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Disney’s Genie Plus Explained: These 10 Tips Will Save Money and Time

Disney's Genie Plus Explained: These 10 Tips Will Save Money and Time | Frommer'scdorobek / Flickr / Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)

Disney’s Genie Plus Explained: These 10 Tips Will Save Money and Time

Is Disney’s Genie+ service worth the extra money? That’s debatable. One thing is for sure: It’s a waste of money if you use it the wrong way.

The app-based Genie service, which was introduced at Disney’s American theme parks in late 2021, evokes dread in casual visitors to the self-billed Happiest Place on Earth.

People who choose to vacation at a Disney park already struggle to navigate high costs and crowds. Genie, which purports to help guests plan the best times to enjoy attractions, adds yet another layer of complexity to deciphering the Disney system. 

Genie can perform a few functions, like devising suggested itineraries using algorithms for free, but let’s be honest: Most users only use it because it also grants paid Lightning Lane access, which allows for shorter waits on rides.

When you pay for special Lightning Lane line benefits through Genie, it becomes known as Genie+. (Click here to learn about Lightning Lane and how it works.) The price of that Genie+ benefit changes depending on how busy the parks are projected to be. At Florida’s Walt Disney World, Genie+ rates can now be as much as $25 to $39 a day. At California’s Disneyland resort, it’s up to $30 per day. 

For single-day visits, you are only given access to buy Genie+ on that day. It becomes available for sale via the Disney theme park app at the stroke of midnight on the day of your visit. 

We’ve already covered the much-maligned rollout of the Genie system and the challenges of its non-intuitive design. We also must warn you that frequently, Lightning Lane queue entrances get severely backed up and you’ll wonder why you bothered to spend the money for the fast lane. Now we’ll boil down Genie and, more specifically, its pay-per-day version, Genie+, to 10 essential rules for using the app successfully. Follow these and you’ll get through a day using Genie+.

1. Always make your next reservation for as soon as possible.

Once you make a Genie+ reservation, you’re blocked from adding more until one of three things happens: You use the reservation, the arrival window expires, or 120 minutes go by since making the reservation. So to maximize Genie+, you should try to use reservations and make new ones as frequently as possible. Granted, that means you’re going to be consulting your smartphone constantly, but that’s the hidden price of Genie+: It changes how you experience the parks.

The next available Lightning Lane reservation times are always listed in the Tip Board section of Genie. Given a choice between, for example, a 1pm time slot and a 3pm time slot, go for the 1pm if you’re equally excited about both rides. Using the earlier time will clear the way to make more plans sooner.

Reservations open at 7am, before park opening. If you don’t get started on your Lightning Lane plans until late morning or later, then many slots will already be gone by the time you begin. You’ll probably have to wait longer for the next reservation slots, which prevents you from getting your usage rolling. 

2. Start first thing in the morning.

The biggest mistake you can make with Genie+ is to start thinking about it only when you arrive at the park. By then, other Disney fans have already got a jump on you.

Genie+ works best for people who plan to start programming it before opening time. If you plan on arriving to the park later in the morning, you will get much less out of your money. In fact, you may find that future slots for the most popular rides are no longer available by lunchtime, or they are so far into the afternoon that if you take one, you’ll have no choice but to wait 120 minutes until you can make a second booking. You get the most out of Genie+ when you can use your ride reservations faster than that 120-minute lockout.

Ideally, you should only trigger the 120-minute rule about once a day so you can keep the redemptions rolling one after another.

Don’t get confused! The My Day tab shows your current daily schedule, but the Tip Board shows the next available Lightning Lane slot for each attraction. In the heat of the moment, it’s easy to confuse.

3. Schedule the popular rides first.

When you check available times for rides, you’ll notice that the biggest blockbusters start filling slots quickly. Even as soon as 8am or 9am, you may only be able to find available slots in the afternoon. In the Tip Board section of Genie, current wait times (“Standby Line”) are listed alongside the next available Lightning Lane times. If a ride has a very long wait time, it’s a safe bet that the ride’s daily Lightning Lane time slots will be among the first to get booked up, so use those Standby times to gauge whether you should snag a reservation while you still can.

It’s crucial to know which few big rides are excluded from Genie+ and require paid Individual Lightning Lane reservations. Each Disney park has one or two attractions that have a Lightning Lane that Genie+ can’t get you. Those attractions require a separate payment that can be as high as $25 per person per ride (yes, that’s in addition to what you paid to access Genie+), and each person can only book two such rides a day.

The list of Individual Lightning Lane rides changes over time (Disney requires individual charges for more rides when it’s busy), though it’s almost certain to include Star Wars: Rise of the Resistance, Avatar Flight of Passage, and Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, and Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind. For those, you must pay separately for Lightning Lane and it won’t be granted by paying for Genie+ for the day.

So that you’ll be certain, the Walt Disney World site lists attractions requiring Individual Lightning Lane reservations on this page; the Disneyland site lists them here. But the lists change depending on projected crowds.

Particularly in Florida, Individual Lightning Lane rides can sell out all their daily slots by late morning. Standard Genie+ rides (the ones included in the $15–and-up Genie+ daily payment) typically take longer to fill fully, but the most popular ones can book up by early afternoon in busy season. You’ll know the ride is about to book up when the next available time pushes far into the future.

