Fans are hopeful that Walt Disney World will build a 5th theme park given the billions of dollars the company plans to invest on expansion in Florida. This makes the pessimistic prediction that a fifth gate won’t come to WDW any time soon…and shouldn’t! Here’s why it won’t happen, what we’ll get instead at Magic Kingdom and beyond, and why that’s better for fans. (Updated April 10, 2025.)

This is a topic that has been discussed to death by Walt Disney World fans for a while. As soon as Animal Kingdom opened, people began looking to the future again at what would come next. To some degree, this was understandable. California Adventure and Tokyo DisneySea both opened a few years later, with new parks in Paris, Hong Kong, and Shanghai after that. All offered amazing attractions and lands that Walt Disney World fans would love to see in Florida.

There’s been a lot in the last year-plus that’s given fans optimism that Walt Disney World will build a 5th (and even 6th!) theme park in coming years. This has once again kicked into high gear following the first media previews of Epic Universe, the new 3rd gate down the road at Universal Orlando. Which brings us to our latest update…

Epic Universe is being widely praised in early media reviews, which is unsurprising since it’s the shiny new thing featuring Nintendo, Harry Potter, How to Train Your Dragon, and classic Universal Monsters intellectual property. The park looks fantastic and will be a smash hit over time, without a doubt.

The media coverage thus far has been a bit frothy, with superficial analysis amounting to Universal has an excellent new theme park, therefore Disney will need an excellent new theme park. One particular piece that’s been gaining traction is CNN’s otherwise well-done review that includes this “expert” prediction:

“Disney and Universal are in the greatest boxing match they’ve ever been in at this point in time, and it’s a slug fest,” said Dennis Speigel, owner and founder of consulting firm International Theme Park Services. “I believe that within 12 to 16 months, Disney will announce its fifth gate theme park, because it’s necessary.”

Speigel predicated this on his analysis of Epic Universe, which is “too [expletive] good” as compared to all other theme parks around the world. “Is [Epic Universe] going to put Disney out of business? Absolutely not. Is it going to put a chink in their armor? Yes, it will,” Speigel said.

Frankly, this is nonsense. No offense to this dude, but it’s a dumb comment for an expert to make, and one that reeks of someone who knows that outlandish sound bites are the ones that’ll gain traction, so those are the ones to make. So I guess in that sense, it’s really clever as opposed to dumb, since he gets his name out there. But the analysis itself is dumb and unmoored from reality.

Just this week, Bob Iger Warned of Tariffs’ Impact on Disney’s $60 Billion Expansion Plans. While the executive’s comments used Disney Cruise Line as an illustrative example, we are more concerned about plans being scaled back or delayed for Walt Disney World. Even with the “reciprocal” tariffs now partially paused, some have already been implemented. And regardless of the tariffs, there’s a lot of economic uncertainty and travel trepediations as consumer confidence dips and fears of a recession rise. Against this backdrop, Disney usually pulls back on its investment plans, as opposed to doubling down.

On the other hand, Universal still seems to be moving full steam ahead. The company and UK government just announced Universal Studios Great Britain, and fresh rumors are swirling about the company’s aggressive expansion plans in Orlando after Epic Universe. However, we should point out that the UK park has been underway since 2023, and rumors are just that.

Even if Epic Universe is a huge hit among fans (and it almost certainly will be!), there are no guarantees that it’ll be an immediate commercial success. Everything we’ve heard thus far suggests that Universal Orlando’s own bookings are below expectations for June 2025 and beyond, hindered by its own ticketing strategy (aimed at preventing cannibalization) and the broader economic backdrop.

Suffice to say, Mr. Speigel’s prediction that Disney will announce a 5th gate at Walt Disney World in the next 12-16 months is exceedingly unlikely to be accurate. I’ll take that one step further: Disney will NOT announce a 5th gate at Walt Disney World in the next 12-16 years.

