a full week of crowds into 6-8 performances as opposed to 14. Same story for the Happily Ever After fireworks. Unsurprisingly, the area in front of Cinderella Castle was chaotic and crowded most of those nights.
This is not meant to scare you out of watching Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away. The night parade is absolutely worth it, and as we mentioned above, you do not need to show up 2+ hours in advance to pre-claim and then camp out. Great spots can be easier to get if you know what you’re doing, which is the whole point of this guide.
In fact, I’ve already seen Starlight over a dozen times from more than 10 different viewing locations. This guide has been devised based on my firsthand experiences with seeing Starlight in-person at Magic Kingdom on some very busy nights early in its run (even in high crowds, motivated guests can catch Starlight up to 4 times per night). Those experiences were likewise informed by watching Main Street Electrical Parade and SpectroMagic hundreds of times back in the day. Here’s everything you need to know…

2026 Showtimes for Disney Starlight Night Parade
Before we dig into viewing tips, let’s start with the basics. With the end of the aforementioned Party Season and start of 2026, Walt Disney World has scaled back the Starlight schedule, with a single showtime on weeknights. Here’s the full Magic Kingdom nighttime calendar:
- Starlight Parade: 7:45 pm
- Happily Ever After: 9 pm
- Starlight Parade: 10 pm*
*Note that second Starlight performances are only occurring Friday and Saturdays throughout January 2026. It’s expected to return other busy weeknights, potentially around Presidents’ Day. Hopefully the full schedule returns by Spring Break.
These times do shift throughout the year based on sunset and park ops, so be sure to check the daily entertainment schedule if you’re visiting long after this is published.
One big recommendation we’d make right off the bat is visiting on a Friday or Saturday night if at all possible, and seeing the second Starlight performance. Those days are not the busiest of the week for Magic Kingdom, but they are when locals turn out in the evenings to see entertainment. Not double the number, though. (Maybe 1.25x to 1.5x?) Meaning the second parade is much less busy!

Reverse Parade Route for Starlight
Starlight begins on Main Street U.S.A. and travels along the parade route towards Frontierland to allow for better guest flow at the end of the night. This is consistent with what Magic Kingdom previously did for Main Street Electrical Parade and SpectroMagic, and unlike most other parades.
Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away travels in the “reverse” direction, up Main Street towards Frontierland for both performances. The rationale for this reverse route is pretty simple: it allows for the parade to pass guests closer to the exit, and then those guests to exit the park in a orderly fashion.
There is a steady stream of guests able to leave their spots as Starlight passes, meaning crowd flow regulates itself naturally. This is much better than the alternative, which is how the first Paint the Night plays out at Disneyland, with a guest cavalcade trailing the parade that’s so packed with people that it looks a bit unsafe!

Starlight + Happily Ever After
Many guests strategically select Starlight spots that will also be good for Happily Ever After. Even once the showtimes shift, this dynamic will exist because the gap will still be similar.
This is logical, and it results in the Hub/Central Plaza being far and away the busiest viewing area for Starlight. That’s because you aren’t camping out 90 minutes to 2.5 hours for just Starlight, but a combined 2-3 hours for both. While this is certainly one option, it’s not necessarily what we recommend.
Instead, we’d advise staking out a lower-demand spot towards the front of the park and following Starlight up along the route. You will not be swimming upstream in this case so long as you’re fairly close to the back of the parade. This is the way the crowd immediately behind Starlight will flow.
The exodus in the other direction occurs with a bit of a lag, so you can “draft” on the parade deeper into the park and secure a prime spot for Happily Ever After with relative ease. (See Best & Worst Magic Kingdom Fireworks Viewing Spots.)

