Halloween is the longest event of the year at Walt Disney World, beginning in August and running until October 31, 2025. This guide to spook season covers everything you need to know about how Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom, and resorts celebrate fall–from food to special events, merchandise, and more. (Updated July 5, 2025.)
In terms of basics, we should start by acknowledging the reality that Halloween pales in comparison to Christmas at Walt Disney World. While the Halloween season is technically longer (3 versus 2 months), the holiday season is the biggest in scale and scope. See our Ultimate Guide to Christmas at Walt Disney World for everything you need to know about that.
Every park and resort gets into the holiday spirit for Christmas. By contrast, Halloween is largely confined to Magic Kingdom, Disney Springs, and a handful of other locations–and even then, it’s not as ubiquitous as Christmas. Nevertheless, if you’re planning on visiting Florida during the spook season months, we’ve got you covered with everything to make the trip as ghoulish (in a good way!) as possible…
For starters, one of the most common question we receive is When Does Walt Disney World Decorate for Halloween? If you’re planning a 2025 vacation, that’s worth checking out.
Also note that this guide does not yet cover the food that’ll be available specifically for Halloween. Walt Disney World typically releases multiple ‘foodie guides’ for Halloween–one for Magic Kingdom, one for the other parks, and one for Disney Springs and the resorts. We’ll share those here once available, which often isn’t until early August for Magic Kingdom, and late August or early September for the other locations.
Here’s everything else you need to know about the autumn at Walt Disney World…
Halloween Season Crowds
The crowd levels you’ll encounter at Walt Disney World during Halloween vary widely, which should be unsurprising since it’s a 3-month holiday. Generally speaking, weekends and school breaks are the busiest times to visit Walt Disney World from August through October.
This includes the first half of August, which is still summer vacation for most of the United States. See our August 2025 Crowd Calendar for further insights on good and bad times to visit in that month.
Historically, September is the least busy month at Walt Disney World, making pretty much any day during that month a good time to visit Walt Disney World. However, there are a couple of exceptions towards the beginning and end of the month. See our September 2025 Crowd Calendar.
October tends to be the busiest month of the trio due to fall break. In particular, the dates around Columbus Day are busy. However, the month as a whole hasn’t been as bad in the last few years, likely due to fewer conventions and also disruptions due to hurricane scares. It could be worse again in 2025, or remain more moderate. See our October 2025 Crowd Calendar for further details.
If you’d prefer dates to target and avoid, see our lists of the 10 Best & 10 Worst Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World in 2025-2026. The months of August through October have multiple weeks on both sides of the ledger.
Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party
Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party is a hard-ticketed event at Magic Kingdom that allows guests to celebrate the spook season at Walt Disney World. MNSSHP features special entertainment, trick-or-treating throughout Magic Kingdom, lower crowds (although you might not notice this if you hang out on Main Street all night) and shorter waits for most attractions. Lots of characters are out in the park wearing their favorite costumes – and you’re encouraged to wear yours, too!
Here’s a quick rundown of the major highlights at Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party:
- Hocus Pocus Villain Spelltacular! Watch 3 sinister sisters bewitch and bedazzle the residents of Magic Kingdom in this stage show.
- Disney’s Not-So-Spooky Spectacular—a wickedly wild fireworks display featuring some of your favorite characters and hosted by Jack Skellington, who appears in larger-than-life puppet form.
- See beloved favorite floats and characters during Mickey’s Boo-to-You Halloween Parade.
- Boogie down at the Disney Junior Jam at Cosmic Ray’s Starlight Café—featuring some favorite friends from Disney Junior shows. It’s perfect for young partygoers!
- Collect a bag full of candy as you roam the trick-or-treat trails in search of some of your favorite sweets.
- Revel in the extraordinarily enchanting atmosphere of Magic Kingdom during this limited-capacity event.
- A few iconic Magic Kingdom attractions have an extra-eerie vibe during the party. Feel the Halloween spirit with spooky music, special effects and more Space Mountain, Mad Tea Party, and Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor.
The marquee entertainment during MNSSHP is the first three entries above–stage show, fireworks, and parade. Those are the must-see aspects of the event.
