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After 5 Months, Major Orlando Airport Puts out First Official Warning to Disney World Travelers

A large crowd in Magic Kingdom with Cinderella Castle in the background
Credit: Lee (myfrozenlife), Flickr

America’s 7th-largest airport just issued a major warning, saying travel to and from Walt Disney World over the next 72 hours will be chaotic and difficult.

Here’s what you need to know.

A guest with a backpack navigates the bustling park crowd near a prominent yellow "BEWARE" sign, adding to the thrill as Disney World and Universal Orlando guests attempt to either fly home or fly into their theme parks through January 4, 2026. Spirit Airlines Orlando flights

Credit: Inside The Magic (Emmanuel Detres)

MCO Sends out New Alert for All Walt Disney World Vacations

There is a very specific feeling that comes with arriving in Orlando at the start of a holiday weekend.

For some families, it starts the moment the plane begins its descent and someone catches a glimpse of palm trees outside the window. For others, it begins inside the terminal, somewhere between baggage claim, rental car counters, stroller traffic, and the first overheard conversation about Magic Kingdom fireworks. Orlando is not just another destination airport. For millions of travelers, it is the front door to something they have been planning, budgeting, and dreaming about for months.

But this weekend, that familiar arrival-day excitement may come with something else: long lines, crowded terminals, packed roadways, and the very real possibility that guests will need more patience than usual before the vacation magic fully begins.

A surprising shift is unfolding in Central Florida as Memorial Day weekend collides with a major moment for Walt Disney World. Orlando International Airport is preparing for a massive holiday travel period, and while the numbers may sit slightly below last year’s record-setting Memorial Day levels, the experience for guests could still feel anything but quiet.

The image is split into two: on the left, a Disney adult sitting in a Florida Airport appears upset with their head in their hands; on the right, a large Mickey Mouse figure is displayed against a blue sky, reminiscent of Disney World travel.

Credit: Inside The Magic

Orlando Is Preparing for One of Its Busiest Travel Weekends of the Year

According to sources, Orlando International Airport is expecting nearly 902,000 total travelers between May 21 and May 26, with Memorial Day itself projected to be the busiest day of the stretch. Approximately 165,000 people are expected to move through MCO on Monday alone. Departures are forecast at 451,081 passengers, about 4% below 2025’s record-setting 468,698 departures.

That small year-over-year dip may sound reassuring on paper. In reality, guests flying in or out of Orlando should not mistake “below record levels” for “easy.”

MCO said the forecast reflects changing airline operations, including schedule adjustments meant to maximize seating efficiency and carrier-level service changes. Even with those shifts, the airport said demand remains strong as travelers head out for the long weekend.

For Disney World guests, that means the vacation may begin before they ever scan into a park. The first real test could be finding space at baggage claim, navigating rideshare pickup, waiting for rental cars, or getting through security on the way home.

Walt Disney World Resort to the right of the image and a woman in an airport delayed to the left of the image, with a guest waiting at a Florida airport, as Spirit Airlines ends service to 12 cities.

Credit: Inside The Magic

Disney World Is Adding More Reasons for Guests To Arrive Right Now

The airport surge is not happening in a vacuum. Walt Disney World is entering one of its most active seasonal windows, and Disney has given families several reasons to make this particular weekend feel bigger than a typical summer kickoff.

Cool KIDS’ SUMMER officially runs from May 26 through September 8, bringing limited-time character experiences, resort activities, water park offerings, and family-focused entertainment across Walt Disney World. Disney’s official summer guide lists offerings such as Jessie’s Roundup at Magic Kingdom, GoofyCore at EPCOT, Bluey’s Wild World at Animal Kingdom, and Disney Jr. Mickey Mouse Clubhouse Live! at Hollywood Studios.

That matters because Disney vacations are rarely casual decisions. Many guests are not simply “stopping by.” They are building entire trips around openings, previews, seasonal entertainment, festivals, and the chance to say they were there when something new began.

For longtime Disney fans, this feels significant. The resort is not just relying on nostalgia; it is stacking the calendar with fresh experiences, returning favorites, and character-driven moments designed to pull families deeper into the parks.