As for the next 12-16 months, we already know that announcement isn’t happening because the company already unveiled what’s essentially the 5-year plan for Walt Disney World back at last year’s D23 Expo. Take a look at Construction & Openings Timelines for New Lands, Rides & Additions at Walt Disney World for a rundown of all projects on the horizon, when closures would occur and when the reimagined replacements or new attractions would open.

Parks Chairman Josh D’Amaro emphasized that the time horizon for the D23 projects is not remote–everything discussed will “start to come to life over the next five years.” This officially rules out a 5th gate in the next 5 years. Honestly, we think it goes further than that.

It also more or less closes the door on a 5th gate in the next decade. First, because the nature of these projects reveals–or rather, reiterates–the kind of “expansion” Walt Disney World wants. For the most part, all of these projects are within the existing boundaries of the existing parks. They are expansions by virtue of increasing capacity and utilization, but that’s about it.

Only one of them meaningfully increases the footprint of the existing parks. There’s a reason for that: it’s more efficient and easier. If Walt Disney World is going this route with parks that are already built and, for example, replacing the Rivers of America rather than expanding beyond the berm to the northwest of Magic Kingdom, what reason is there to believe they’ll go the exact opposite direction and build a whole fifth park? There isn’t.

Second, because Walt Disney World announced a lot of projects for the next 5 years and they’ll end up costing several billions of dollars. We already know the total amount the company plans to invest in Florida (see below) and there’s realistically not enough left over to build a fifth gate in the 2030s. It’ll be more expansion just like the current 5-year plan. That is quite clearly the blueprint, and Disney’s most effective means of deploying capital. There is no compelling business case for a 5th gate–it’s all fan daydreaming.

One of the reasons some fans had renewed hopes for a 5th gate last year was the settlement of a lawsuit over the former Reedy Creek Improvement District. As a result, a joint development agreement has been reached between the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District (CFTOD) and Walt Disney World.

The development agreement commits the company to invest up to $17 billion from Walt Disney World over the next 10 to 20 years. Under the terms of the deal, Disney is required to invest at least $8 billion within the first 10 years of the agreement. Disney also agrees to fund at least $10 million in affordable housing projects and create a local business hiring program that would award at least 50% of all construction work to Florida-based businesses.

One wrinkle about the agreement that has caught the attention of fans is that it authorizes a maximum of five major theme parks, which is one more than the current count (Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom). It also allows a maximum of five minor theme parks (think Blizzard Beach, Typhoon Lagoon, and other niche concepts) as well as nearly 1.3 million square feet of office space, 1.7 million square feet of restaurant/retail space and 53,467 hotel rooms.

This has fans excited, because surely this language was included purposefully because Walt Disney World has plans to build a 5th gate, right? RIGHT?! Wrong. The agreement simply gives Disney the autonomy to build a 5th park–keeping its options open–without having to revisit the development agreement. Seriously, don’t read too much into this. It’s like how the land on your home might be zoned or conditionally approved for an ADU, even if you have no plans of building one.

The dead giveaway of this should be the fact that the development agreement also authorizes Walt Disney World to build three more minor theme parks…despite the company not even operating both of its existing water parks simultaneously. No one seriously believes Disney is going to build more water parks or other niche concepts, so why get your hopes up over a theoretical 5th gate that Disney has–not once–evinced an appetite to build. We already know what the company plans to do in the coming decade. And none of it is a fifth gate!

Even with tremendous optimism for the future of the Florida Project, we still do NOT expect a 5th gate at Walt Disney World. First, because both Iger and D’Amaro have specifically said they want to expand the existing parks. During the many interviews the two have given that discussed plans for the future and bullishness on parks, they talked about capacity-expanding additions. There are no shortage of quotes from Iger and D’Amaro about reimaginings and new lands at the existing Walt Disney World parks. There are zero about fifth gates.

Iger and D’Amaro are careful and deliberate when speaking publicly, choosing their words carefully. If there were plans for new theme parks, they’d say as much. Instead, they repeatedly have invoked Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, Toy Story Land, and Pandora – World of Avatar as the blueprints for how Disney plans to expand its parks and “invest in increasing capacity” and “opportunity within these existing footprints to optimize.” Those words are pretty clear.