4. Favor reservations that come due soon.

The sooner you use a reservation, the sooner you can get another one. Die-hard Disney fans call this “stacking.” Stacking rides one atop another, rather than waiting hours in between, gets you a lot more for your money. Genie+ works best when you swing from one Lightning Lane time to another, like Tarzan swinging from vine to vine without stopping.

This tip will help you speed up your options: You can redeem a reservation starting 5 minutes before the posted time. You can also book a new Genie+ Lightning Lane reservation as soon as you’re fully checked in for your previous one. (Some rides have two check-in posts—for those, you’ll need to clear both of them first. But technically you can book a new Lightning Lane appointment by the time you’re boarding the ride vehicle of your previous Lightning Lane wait.)

5. Modify if you can.

Available times may shift slightly as people cancel their original choices, and sold-out time slots sometimes reappear briefly. If you don’t see a time slot you like, keep refreshing the page (or leave the Tip Board and return to it) to shake up the options.

You might have to cancel a less favorable reservation in order to snag a new one. If you see a better ride time become available within the park you’re in, Disney gives you the option to swap out one reservation for another by modifying it, but you must be quick about it—coveted ride reservations may be snapped up by someone else before you have time to click yourself. For popular rides, the difficulty in securing a new return time can be so frustrating that you might be better off just sticking with your original time and concentrating on having fun at the parks.

If you want to swap a reservation with one on a ride in different Disney park, you’ll have to cancel your first reservation before changing parks in the app to book the other one.

It’s far better for you to modify a reservation instead of cancelling it and rebooking. That’s because when you modify, your 120-minute lockout time doesn’t reset, but when you cancel and make a new reservation, it does.

When you lose a better ride time because you were too slow, don’t give up. Keep refreshing, because another better time might still surface, and rides that were previously sold out of Lightning Lane may suddenly show availability. Refresh!

6. Don’t waste a reservation on minor attractions.

One reason Disney built Genie was to steer visitors to attractions that usually get less traffic, spreading crowds. So the options that the app shows you are full of filler. Lower-tier diversions such as Mickey’s PhilharMagic and Spaceship Earth are perfectly pleasant and worth treasuring, but the average Standby wait time doesn’t always justify the use of a precious Lightning Lane reservation.

If you want to know how the Walt Disney World attractions compare, buy the print or digital version of our guidebook—we appraise every last one.

7. Genie+ is not very useful if the park isn’t crowded.

When wait times are low across the board, you won’t save much time paying for Genie+. In fact, having to fuss with it might even drag down your fun. The day before your visit begins, use the Disney World or Disneyland app to monitor wait times. If they’re acceptable, you may be able to forego Genie+ entirely. 

There are some rides, like Twilight Zone Tower of Terror and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, that have queues that are configured in a way that even Lightning Lane guests must wait 15 or 20 minutes after entry before they actually board a ride vehicle. If overall wait times are only 20–30 minutes, Lightning Lane may not save you much pain.

Remember: Every single ride also has a regular line. If you don’t buy Genie+ or Individual Lightning Lane, you can always just wait in line. That’s the “Standby Time” that’s posted, and if it’s not long, you’ll be fine without the app.

8. If you only want to ride the big rides, Genie+ may run out of steam.

If you only care about a handful of favorite attractions and you have no interest in riding the majority of the rides, then you can probably do without paying for Lightning Lane via Genie+ and just wait in line like a regular person. Disney has a lot of rides targeted at small children. If you don’t have any kids in tow, were you really going to ride those rides?

At California’s Disneyland, the opposite is true: Very few of the classic Fantasyland rides participate in Genie+ there, and the app is good mostly for big-ticket rides.

9. Reservations for some shows play havoc with your schedule.

For rides, you are granted a one-hour window to use your reservation. But performances of some shows, like Festival of the Lion King in Animal Kingdom, follow a set schedule. So if you have a Genie+ reservation for guaranteed seating, you won’t be able to dawdle for an hour—you’ll have to be on time.

Generally speaking, we don’t like using Lightning Lane for shows—and for the sake of maximizing your dollar, we don’t recommend you do that, either. We tend to use Lightning Lane for the rides that always have lines.

10. If the system lags, sign out of the app and back in again.

When Disney’s systems glitch out, they don’t usually tell you why. Sometimes, the app will stop working but act like it’s still thinking. If the Disney tech stops working for any reason, it might be a simple time-out. Sign out and sign in again. Most of the time, that solves the issue. 

That’s why you should memorize your account email and password. You might need them several times during your day.

The biggest message we have about Disney’s Genie+ is that you should adjust your expectations.

In 2022, Walt Disney World’s managers quietly added this caveat to the fine print describing the Genie+ service: “On average, guests can enter 2 or 3 attractions or experiences per day using the Lightning Lane entrance.”

That means Disney itself has calculated that by using the paid Genie+ system, the typical guest will only be able to use, at most, three Lightning Lanes by for their money.

Ultimately, Genie+ is a system that takes more than it gives back, and Disney warns you about that in the fine print.

Obsessive fans argue that they’re able to wring many more Lightning Lane trips out of Genie+. But most casual visitors to Disney parks aren’t as well-versed in the attractions and attendance patterns—or they refuse to hunch over their smartphones all day to make that kind of efficiency happen.

Follow our 10 tips and at least you’ll be able to use Genie+ better.

You might also like: Disney’s Lightning Lane Is a Scam. Why Do People Keep Buying It?

You might also like: Can a Computer-Literate Great-Grandmother Figure Out Disney World’s Genie+?

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