Disney World Brings Back 'Good-to-Go' Dates for Annual Passholders in Early November 2024

3 hours ago in "Ticket Annual Pass - Disney Incredi-Pass"

Posted: Wednesday October 30, 2024 9:35am ET by WDWMAGIC Staff

Walt Disney World has added two new "Good-to-Go" dates for annual passholders on Tuesday, November 5, and Wednesday, November 6, 2024.

These dates let passholders enter the parks without making an advance reservation, offering more flexibility for spontaneous visits. The most recent "Good-to-Go" date was October 1, making this a welcome return after a short hiatus.

The "Good-to-Go" perk was introduced in January 2024 to help alleviate the need for passholders to plan visits far in advance, especially on specific lower-attendance days. Since Disney World implemented the park reservation system in 2020, passholders have often had to secure a reservation alongside regular guests, creating more planning than some were used to. The "Good-to-Go" dates give passholders opportunities to visit without reservations on selected days, helping them experience the parks with a little extra freedom.


Annual Passholders may also continue to visit without a park reservation after 2 pm unless visiting Magic Kingdom on a Saturday or Sunday (blockout dates continue to apply).

To use the Park Hopper benefit, Annual Passholders must make a theme park reservation for the first park they plan to visit AND enter that first park prior to visiting another. Or, they can enter a theme park without a reservation on a "good-to-go" day for that park or after 2 pm (except Magic Kingdom on Saturdays and Sundays) before visiting another park.

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Brian53 minutes ago

Should be very quiet with the initial battles of the civil war and whatnot. ;)

threvester3 hours ago

Didnt you just say the parks havent been busy for 2 years? According to you, you are 100% wrong about the parks being busy for Jersey week...respectfully

Sirwalterraleigh15 hours ago

Jersey week. Been a thing for about 20 years… It falls on an election week often…it’s not slow People stay home for elections now?

SoFloMagic15 hours ago

Election day and the day after. Should be slow

Sirwalterraleigh16 hours ago

lol…jersey week? 🤪

SingleRider19 hours ago

“Oh, welcome back, unfavorables! We have a few less busy days, so please come to our parks!”

DCBaker20 hours ago

November 5 and 6 have been added to the calendar as Annual Passholder good-to-go days. The last good-to-go days were September 29 and October 1.

Sirwalterraleigh5 days ago

The hubris is what is shocking. I get that people were caged and Americans aren’t geared for that…so there was an artificial demand created…but that will subside and the cost will look insane. Disneyland has a totally different landscape. There is ZERO reason to have reservations for APs at wdw. They’re just trying to hold on to their desire to make you go where they want. I know of what I speak: those parks are NOT crowded and haven’t been for 2 years. Every “the parks are mobbed” is 100% wrong. You don’t know what you’re looking at and what to gauge. Respectfully 😎

SoFloMagic5 days ago

That sucks. For sure. But they clearly advertise that it's subject to bookings. Now they don't make it known that 100k locals want to get in each weekend, but.... I don't think I'll even understand disneyland culture.

Sirwalterraleigh5 days ago

Double layer of restrictions Blackout windows up front and a first come, first serve (so they say) on top of that stretches the bonds of logic

IanDLBZF5 days ago

DLR does not do that at this time.

SoFloMagic5 days ago

They're sold as requiring reservations. We just don't like it. Although it's not bad at WDW as we can enter after 2 with no reservations. Not sure if DL does that.

Sirwalterraleigh5 days ago

Crazy idea: honoring an annual pass as they are sold

Vegas Disney Fan5 days ago

I would love an option like this. I’d love it if Disney went to tickets based on number of days rather than the current AP system, day 1 is full price with each additional day being 25% off the previous price. $150 for day 1, $115 for day 2, $85 for day 3, $65 for day 4, $50 for day 5, $35 for day 6, $30 for day 7… THEN every day after that is an additional $30. So a 10 day pass would be $740, a 15 day pass would be $950, a 20 day pass would be $1160, a 25 day pass would be $1370, a 30 day pass would be $1580, a 100 day pass would be $3320, etc… if someone wanted to go all 365 days they technically could, their price would end up being $11630 though (or $32 a day on average). So the first week would be $530, then each additional day would be $30. The APs get a deal but there’s still a substantial enough charge most people won’t be using their pass hundreds of days a year, so Disney wouldn’t need to require reservations. Special days like Christmas, New Years, etc could be a higher price day ($50-75), still a deal for the APs but expensive enough that all the APs don’t show up and overwhelm the park. I think this system would do 2 things simultaneously, 1) provide more value to the average guest and encourage them to take multiple trips a year and 2) also encourage the super AP user not to come 100+ days a year, to the point Disney gets less and less value from them.