When it comes to the holidays at Walt Disney World, there are three questions we receive more than any others. One of those is “when will Christmas decorations go up in the parks & resorts?” That’s what we’ll answer in this post. (Updated July 11, 2025.)

Just in case you’re curious, the other most common question is: “How do you get tickets to see the ABC Christmas Day Parade live in person at Walt Disney World?” (Sorry, we have some bad news on that one.) Rounding out the top three, “when are Christmas decorations taken down? (Answered in our Ultimate Guide to Christmas at Walt Disney World.)

As people plan their Christmas trips months in advance, it makes sense that this would be important information. This year, Walt Disney World officially kicks off Christmas on November 14, 2025. However, there are a couple of big exceptions to this that have already created confusion about when the holiday season will actually start and the parks will be decorated for Christmas.

In addition to that resort-wide holiday season start date, Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party in Magic Kingdom kicks off on Friday, November 7, 2025. This is a full week before the holiday season as a whole, which starts the following Friday. This is the biggest gap ever, which is undoubtedly the source of confusion.

Over in Disney’s Hollywood Studios, the Jollywood Nights Christmas Party starts on November 8, 2025. At the other end of the spectrum, the 2025 EPCOT International Festival of the Holidays starts on the Friday after Thanksgiving–and also ends earlier than the rest of the Christmas season. All of this is confusing, which leads guests to ask: when will Christmas decorations go up at Walt Disney World in 2025?

The answer is “it’s complicated,” but thankfully, it’s also based on literally decades of past precedent–so it’s relatively predictable. Walt Disney World’s Holiday Services team always gets a jump start on Halloween by putting up the more ambiguous decor in late October, and we’d expect that to continue in late October 2025.

The groundwork is quietly laid for this at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, where infrastructure goes up for Sunset Seasons Greeting, snow on Sunset Boulevard, and more. All of this infrastructure work is visible to keen eyes by mid-October. Of course, you’re probably not concerned with this–you presumably care about visible holiday decorations.

By late October 2025, expect to see tinsel stars in Hollywood Studios, luminaries in Animal Kingdom, and gingerbread house construction at the resorts, among other things. Some of this–like gingerbread house construction–necessarily occurs in October, as it needs to be ready for the start of the holiday season and takes a week or longer to complete.

If you’re hoping to see fully-fledged Christmas decorations at Walt Disney World, the good news is that they go up earlier than you might expect. No, not as early as the holiday aisles at Target or Walmart, but overnight decorating in earnest usually begins immediately after Halloween has ended. Like, literally overnight right as the fall decorations go down.

One of the common misconceptions about Walt Disney World and the holiday season is that all of the decorations appear overnight, all at once. There are a variety of reasons why this is a persistent urban legend. For one thing, it used to be true. Back when Walt Disney World was just two theme parks and a few resorts, the Holiday Services team did almost everything overnight.

Second, because Walt Disney World still releases time-lapse videos showing the transformation of Main Street USA from Halloween to Christmas. In large part, that does occur overnight–but even that now usually takes two nights, not just one.

Finally, it’s a matter of guest perception. You can leave Magic Kingdom one night and see Halloween decorations on your way out and enter the next morning to see the scene magically transformed to Christmas. It’s an impressive sight to behold, and one that you might be convinced happens “all at once.” However, not all of the details are there at that point, nor are the other parks totally decorated.

Anyway, perception aside, the reality is that Christmas decorations go up pretty early in the parks. Despite the Christmas season not officially starting at Walt Disney World until November 14, 2025, the reality is that decorations will go up before then.

Last year, Diwali occurred early and Walt Disney World installed lanterns and marigold flowers in the Asia area of Animal Kingdom, in front of the Andapur Theater District, to illuminate this space for the special season.

Known as the Festival of Lights, Diwali is celebrated for 5 or 6 days in different regions of India. This year, Diwali starts on October 20, 2025. This means we can almost certainly expect these decorations to be the first to go up for the holiday season at Walt Disney World, probably a few days in advance.

Around the same time, Discovery Island Luminaries will also go up at the front of the park. There’s no real world holiday coinciding with their installation to explain why that’s happening. It’s presumably because overnight crews are already there for Diwali, so they might as well knock out the Discovery Island Luminaries while they’re there. For the sake of reference, these were installed on October 24 last year. With Diwali happening a week earlier, expect this to occur mid-month in 2025.