You might consider taking this a step further, securing a spot in Town Square near Main Street Theater and immediately heading up the parade bypass corridor once Starlight passes. You can then arrive deeper onto Main Street near the Plaza before the parade even passes, and fairly easily work your way into the Central Plaza.
At some point, this bypass does convert to one-way traffic out of the park, but that shouldn’t be the case at this point. A similar approach works on the other side of Town Square and going through the Emporium (now you know why that corridor was widened).
What I cannot overemphasize with any of these approaches is that you need to be ready to move as soon as the parade passes. Don’t spend 5-10 minutes gathering your group. That will result in fighting the crowd as you will be swimming upstream.
However, there’s still an even better approach…

Earlier vs. Later Starlight
The first performance of Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away is always busier than the second performance. It’s not even a remotely close call. This should make sense, as Magic Kingdom’s core demographic is families with small children, and staying until after 11 p.m. is a big ask for many of them. Even many guests without kids don’t realize that the second parade is significantly less crowded.
If you only take away one thing from this viewing guide, it’s that you should watch the second Starlight Night Parade instead of the first if at all possible. That’s the #1 tip, as that is the single easiest and best option for spending less time camping out. Not only are the crowds easily twice as large for the first parade (although that could change over time), but they also arrive twice as early.

So instead of watching Starlight and then Happily Ever After, flip the script and watch Happily Ever After and then Starlight. (The biggest downside of this approach is not doing an end-of-night ride, at least with the current 9-10-11 schedule, unless you’re really aggressive!)
Guests are several rows deep during the first performance, whereas that does not happen for the second Starlight. There are times where you could score a front row spot for Starlight as the parade is stepping off, especially in Liberty Square and Frontierland.
Whereas many guests arrive 90 to 120 minutes before the first performance, that isn’t even possible for the second. There isn’t that much time on the clock once Happily Ever After ends. This means that the ‘dust settles’ on the parade route around 10:30 pm, which is about the earliest people will start camping out for the second showing.

What Time(s) to Stake Out Starlight Spots
The parade route starts filling in about 60-90 minutes in advance of the first performance, and this is currently the ‘sweet spot’ if you want a spot on Main Street. This will change over time as crowd levels decrease and increase, but it’s a good rule of thumb.
The first area to fill up is the Central Plaza in front of Cinderella Castle (closer to 90 minutes), followed by up and down Main Street USA (60 minutes), and then Town Square (less than an hour). Frontierland and Liberty Square are slowest to fill up, with spots available for the first parade 30-45 minutes before Starlight steps off.
Just keep in mind that it takes longer for the parade to get to Tiana’s Bayou Adventure than it does Main Street Theater, so 60 minutes in Town Square vs. 45 minutes in front of Pecos Bill ends up being about the same. And those earlier viewpoints also allow more time to position for Happily Ever After or, alternatively, beating the post-parade crowd out of the park or to attractions with shorter waits.

For the second parade, you can arrive much later. The most popular spot will fill up immediately after Happily Ever After and Main Street will become busy ~30 minutes in advance, but Town Square often has a scattering of front row spots after that, sometimes up until 15 minutes before the second parade steps off. Over in Frontierland and Liberty Square, you might find a prime spot shortly before the parade arrives.
In fact, I’ve been able to find a spectacular location ~10 minutes before the parade arrived. This is not abnormal, especially if you’re willing to stand. You can walk up to a good view fairly last minute on many nights for the second performances, whereas you’ll be several rows deep and have your view obstructed if you try that with the first performance.
It is not difficult at all to have a decent view even if you arrive right as the parade does. It probably won’t be front row if you’re on Main Street, but it might be in Liberty Square or Frontierland. I’ve scored great spots arriving after 11:15 p.m. at the end of the parade route.

Best & Worst Photography Spots for Starlight
My all-time #1 spot for pretty much any parade is right behind the flagpole with a view up Main Street (aka Christmas Tree Point). This is hardly a secret, and is the preferred vantage of 9 out of 10 photographers. And there are a lot of Disney fan photogs out there. This is still one of the first stops to fill up, despite the fact that Christmas Tree Point is an objectively awful spot for Starlight due to the reverse parade route.
The underlying idea is the same for Starlight, it’s just a different spot due to the reverse route. My ‘secret’ hack for securing parade spots has long been to camp out off to the side where a rope will go up at some point to create a viewing area on the street. This happens in both Town Square (in front of the Emporium) and the Central Plaza (Crystal Palace side) because Starlight loops around both, creating viewing areas in what would otherwise be street.
This hack normally works well at tourist-centric Walt Disney World, but locals and photographers are well aware of this trick. Consequently, the street section fills up early, too. Below is how this looks in the Central Plaza:

Unless you are a photographer, we do not recommend this spot in the Central Plaza. Yes, it offers a picture perfect view with Cinderella Castle in the background. But it comes with serious downsides.
The first is that its the fastest to fill up for the first parade, as space is extremely limited in this area. This means arriving at least 2 hours in advance, and then doing this awkward song and dance. If the rope isn’t up yet (it won’t be), you’re just standing in the street like a dummy, impeding crowd flow. This annoys other guests.
That’s assuming Cast Members allow you to stand there 2 hours in advance. If they don’t (and they probably won’t), you are then doing a different (but equally awkward) song and dance with other guests who are also “competing” for this spot. We have already seen tensions flare here and guests exchange heated words, which then becomes doubly awkward as they are presumably camped out next to one another for a couple hours. Not exactly the ideal vibe for enjoying a parade!

It’s no better after the fireworks. While the spot is objectively easier and less time-consuming to secure, the bigger problem is the Magic Kingdom mass exodus. There is a steady stream of guests trying to exit the Central Plaza…and this wall of guests trying to fortify their positions, riot police style.
We have also seen tensions flare between regular guests trying to exit and this line of photographers, but I guess the upside is that the line is unified and not adversarial with one another, and the upset guests are still exiting the area. Either way, don’t bother with this unless you are a serious photographer.
I would argue that it isn’t even necessary for most photographers (save for those wanting most or all of Cinderella Castle). I really like this spot when using a wide angle lens, but would not bother if using anything above 35mm. There are easier alternatives.

Best & Worst Viewing Spots for Starlight
While the Cinderella Castle view in the Central Plaza is the single most competitive spot for seeing Starlight, the entirety of Main Street is a close second. The good news is that there’s much more space up and down Main Street, so there’s both more capacity and lower demand.
The bad news is that it’s still very popular. And honestly, the corridor of Main Street is a bit overrated for viewing Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away. It’s the first section to fill up and even if you put in the hard ‘work’ for a front row spot, you still might have your view obstructed.
This is because the parade is not coming straight towards you on Main Street. The parade is only approaching you if you turn sideways, in which case you’re looking past other guests who are in line with you. This creates a potentially awkward dynamic where guests reaching out with their phones or cameras, or even just leaning out, can partially block your view.
For this reason, if you must watch from the Main Street curb, we recommend putting a trash can between you and the Train Station. It’s an imperfect solution, but gives you a bit of a buffer. Obviously, this also means sitting/standing next to a trash can, which can be annoying if you’re there for an hour-plus and people are constantly throwing away their trash. Unless your name is Oscar.

When it comes to Main Street viewing, my favorite spots are either behind Partners (basically Starlight’s version of Christmas Tree Point, except with the Train Station as a background instead of Cinderella Castle) or near Casey’s Corner (behind a trash can).
Both have the advantage of long approaches and the parade then curving past the route. Behind Partners is definitely better from this perspective, but it’s also in higher demand for the first parade due to Happily Ever After viewing.
I would only recommend these locations for the second parade; they fill up too fast for the first. Since Starlight debuted, I’ve been able to score both of these spots less than 30 minutes before showtime. I’ve tried before the first parade, and both were total nonstarters even 2 hours in advance.

My #1 viewing recommendation for Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away is around the bends in Town Square.
I would strongly recommend being on the outer perimeter of Town Square as opposed to the inner circle. You also want to be at one of the curved sections, as opposed to the straightaway directly under the Train Station. This is important because the parade curls around Town Square, so most spots along the outer perimeter will give you a longer view of the parade. You see it approaching and crossing directly in front of you. Better for enjoying and for photography.
In addition to seeing the floats as they round the corner and come towards you, providing side and front angles of the floats from a distance, you will also see another ‘layer’ of floats on the other side of Town Square. This gives greater depth to the parade and makes it more enjoyable.

If you watch Starlight from the Main Street Theater side, this also makes for a quick exit to beat the mass exodus, if you so desire. Or, as mentioned above, you can take the bypass in the other direction and find yourself deeper in Magic Kingdom before things get chaotic.
Although technically part of Main Street as opposed to Town Square, this recommendation includes the final ‘bend’ that’s directly in front of the Emporium. This spot can be busier for the first parade, but it should be easy to grab a Happily Ever After fireworks in the middle of Main Street back by the Emporium and then moving to the curb for the parade.
This makes for a lower stakes 1-2 punch of the fireworks followed by the parade, as opposed to the other way around. Perhaps most importantly, this makes for a quick and easy exit after the parade passes at park closing. You should be able to beat the rush and be on a bus, boat, or monorail by around 11:30 p.m., which is difficult from spots further down Main Street or in Frontierland and Liberty Square.