Aside from 2020-2021 (when it didn’t happen), we’ve attended Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party at least once every year since 2008–including over a dozen times in 2019. If you’re on the fence about attending, see our most recent review: Is Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party Worth the $$$$? For what it’s worth, the last few years have been better than 2018-2019, so if you haven’t attended since then, it’s potentially worth reconsidering.
From all of those party nights–and ticket purchases–we’ve learned a lot about how it works, much of which is also covered in our Guide to Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party, which also covers whether it’s worth the money, strategy for the event, and much more.
Tickets for the 2025 Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party may now be purchased by anyone by calling 407-939-4240 or online at disneyworld.com. One thing to note is that the event starts a week later than normal this year, beginning on August 15, 2025 (still very early to start celebrating Halloween by real world standards!).
Tickets for most dates of Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party will sell out again in 2025, so we’d encourage you to make a decision to attend or not and buy tickets ASAP. If you sought out a guide to Halloween at Walt Disney World, you should probably attend this party, as it’s far and away the highlight of Halloween.
One final thing to note is the reason why MNSSHP is starting later than normal: Disney Starlight Night Parade. This is debuting less than a month before Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party starts, and it will only be presented on non-party nights from August through December 2025. This means that if you want to see Starlight, you’ll also have to visit Magic Kingdom on a different night when MNSSHP or MVMCP (the Christmas event that happens in November and December). We’re anticipating sky-high demand for Starlight, so expect those non-party nights to be very busy.
Minnie’s Halloween Dine
At Disney’s Hollywood Studios, there’s Halloween fun at Hollywood & Vine where Minnie’s Seasonal Dining is back for Halloween. You can get in the spooky spirit during Minnie’s Halloween Dine.
This is once again the normal experience. The buffet recently returned and the full character experience is back. As such, we once again highly recommend Minnie’s Halloween Dine, especially to those who aren’t doing Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party. Read our full Minnie’s Halloween Dine Review for photos of the characters, food, and more!
EPCOT Food & Wine Festival
It’s not even remotely themed to Halloween, but if you squint hard enough, the EPCOT International Food & Wine Festival might vaguely resemble a fall-themed offering. Depending on the year, you might find a handful of pumpkin-flavored snacks and other fall(ish) treats in EPCOT (if you search hard enough). Plus, the event has something of an Oktoberfest vibe (again, a stretch).
Regardless, Walt Disney World’s flagship fall foodie event is fun, and we highly recommend spending some time snacking around the world. Not only that, but this is the other “big” happening during Halloween season, so it’s worth highlighting even if it isn’t “Halloweenie.” See our Guide to the 2025 EPCOT International Food & Wine Festival for everything you need to know.
This year’s EPCOT Food & Wine Festival doesn’t start until Labor Day weekend, which means you’ll miss it if you visit for the first couple of weeks that Magic Kingdom is hosting Halloween in mid-August. We’d highly recommend timing your visit to catch Food & Wine–the lead-up to the event is One of the Best Weeks of the Year to Visit Walt Disney World.
Magic Kingdom Halloween Decorations
Magic Kingdom is the only park at Walt Disney World that really gets decked out for Halloween. There you’ll see iconic Mickey Head Pumpkin Wreaths on lampposts up and down Main Street and the Central Plaza in front of Cinderella Castle.
There are also pumpkins lining the second story of Main Street’s shops, with the carvings on each drawing inspiration from the businesses inside. In addition to that, there are some fall wreaths and other light touches to give the front of the park Halloween atmosphere.
Our favorite decorations of all are the Town Square “Pumpkin People” or Scarecrow Citizens of Main Street!
These are just some of the many decorations up and down Main Street and extending into Liberty Square at Magic Kingdom.
Disney Springs Halloween Decorations
Throughout September and October, you’ll find “Fall at Disney Springs,” which features seasonal decorations, photo backdrops, entertainment, and treats all around Disney Springs.
There’s not a ton to it, but Disney Springs definitely feels more like Halloween than anywhere at Walt Disney World outside of Main Street at Magic Kingdom. The decorations are nice, there’s plenty of Halloween merchandise, and some fun photo ops. We wouldn’t recommend making a trip to Disney Springs specifically for the fall/Halloween decor, but it’s neat to see on an already-planned visit there.
Halloween Merchandise
Guests visiting Walt Disney World during the Halloween season will find a variety of themed merchandise throughout the theme parks, hotels, and at various shops in Disney Springs.