This year, you can expect Magic Kingdom to be mostly decorated by November 1, 2025 and fully decorated before November 4, 2025.

This is a safe assumption because many decorations will go up as Halloween decorations come down. It’s also necessary to get Magic Kingdom done quickly because the first Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party will be held around November 7, 2025. Typically, the park is fully decorated by then.

Last year, most decorations went up overnight on November 1 and the Christmas tree was up by November 2. There were a few lingering decorations to install on the 3rd and 4th, but Magic Kingdom was 95% finished by the 2nd. This is close to consistent with past precedent.

Even before the first MVMCP, it’s likely that the first ‘Frozen Holiday Surprise’ will debut.

In previous years, Magic Kingdom was fully decorated by the time that debuted. That should further narrow down the range that decorations will appear in the park. Last year, Frozen Holiday Surprise quietly debuted on November 5. This is also normal.

The debut date for Frozen Holiday Surprise is trickier to predict, but adjusting for this year’s dates, it should start on November 4, 2025.

Another thing that’ll occur early is Jungle Cruise’s transformation into Jingle Cruise! This happens overnight, meaning that the ride is not closed for the overlay. It simply ends one day as Jungle Cruise and magically begins the next as Jingle Cruise.

Last year, Jingle Cruise began on November 2. Walt Disney World has not confirmed when Jingle Cruise will begin this year, but November 2, 2025 is a safe bet. That one does not get adjusted for day of the week, and could also shift to the 3rd or 4th based on overnight installation schedules.

Whenever Jingle Cruise does start, guests can experience this wild attraction wrapped with festive jokes and even more fun memories, something guests of all ages look forward to every single year. Jingle Cruise almost always begins on November 2 because Magic Kingdom’s holiday transformation is an overnight taking two evenings after Halloween ends. Jingle Cruise is part of that–so it’s all but certain that the rest of the decorating will likewise be done by the second day of November.

As noted above, the start of Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party on November 7, 2025 establishes a hard ‘deadline’ for decorations to go up.

It isn’t just that, though. Additionally, that weekend has been when the ABC Christmas Day Parade and Thanksgiving Specials are filmed at Magic Kingdom (to indirectly answer another question). Assuming this trend continues, and we fully believe it will, that’s another reason why Magic Kingdom will be fully decked out ASAP.

It’s also worth noting that some ‘one weekend only’ decorations go up around Cinderella Castle for the parade filming. It’s also worth noting that portions of the Central Plaza are typically blocked off from Thursday through Sunday as the crews install the special infrastructure needed for the “aerial” and other footage in the parade.

Animal Kingdom and Disney’s Hollywood Studios will be next up after Magic Kingdom.

The timeline with both of these parks is a little less certain. Animal Kingdom and DHS have been known to put up more ‘ambiguous’ holiday decorations in late October (see above). In fact, the tinsel stars at Disney’s Hollywood Studios are usually the very first decorations to go up at Walt Disney World, often appearing by the second to last week of October.

Last year, everything but the Christmas tree was up at Disney’s Hollywood Studios by November 5. The tree was up on November 6. Again, that park has a two-night installation process for the bulk of the decorations.

Nowadays, Disney’s Hollywood Studios tends to be the focus after Magic Kingdom because it hosts Jollywood Nights. This means that all Christmas decorations will be up by November 8, 2025 at the latest. (We’d expect a repeat of the November 5-6 timeline, in actuality.)

There are a lot of decorations that will be visible during the daytime hours, but the finished product won’t be ready and the lights likely will not be lit up at night until closer to the official start date of Christmas 2025.

Disney Springs also begins its Christmas offerings in early November. Sometimes that happens gradually, so expect some items not to be up until the following week. Admittedly, we don’t spend as much time at Disney Springs or follow it as closely, so I can’t offer the precise decoration cadence for Disney Springs. And you probably don’t care as much anyway.

Animal Kingdom is next up after Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Keep in mind that, as discussed above, many of its decorations quietly go up in October. As really, what’s happening in November is installation of the more overtly Christmasy decorations, such as the tree.

Last year, the Christmas tree outside Animal Kingdom was up by November 10. We’d expect a similar timeline this year, perhaps as soon as November 8, 2025.