Throughout the parade route, I favor locations where the curvature of the parade route is such that the floats are heading directing towards you and pass in front of you. For the most part, this same idea actually applies in the Central Plaza–I just wouldn’t recommend it for the first parade since it fills up so fast.
Another good spot like this is in Liberty Square in front of the former Riverboat Landing, or on the opposite side across from Hall of Presidents. Most of the spots in this area are pretty good–you just don’t have a great backdrop.
There are also a few sections of this route that only allow a couple rows of viewing. It’s a similar story in areas of Frontierland; there are also spots there that allow for elevated viewing. Just be sure where you’re standing is actually parade viewing and not a crowd flow corridor (look for tape on the ground).

You’ll probably find a lot of advice elsewhere that Liberty Square and Frontierland are the best Starlight spots because they’re the least crowded. This is technically true, but again, you’re waiting longer for the parade to arrive.
This means that you cannot beat the mass exodus. You also cannot secure a good spot for Happily Ever After. Finally, you cannot beat the crowd deeper into Magic Kingdom to ride Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, TRON Lightcycle Run, or other headliners (except Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, but that isn’t high-demand at night in the first place).
These are all things to give significant weight to if you’re watching the first Starlight performance. It’s not just how long you wait before the parade steps off, it’s total time commitment and how your parade spot sets you up for what comes next. If you’re watching the second Starlight, there’s honestly no point settling for a subpar spot given the ease of securing better spots.

One way that Frontierland or Liberty Square can make sense for the second parade is if you race to a ride immediately after Happily Ever After and then grab a last minute spot for Starlight.
You might be able to knock out Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, at which point it’s too late to return to Main Street. Scoring a spot in Liberty Square is easier at that point, both in terms of navigating the parade route and being bought a bit of extra time until the floats arrive.
I’m also a big fan of a couple specific spots in Frontierland and Liberty Square. The first is directly opposite Sleepy Hollow, right on the other side of the bridge. This can give you a clean shot of the parade coming across the bridge with Cinderella Castle in the background (see above).
The other is anywhere in Frontierland that’s elevated. There are several such spots, including in front of Country Bear Jamboree. As an added bonus, these views behind the first row of people provide enough clearance that you can watch the parade approach from a distance, and take photos that have Cinderella Castle in the background (see below).

Finally, a couple of recommendations. The first is that you don’t need to sweat Starlight too much. If all of this sounds overwhelming, or if you’re not a parade person but still want to check it out, you can get a “bad” back row spot with ease at the last minute and not miss much.
As covered in our Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away Review, this parade has a terrible ground game. This partly seems purposeful, as most of the floats are large and elevated, allowing for a great view even from a distance. So even ~5 rows deep, you’re seeing 95% of what matters just fine.
My last piece of advice would be grabbing something to eat while waiting for Starlight. Everyone is going to advise sending a runner to Casey’s Corner or Sleepy Hollow for hot dogs or waffles. And that’s sage wisdom–I’d recommend likewise. But this blog is all about deeper cuts, and zigging when they zag. So my advice is doing that, but also sending a runner over to Auntie Gravity’s in Tomorrowland for Salted Caramel Soft Serve. This ice cream hits the spot, and the short line plus the walking will still take less time than Plaza Ice Cream Parlor on Main Street.
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Your Thoughts?
Have you tried watching Starlight Night Parade at Magic Kingdom? Do you have favorite and least favorite viewing spots? Like or dislike the ones we’ve recommended? First versus second showing Starlight? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment on crowds and the hassle of securing spots for the first parade? Any questions? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