If that’s not enough for you, there are the concepts that have already been announced or teased. Walt Disney World has now announced Tropical Americas in Animal Kingdom, Monstropolis in Hollywood Studios, and Cars Land as well as Villains Land in Magic Kingdom. All of these are lands that redevelop existing areas of existing parks while increasing the usable guest space in the respective parks. There’s really no need to speculate. D’Amaro and Iger have repeatedly and consistently shared the plan, and it is not for a fifth gate!

Fans are also looking at that headline $60 billion or $17 billion number and doing some dreaming of their own. To be sure, those are colossal sums of money. Taking just the $17 billion, which is conceivably enough for 5th, 6th, and 7th gates. That’s theoretically enough for roughly three new Shanghai Disneylands (~$5.5 billion upon opening in 2016).

However, there’s zero chance of a 5th gate at Walt Disney World costing that little unless it were done in the spirit of the OG Walt Disney Studios Park in France and, trust me, no one actually wants that mess. For one thing, construction isn’t as cheap in the United States as it is in China (that was also almost a decade ago).

Labor and material costs have skyrocketed and Disney doesn’t have a great track record of keeping costs in check. A new Disney theme park in Florida would easily cost $8 billion unless it were an absolute barebones, half-day park. And that’s before tariffs. After them? I can’t even begin to imagine the cost–perhaps north of $10 billion? I don’t know–I do not purport to be an expert on the degree to which steel and other raw material costs will increase.

On top of that, this is all of the CapEx at Walt Disney World over the course of a decade. Even Disney could build a new park for $6-7 billion, that would be a big chunk of that total, and would necessitate CapEx reductions in the existing 4 parks as compared to the last decade.

At first blush, $17 billion seems like a ton of money, but it’s actually only slightly above the last decade at Walt Disney World when adjusted for inflation (it may not be above it at all when looking exclusively at construction costs). To be sure, there were a ton of awesome additions over the last decade–and it’d be great to get another 10 years of that–but zero new parks.

Building a fifth theme park at Walt Disney World would mean that the Tropical Americas, Cars Land, and Villains Land projects, which they’ve already said are happening, wouldn’t be able to happen. (Rest assured, they very much are happening…along with a few other major unannounced projects that’ll cost at least a few hundred million a pop.)

Still, many Walt Disney World fans think a 5th gate must happen for one simple reason: as an “answer” to Universal’s Epic Universe. Many fans believe Walt Disney World needs to have a response to Epic Universe, and the only thing that can really compete with a new theme park is a new theme park. 

Assuming, for the sake of argument, that Walt Disney World had built a 5th gate and it also opened in 2025. At least when it comes to theme park fans or people wanting to do the hot new thing, Epic Universe and that fictional Disney 5th gate aren’t going to compete with one another–they’d both cannibalize attendance from the existing parks.

Walt Disney World will only ever build another theme park if it won’t pull away from its existing gates. You may also hate to hear this, but Walt Disney World is not going to build another park to reduce crowds or attendance in its current parks. There’s no scenario where they’re going to spend billions of dollars to tread water–that doesn’t make any sense.

Walt Disney World will only build another park if it can increase per guest spending via vacation duration and add at least ~8 million new visits to Walt Disney World’s cumulative total in its first full year. That would be a difficult feat. The average American’s vacation is between 4 and 6 days long, and that average has been on the decline for the last couple of decades with Americans leaving a record number of vacation days on the table (there’s article after article about the shrinking American vacation).

Anecdotally, we’ve heard from many travel agent friends that the most common “answer” from clients to rising costs at Walt Disney World is decreasing length of stay. Rather than doing a full week or 6 days, they’re doing 4-5 and avoiding weekends. There’s actually indirect data to support this–look no further than the slowdown on Saturdays and Sundays.