EPCOT is the last park to get in on the holiday time fun, and that’s because the lucrative EPCOT International Food & Wine Festival runs until late November. Consequently, decorating for EPCOT will begin before Thanksgiving and finish by November 23.

Last year, the iconic Christmas tree went up on November 13. The date for this installation varies more from year to year than the other three parks since Food & Wine is still ongoing. As a result, some of the resorts are prioritized before EPCOT.

Because of this, we hesitate to offer a prediction for EPCOT’s Christmas tree. It could be as early as November 9 or as late as November 17, 2025. I’ve seen the EPCOT Christmas tree during some Veterans Day weekend visits, but not others. In any case, all of the decorations throughout the front of the park and in World Showcase take longer.

Our hope is that all 4 parks have their icon trees up by the time Christmas officially begins on November 14, 2025. But Walt Disney World did make clear that the EPCOT Festival of the Holidays doesn’t start until later.

The resort hotels are the true wildcard. Last year, decorations went up about a week earlier than normal throughout the resorts. We are anticipating that this trend will continue, with almost all major hotels (Deluxe and Moderate Resorts) having their Christmas trees, gingerbread displays, etc. up by mid-November.

For whatever reason, Wilderness Lodge and Animal Kingdom Lodge always seem to lag behind the other Deluxe Resorts. Precise dates are difficult to offer, but Wilderness Lodge sometimes is around November 15-18 and Animal Kingdom Lodge is around November 17-21. The goal is having all of this done before Thanksgiving week. (That would be Monday, November 24, 2025.)

Gingerbread displays are prioritized, likely because these are accompanied by snack stand kiosks that generate revenue selling snacks. The dates for these are highly variable. The teams that do some of the fabrication and installation work usually start at Grand Floridian in late October or early November, then move on to the Contemporary, followed by the Crescent Lake resorts. This is a process, and takes longer than the rest of the decorations–even though there are far fewer resorts that get the gingerbread houses.

For reference, here are the gingerbread display opening dates from last year:

  • Grand Floridian – November 6
  • Contemporary Resort – November 8
  • Beach Club – November 10
  • BoardWalk – November 12
  • Animal Kingdom Lodge – November 24

While the lineup of gingerbread displays has yet to be announced for this year, Walt Disney World did already reveal that Grand Floridian’s Gingerbread House is Cancelled for Christmas 2025. This is due to construction, but as discussed in that post, we suspect it will never return. At least, not to its old location in the lobby.

It’s unclear whether a different resort will receive a gingerbread display for Christmas 2025 to offset that loss. While the neighboring Polynesian might seem like an obvious choice, it’s already packed with people year-round, so we doubt that. Wilderness Lodge used to have a display, so that strikes us as more likely. Or maybe a wildcard, like Riviera Resort–increased foot traffic there might be a good way to boost DVC sales!

Usually, Holiday Services can do an entire resort in a single night, with teams deployed to multiple resorts simultaneously. This means that, for instance, Wilderness Lodge (usually done in mid-November) will be completely transformed into the Christmas spirit overnight–in the same evening that Port Orleans French Quarter, for example, receives its holiday decor.

However, due to the sheer number of resorts throughout Walt Disney World, even if Holiday Services decorates two hotels in a single night, the process would still take over two weeks to complete. Moreover, there are no hard and fast rules as to the order that resorts receive their decorations. It varies from year to year.

With all of that said, if you’re visiting on or after November 1, 2025 you’ll start to see some decorations at Walt Disney World. By that weekend, you’ll see even more items installed–the process should be about half-finished.

By November 4, you will find that the 3 of the 4 Walt Disney World theme parks are either partially or fully decorated and some of the resorts are decorated. If you visit a week after that, you’ll have the same amount of in-park decorations, but now half of the resorts will also be decorated. Another week and the resorts will be totally decorated. Visit for Thanksgiving week or at any point in December, and everything at Walt Disney World will be decked out for Christmas!

For comprehensive tips for planning your Christmas-time trip to Walt Disney World, check out our Ultimate Guide to Christmas at Walt Disney World. For Walt Disney World trip planning tips and comprehensive advice, make sure to read our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide and related articles.

YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you think of Walt Disney World’s ‘process’ for getting decked out for the holidays? Is November 4, 2025 too early for Christmas decorations? Are you excited to experience the holidays at WDW? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!