I 4th the question about strategy for seeing HEA then the second parade. My thought is forgoing seeing castle projections and rising 7 dwarves during the first parade, Watching fireworks from behind the castle, then heading to adventure land or the spot mentioned by sleepy hollow for the parade.
Hi Tom, Sarah and Baby Bricker,
Love your Blog!!! We are coming to Walt Disney World the week of Aug. 7. We always buy the Dessert Party for the Fireworks. Just the best way to handle the crowd for the fireworks in a secure fenced in area! The Dessert Party starts at 8:30pm. Starlight starts at 9pm. Do you know if we will be allowed to go into the fenced in area for Starlight viewing and for the Fireworks? You and Sarah have the best info on all things Disney! Hopefully, you guys will have the answer. Trying to have a plan in place before we go. Thanks for all of your great blogs keeping us all informed!!!
Hi i had the same question…..if i buy the dessert party am i getting a “bonus” now for parade and fireworks viewing? Thanks for all your great info always!
We did a post-fireworks dessert party on Friday 7/25. We checked in and entered the fenced viewing area by 8:30. We could see the 9:00 parade from there but not as well as a seat on the sidewalk. We could see the top half of the floats (shrubs/people blocking the bottom half). We could not see the dancers on the ground between the floats, other than the lighting pieces some of them wear above their heads. It was enough to keep our kids engaged while waiting for fireworks!
Thank you for this very helpful information.
I know they’d never do it, because Magic Kingdom has already staked out paid viewing areas for dessert partygoers, but I would love the option to use a LL/ILL for a reserved viewing “dot” like in Tokyo. Seeing the nighttime parade was so much easier when I could just sit down on my number about 20 minutes before show time. I paid about $14 apiece for Dreamlights premiere access, and I would be willing to pay a Rise of the Resistance level ILL price for my family of 4 to avoid this. And I am not a person who typically buys LL/ILL in the US parks. Take my money, Disney!
What would your recommendation be for seeing Happily Ever After and the second parade? We have our tried and true method for getting a decent spot in the hub without much of a wait for Happily Ever After without the parade, but I’m not sure how the added variable of the first parade will affect our Happily Ever After strategy.
I’m wondering the same thing. My guess is that MOST people in the hub for the 1st parade aren’t going to leave before the fireworks, so it may be a lost cause. (I’ve waited ~45 minutes to see the fireworks from the hub.)
Thanks for the great tips. Always enjoy reading your blog. My family is planning to do the pre-party fireworks dessert party in 2H of August after most schools are back. Any tips on if we should rush the dessert portion to snag a parade viewing spot or just enjoy the party and watch the parade elsewhere after? Thanks!
Thanks for the great tips. Always enjoy reading your blog. My family is planning to do the pre-party fireworks dessert party in 2H of August after most schools are back. Any tips on if we should rush the dessert portion to snag a parade viewing spot or just enjoy the party and watch the parade elsewhere after? Thanks!
Good call on the map, everyone. I realize this is like a firehose of info and that would be helpful. I’ll work on making one and add it in an update–stay tuned!
Thanks for another incredibly helpful guide. One topic that would help less experienced folks would be a general guide to parade and fireworks viewing. You’d be surprised by how confusing the specific “rules” are for people who have never been or only been a few times. We may only have once chance to get it right! For example, how do guests know where they can line up? I know we can sometimes see tape on the sidewalk or look for places on the ground where stanchions & rope will be set up. I have heard of people who staked out a spot and lined up along the tape, only to learn that CMs remove the tape just before fireworks and then the space in front of them filled with people! Beginner tips to avoid these pitfalls would be so helpful even if they are obvious to more experienced people 😉 (I recognize that this post is chock full of many excellent tips- just sharing that more of this is helpful and appreciated.)
There’s no great way to avoid scenarios like this. They’re thankfully fairly rare, but they do happen.
My tip with this type of thing is to ask more than one Cast Member if you’re in an area that seems questionable (don’t ask in quick succession–do so over the course of ~20 minutes or so). Even doing this, I’ve had that type of last minute thing play out.
Tom: Hands down you have the best and most comprehensive viewing spots lists on parade and fireworks viewings! I will echo other commenters’ request for a map, as I think you’ve done it for other articles.
WDW hasn’t posted the parade schedule for when I’m at MK yet (Aug 7), but this guide will be indispensable for picking a spot. Hopefully I get two viewings of Starlight when I’m there: one from the reserved HEA viewing area, and one from your recommended spots after I gorge myself on sweets and champagne for the post-fireworks dessert party.