With the duration of the average American vacation on the decline, adding more gates is a tough sell. After factoring in travel days, many Americans already don’t have enough time to experience all four parks plus Disney Springs or water parks plus whatever Universal’s parks might siphon away.

This is a problem because it necessarily means that a new theme park at Walt Disney World would cannibalize attendance from the existing gates, at least among a good segment of guests. If the majority of visitors to Walt Disney World don’t have another park day to add, building a fifth gate is a nonstarter. It’s easier to get more people to come to the current parks than to take the current demographic and have them add another day.

As always, there are outliers–and those of you reading this who measure your annual time at Walt Disney World in weeks are exactly that. But if you’re reading this, you already do not match the median guest profile for Walt Disney World, so let me stop you right there. You are very much above average. It’s important that we don’t confuse our own vacation time or preferences for the norm.

Then there are the logistical impediments or reasons why building a new theme park would be less desirable than expanding existing gates. Staffing shortages have been a hot topic for the last couple of years, and although they’re largely resolved in the parks, it’s still not perfect. It’s a tight labor market, with nearly two job openings for every unemployed person. The root causes of this are beyond the scope of this post, but the bottom line is that it’s unlikely to change in the Central Florida hospitality industry.

Whether the local labor market (not to mention the housing market, which is already pricing hospitality industry workers out–that’s the reason why Disney is helping to build affordable housing) can sustain not just one, but two more parks, is an open question. It’s not just these parks, either. There’s the $1.5 billion Evermore Orlando Resort and dozens of other attractions and hotels that are under construction. All of these places need people to work at them.

Of course, Walt Disney World has the College Program and various other means of importing temporary workers from out of state–and that could certainly help provide the workforce necessary for a fifth gate–but thus far that has not been the case for their 4 gates in the last couple of years.

If Disney is going to allocate existing or additional employees to new developments, they’d probably prioritize timeshares and hotels over a theme park. There’s better ROI and less risk, and those are not nearly as resource-intensive. Personally, I think Disney is likely reticent to build new hotels in the near-term, but timeshares are full steam ahead.

When it comes to growing theme park attendance, the easier and more cost-effective solution is the one we’ve been seeing over the last several years: expanding the existing parks. Walt Disney World has already built out the capacity of its existing gates with attractions like Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, the Guardians of the Galaxy coaster, TRON Lightcycle Power Run, and Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge.

This approach of expanding the footprint of existing parks or replacing underutilized attractions is advantageous from Disney’s perspective because it keeps infrastructure costs lower. It also doesn’t require gambling big on a new, untried concept and having to throw more money at that in the future to boost its popularity.

With a new park comes new toll plazas, ticket booths, turnstiles, backstage facilities, roads, transportation hubs, and other infrastructure that already exists in support of the existing theme parks. These infrastructure expenses are not insignificant, and it’s difficult to justify their expenditures when the existing parks can be built-out without incurring all of these same costs.

Then there are the operating costs, which would also be higher with a new gate versus an existing gate with added capacity. New theme parks require more labor (see above) for staffing said toll plazas, ticket booths, turnstiles, transportation, and so forth. Simply put, expanding the existing parks is the conservative, cost-effective, and low-risk approach. It costs less for the company, and that means less expense to be passed on to consumers.

This brings us to the point that Walt Disney World should not build a fifth gate. Here, we’re switching gears from what will likely happen to what should happen. Frankly, Walt Disney World has no business thinking about another brand-new theme park anytime soon. I know this is going to get me some hate mail, but hear me out.

Fans love the idea of a 5th theme park because it’s a blank slate, capable of holding a long wish list of rides and lands. Instead of getting 1-2 rides here or there, we get a half-dozen new lands. I get it. A brand new theme park is sexy and exciting, and it’s fun to daydream about Florida DisneySea or whatever might be in your perfect park.

Don’t get me wrong–I would love to relive the feeling of setting foot in a brand new park that’s totally unfamiliar. There’s nothing like that–expansions absolutely do not compare! But I’m also a realist. It’s fun to dream, but the practical reality of a new theme park in the late 2020s or early 2030s would not be perfect or meet what you’re imagining; at best, it would open incomplete.