A yellow caution sign is superimposed on a split image; one side shows a crowded Orlando International Airport terminal and the other displays a busy scene at Disney World and Universal guests as the government shutdown begins as of October 1, 2025. Disney World and Universal Orlando park closures.

Credit: Inside The Magic

Guests Could Feel the Pressure Before They Even Reach Disney Property

The biggest challenge this weekend may be the emotional whiplash between vacation anticipation and travel reality.

A family may land excited to see Bluey, ride the new Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run mission featuring The Mandalorian and Grogu, or experience Soarin’ Across America at EPCOT. But before any of that happens, they may be standing in a crowded terminal with tired kids, delayed bags, or a rideshare price that suddenly feels much higher than expected.

MCO is encouraging passengers to plan ahead by arriving at the security checkpoint two hours before a flight and reaching the gate one hour before departure. That guidance is especially important for Disney guests who tend to squeeze every final park hour out of departure day.

This is where many vacations can get stressful. A guest who assumes they can leave EPCOT, grab luggage, return a rental car, clear security, and make a flight with minimal cushion may find themselves gambling with the wrong weekend.

The smarter move is to treat MCO like part of the itinerary, not an afterthought.

A look at crowds headed to Cinderella Castle from Main Street, USA at Magic Kingdom Park. Disney World 2027 Free Dining Plan

Credit: Disney Dining

Fans Should Build a Flexible Plan Instead of Chasing a Perfect One

Guests traveling this weekend should expect pressure points at nearly every stage of the trip: airport security, rideshare areas, rental car facilities, hotel check-in desks, park transportation, dining availability, Lightning Lane demand, and evening exit crowds.

That does not mean the weekend is doomed. Far from it. In many ways, this is exactly what Orlando does best: absorb huge waves of travelers chasing major vacation moments.

But guests who navigate it well will likely be the ones who adjust expectations early.

Arriving earlier than usual, mobile-ordering meals before peak times, checking flight status repeatedly, using the My Disney Experience app strategically, and avoiding overly tight park-to-airport timelines could make the difference between a magical weekend and a meltdown. Families with young children should also consider building in breaks, especially with new kid-centered offerings likely to draw heavy interest.

Guests are already reacting to a summer calendar that feels unusually packed, and the timing of Memorial Day only intensifies that energy. The excitement is real. So is the crowd pressure.

Crowds on Main Street, U.S.A. in Magic Kingdom at Disney World. Walt Disney World 2026 performance and leadership change. Magic Kingdom Lightning Lane Premier Pass. Disney World Spring Break Crowds

Credit: Marada, Flickr

This Weekend Could Preview Disney World’s Entire Summer Season

What started as a holiday travel forecast may end up becoming an early preview of what guests can expect from Orlando’s summer season.

Nationally, AAA projected 45 million Americans would travel at least 50 miles for Memorial Day weekend, making Orlando one of the key destinations in a broader holiday movement. At the same time, Walt Disney World is leaning into a summer strategy built around family experiences, recognizable characters, refreshed attractions, and reasons for repeat guests to come back.

That combination could make this weekend feel like more than a travel rush. It may be the unofficial opening act for a very crowded, very competitive, and very emotionally charged summer at Disney World.

For guests, the message is not to cancel plans or panic. It is to prepare differently. The magic is still there, but this weekend, it may take a little more time, patience, and planning to reach it. And as Orlando continues to grow as one of the country’s most powerful vacation gateways, weekends like this may become less of an exception and more of a sign of what the future of theme park travel now looks like.

About Emmanuel Detres

Since first stepping inside the Magic Kingdom at nine years old, I knew I was destined to be a theme Park enthusiast. Although I consider myself a theme Park junkie, I still have much to learn and discover about Disney. Universal Orlando Resort has my heart; being an Annual Passholder means visiting my favorite places on Earth when possible! When I’m not writing about Disney, Universal, or entertainment news, you’ll find me cruising on my motorcycle, hiking throughout my local metro parks, or spending quality time with my girlfriend, family, or friends.

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