There are Pumpkin Mickey and Hocus Pocus Spirit Jerseys, Pumpkin Mickey Ear Band, and variety of other options. See Halloween Merchandise at Walt Disney World for a look at everything.
Return to Sleepy Hollow
“Return to Sleepy Hollow” is (was?) a fun fall event held at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground. It has not been held for the last several years so it’s probably permanently retired, but other offerings that were ‘temporarily’ suspended have still been returning post-COVID, so maybe a comeback in 2025 is possible? Don’t hold your breath.
The evening includes a group viewing of the 1949 animated classic film the Legend of Sleepy Hollow inside the resort’s Tri-Circle-D Ranch stables. During event nights, you’ll be able to see galloping ghosts and experience an up close and personal encounter with the Headless Horseman. After the movie, there’s a dessert party where guests can enjoy Halloween-themed snacks and desserts.
In the last year it was held, the “Return to Sleepy Hollow” occurred at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground on select weekends in late September and October, plus the last full week leading up to Halloween. Here were those dates: September 28-30, October 3-7, October 10-14, 17-21, 24-31.
The reason it was cancelled previously was due to construction of Reflections — A Disney Lakeside Lodge, which also entailed building a new Tri-Circle-D Ranch. The latter project is now finished, and the reimagined results are pretty impressive.
Additionally, the lodge concept has been revived after a multi-year shelving, and it’s now known as Disney Lakeshore Lodge. This means more construction at Fort Wilderness between now and 2027, but it doesn’t really seem like that would impact the Return to Sleepy Hollow. It all depends on whether Walt Disney World has sufficient staffing and a desire to bring back the experience.
“Halloween” Attractions
This is where things start to become a stretch. Unlike Disneyland, there are no Halloween attraction overlays at Walt Disney World. That means no Nightmare Before Christmas-inspired Haunted Mansion Holiday, no Space Mountain Ghost Galaxy, and no “Monsters After Dark” for Tower of Terror.
Instead, Walt Disney World has two iconic haunted house/hotel attractions: Haunted Mansion and the Twilight Zone Tower of Terror. Both are open year-round and are not expressly “Halloween” attractions, but both share bloodlines with–and have served as inspiration for–iconic Halloween stories, movies, and more.
Other Orlando Halloween Events
Now in its 34th terrifying year, Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Florida is Orlando’s most famous Halloween event for adults, and our favorite current haunt season event. We typically buy Frequent Fear Passes that allow us to visit multiple times during September and October. It’s a great event if you want to be scared–but it’s not suitable for children.
The primary draw of HHN is the walk-through haunted house mazes. Around half are usually based on horror franchises like Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Beetlejuice, with the other half being original IP. There’s other entertainment including stage shows, the Halloween: Marathon of Mayhem lagoon show, and outdoor scare zones filled with hordes of scare-actors who try to startle guests. See our Ultimate Guide to Halloween Horror Nights for everything you need to know.
Howl-O-Scream has washed ashore at SeaWorld Orlando, and the fear is everywhere. At SeaWorld’s Howl-O-Scream, you’ll evade angry haunts as they rampage through scare zones. Seek shelter indoors, only to find you’ve entered a house of horrors. Deepen the thrill with a nighttime coaster ride. Quench your thirst for fear at a fiendishly interactive bar. Feel the monstrous electricity of a live show.
Above all, try to resist the haunting song of the one who has emerged from the lake. Evil is calling–with a howl and a scream. Experience 27 nights of fully immersive fear this fall from September 10 through October 31, only at SeaWorld Orlando. (Those are SeaWorld’s cheesy words, not mine. Since this event is brand new, we haven’t yet experienced it and are just rolling with the PR copy.)
That’s a wrap for our Guide to Halloween 2025 at Walt Disney World. As the spook season draws nearer, we’re expecting additional surprises and announcements will be made, so hopefully we’ll have more news to share as Halloween approaches.
So stay tuned. We’ll be sure to keep you posted and this guide updated accordingly!
Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!
Your Thoughts
How do you celebrate Halloween at Walt Disney World? Any other ways to get in the spook season spirit? Wish the other three parks did more to celebrate fall? Do you agree or disagree with our advice? Any questions we can help you answer? 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!