If this fictional fifth gate at Walt Disney World were on par with Walt Disney Studios Park (Paris), Disney’s California Adventure, or Hong Kong Disneyland when any of those opened, the experience would be utterly underwhelming. Building Shanghai Disneyland…as it exists today…in Florida, USA…in the year 2030 would cost at least $12 billion once all is said and done. Maybe more. Want Tokyo DisneySea? Say goodbye to the entirety of the $17 billion.

As exciting as that would be–and it’d be very exciting!–it’s difficult to advocate for that when Animal Kingdom is still a half-day park for most guests and in need of 2-3 more rides. When Disney’s Hollywood Studios needs more all-ages attractions so that its headliners don’t average 60+ minute waits. When EPCOT, even post-overhaul, needs another new World Showcase pavilion and reimaginings to a few rides at the front of the park.

And those are just the things that really should be done at the existing parks. That list did not include expansion at Magic Kingdom. Not because I think it’s a bad idea, but because Magic Kingdom “needs” the least help. (It’s going to happen, regardless.) There are a ton of discretionary projects that could happen at the existing gates to really improve them, and Villains Land is one of those.

Outside of the Dinoland plot, there’s a ton of unused or underutilized space in Animal Kingdom. That park already has great bones–now how about a couple of all-new (not replacement) lands–that turns it into a 1.5 day park? There’s endless potential at EPCOT. Backstage facilities could be relocated at Disney’s Hollywood Studios, allowing for the smallest park to become larger (and have an easier-to-navigate) layout. Imagineering is plenty capable of dreaming up tens of billions of dollars of fantastic ideas for the existing 4 parks at Walt Disney World.

If you’re not persuaded that fixing or building out the existing parks is the right course of action, I get it. The shiny new object (5th gate) is always going to be more exciting. But how about with this added to the mix: the infrastructure costs alone of building a new theme park would eat away at least $2 billion of that $17 billion. So unless you are a road and drainage enthusiast, those are sunk costs that would not enhance your vacation.

Stated differently, let’s say that if the company simply chooses to expand existing parks, we might get around $13 billion worth of new stuff, whereas we’d get $11 billion in total if there’s a new gate thrown into the mix. (I’ve already skimmed $4 billion from the top under the assumption that it’ll go to DVC/hotels or other non-attractions projects, regardless.)

For me, the answer is easy: I’ll take a maximization of the investment, and have that money allocated towards expanding the existing parks and reimagining rides that are currently underutilized or outdated. I know that’s not the exciting choice and might be an unpopular opinion. But the alternative is the current 4 gates stagnating for at least a full decade–and that’s assuming a new gate would be properly built-out in the first place, and wouldn’t require another decade to fix or expand.

As a Disney fan, I’ve lived through decades of stagnation and I don’t really want a repeat of that. From my perspective, the last decade was far, far better. Sure, I think everything took too long and a decent amount of money was poorly allocated at EPCOT. But at least part of that can be blamed on the pandemic, and hopefully that won’t happen again. If leadership coalesces around a clear vision for Walt Disney World’s 10-year plan, the fruits of that in the existing four parks could be fantastic.

The current parks are great, but they have a lot of untapped potential and room for improvement. I’d rather see billions of dollars invested into the current 4 parks than for them to be neglected for 10+ years. The good news, at least from my perspective, is that Walt Disney World fans don’t get a vote on this. My opinion and your opinion do not matter in the least–this is the route that Disney has already indicated it’s going to go.

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Your Thoughts

Do you think a fifth gate is on the horizon at Walt Disney World? Would you like to see $10 billion of that $17 billion spent on a brand-new theme park, or would you prefer it spent on building out the existing 4 parks? Do you agree or disagree with our reasons as to why one is unlikely–or desirable–in the foreseeable future? Any other thoughts or commentary to add? 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!