Please post a map, showing these points. For mere mortals who don’t know MK intimately, its much easier to understand than having our noses stuck in phones trying to decipher your directions.
Tom do you think they will offer some type of dinning / viewing package anytime soon?
No clue–sorry!
To be perfectly honest, I’m shocked that they haven’t already. Feels like they’re leaving a ton of money on the table.
I believe there’s a typo in the first paragraph in the “Starlight and Happily Ever After” section. The first parade clears the Central Plaza at roughly 9:30, not 10:30, which is why that is relevant for getting in position for Happily Ever After.
We saw the first parade on Monday, 7/21. We were a party of 6 including two small kids so we weren’t going to stake out a place hours ahead of time, and staying until past 11 would have been tough. We found a good spot across from Pecos Bill near the popcorn cart/walkway at 8:40 PM. Of course, we were behind a guy with a grandchild who informed us he was saving spaces for 3 more adults and a child. (They all showed up around 8:59). Regardless, we had a good view. This is an elevated spot. The parade arrived at 9:24. (My husband is one who keeps really good notes lol.)
When we saw it, Whimsy was not working at all – there was just a blank/black space at the front of the train. Hope this is fixed soon! But we all loved the parade and I can’t wait to see it again.
Thanks for the catch–you’re correct about the typo!
Interesting about Whimsy. I also saw that parade performance (albeit at two earlier points) and there was no issue. There also weren’t any problems at 11 pm or the following days. Guessing something just happened towards the end of the route? Hopefully it’s not a persistent problem.
We saw Starlight on the second soft opening night (7/19), so I don’t know if there were lower crowds for that than post-debut given the last minute nature of the announcement. But we hopped over from our Test Track preview and dinner at Epcot, so we got to MK about an hour before the parade started. We didn’t even try Main Street for that reason, although I was pleasantly surprised as we were walking through that a second row seat would have definitely been doable as long the family placeholders weren’t saving spots for more than the first row (big “if” there). So we went to Frontierland and grabbed a front row spot right across from Country Bear Jamboree approximately 35 minutes before 9.
Because of this, we had a we’ll take what we can get philosophy for HEA. Much to my shock, we were able to get all the way to the middle left of the street going through the hub. We were a little off center from the castle, but this ended up being an excellent view since this meant we had a great view of the castle and projections, plus the full bursts because being off-center meant the turrets didn’t block part of the fireworks. I had never tried that angle before and loved it. Plus only one shoulder kid in our area to navigate around! There was also plenty of space to spread out along Main Street for the 11 pm parade that night. We were just too beat from being in the sun all day to stay out any longer.
Again, I don’t know how replicable this will be with real crowds and not just the preview crowds, but it worked out great for us and we might try this strategy again intentionally next time!
We were probably within a few hundred feet from one another on multiple occasions–I was also surprised at the pre-fireworks exodus on that night. It hasn’t been like that the next several nights, but I also wouldn’t say the fireworks crowds have been bad by any stretch.
Parade crowds have also been worse, but I wouldn’t call them bad (save for opening night). The worst is definitely yet to come from October through December.
We always get behind a trashcan just down from Casey’s towards the exit for party parades. No one stands or sits in front of you and we mobile order from Casey’s while we wait! Trashcan table (you get a tray from Casey’s to sit on top it) are the best. Literally CM cone clean them ever 20 minutes! Probably cleaner than many folks tanked at home!
We then move just past Casey’s towards castle for fireworks – again with a trash can in front. Once they are over we head down the sidewalk to the exit. You avoid all the street traffic congestion heading out if you stay on the sidewalk.
this parade looks awesome. can you watch it from the train station as well?
The first performance is always VIP, but “sometimes” is the answer for the second showing.
I saw the Train Station open once and passed on it and haven’t been able to get up there for any night since–it’s always been closed. Once the park is busier, I suspect they will *need* to keep it open for viewing.
Do you have a post like this for Paint the Night? You probably have no interest in seeing it a dozen times from different spots lol but I’d love a super detailed recap on best/worst spots to watch. Maybe the smaller Disneyland footprint doesn’t require the same strategizing.
This is chock full of great information. Unfortunately, I think my brain needs “Xs” on a map. I’m having such trouble picturing the best spots.
If we’re planning on watching Happily Ever After and then the second parade, what time would you recommend to stake out a spot for Happily Ever After?
Is the handicap seating areas still still across from the Hall of Presidents?
Yes, that’s where it was when we were there on Saturday!