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Disney Parks Slash Ticket Prices for College Students, Effective From January

Stitch with three adults at character dining at Tokyo Disney Resort
Credit: Tokyo Disney Resort

Disney park tickets have become steadily more expensive over the past decade, reshaping how and when guests choose to visit. For many travelers, a single day at a Disney park now requires careful planning rather than spontaneity.

The shift has been most visible in the United States. Walt Disney World’s move to date-based pricing pushed peak-day tickets well beyond $150, with Magic Kingdom reaching as high as $209 for one day of admission.

Two young women outside the entrance of Downtown Disney

Credit: Disney

Disneyland Resort has followed a similar trajectory. During busy seasons, the highest-tier single-day tickets regularly exceed $200, and the Magic Key program no longer guarantees access every day of the year.

As prices rise, discounts have become increasingly targeted. Disney has focused on narrow promotions designed to stimulate demand without broadly lowering standard ticket prices.

Walt Disney World has leaned on Florida resident deals, limited children’s ticket offers, and seasonal hotel discounts. Disneyland Resort has repeatedly turned to Southern California resident promotions to drive attendance.

Three people sitting in a Space Mountain ride vehicle at Magic Kingdom Park

Credit: Disney

Internationally, Disney applies similar strategies, offering short-term regional discounts or seasonal incentives tied to slower travel periods. These offers tend to be tightly controlled and time-limited.

Now, one Disney resort is narrowing its focus further, introducing a ticket aimed specifically at a younger, budget-conscious audience.

Tokyo Disney Resort Introduces a College-Only Ticket

Tokyo Disney Resort is launching a new discounted option known as the College Passport. The ticket is designed exclusively for students enrolled in higher-education institutions.

The College Passport allows one-day admission to either Tokyo Disneyland or Tokyo DisneySea. Tokyo DisneySea remains a major draw, particularly following the opening of Fantasy Springs.

Mickey and Minnie in their new outfits at Tokyo DisneySea

Credit: Tokyo Disney

Fantasy Springs includes themed areas inspired by Peter Pan (1953), Tangled (2010), and Frozen (2013). The land has become one of the resort’s biggest recent investments.

Eligibility is limited to students enrolled in universities, graduate schools, junior colleges, and technical schools. Junior high and high school students are not included in the promotion.

Age is not a determining factor. Guests of any age may use the ticket, provided they can present valid student identification for an eligible institution, which may be checked upon entry.

Sales for the College Passport begin at 2:00 p.m. on November 13, 2025, and run through March 13, 2026. The ticket is valid for park admission between January 13 and March 13, 2026.

Donald Duck statue in World Bazaar Confectionery

Credit: Tokyo Disney Resort

Pricing ranges from 7,000 yen to 9,000 yen, or roughly $45 to $57, depending on the visit date. Standard adult one-day tickets during the same period range from 8,400 yen to 10,900 yen.

The discount is modest but meaningful, particularly for student groups traveling together. It positions the offer as an incentive rather than a deep price cut.

Purchases are restricted to the Tokyo Disney Resort Official Website and the Tokyo Disney Resort App. Ticket booths at the parks will not sell or modify College Passport tickets.

The College Passport launch coincides with the temporary return of the 1-Day Park Hopper Passport. That option will be available from January 13 through March 31, 2026.

About Chloe James

Chloë is a theme park addict and self-proclaimed novelty hunter. She's obsessed with all things Star Wars, loves roller coasters (but hates Pixar Pal-A-Round), and lives for Disney's next Muppets project.

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