How to Beat the Heat at Disney
& Universal With Kids
Florida theme park heat is no joke. Here’s how to stay cool, keep everyone hydrated, and actually enjoy the day — from park open to the evening fireworks.
Florida theme parks in the summer are no joke. The humidity alone will have you reconsidering every life choice by noon — and that’s before you factor in a toddler who’s hit their limit in the stroller queue for Tomorrowland.
The good news: a little planning goes a long way. Families who stay cool and comfortable aren’t just lucky — they’ve figured out a few things in advance. Here’s everything you need to know to keep your crew happy and hydrated all day long. If you are building out the rest of your trip around these strategies, our Itinerary Builder lets you map park days and rest days together so the full schedule accounts for the heat before you leave home.
Arrive early, rest in the middle
This is the single most effective strategy for a summer park day. Mornings in Florida are genuinely pleasant — low 80s, manageable humidity, and a fraction of the afternoon crowds. Aim to be at the gate 20 to 30 minutes before opening.
As temperatures peak between noon and 3pm, plan a deliberate midday break. Head back to your hotel, hit the pool, and let the little ones nap. You’ll return refreshed — and the park is noticeably quieter in the late afternoon and evening. If you are staying on Disney property, our guide to the best Disney resort pools for families helps you pick a hotel where the midday break is genuinely worth staying for.
Early Entry perks — available to Disney resort guests and Universal hotel guests — let you into the park 30 to 60 minutes before the general public. That extra hour in the morning is pure gold in the summer. It is also when the best rides have their shortest waits of the entire day.
Make air conditioning work for you
Every attraction, restaurant, and gift shop is a potential cooling station. Being strategic about this is what separates families who thrive from those who melt.
At Magic Kingdom, a stroll through the shops on Main Street U.S.A. is a perfect reset — and kids love browsing. At EPCOT, the World Showcase pavilions are great midday refuges. At Universal, indoor ride queues like Escape from Gringotts and the Hagrid’s Motorbike Adventure experience give you extended shade and moving air before you even get on the ride.
Look for long shows and theater-style attractions when the heat peaks. These typically run 20 to 25 minutes and seat the whole family in blissful air conditioning:
- Hall of Presidents or Carousel of Progress (Magic Kingdom) — both are reliable 20-minute AC resets
- Beauty and the Beast Live on Stage (Hollywood Studios) — outdoor seating but covered, with good airflow
- The Simpsons Ride pre-show area (Universal Studios) — long indoor queue that functions as a gradual cooling experience
Embrace the water — seriously
Wet clothes in Florida heat are actually your friend. As water evaporates from fabric, it pulls heat away from your body — it’s essentially free air conditioning.
Water rides like Tiana’s Bayou Adventure, Kali River Rapids at Animal Kingdom, and Popeye & Bluto’s Bilge-Rat Barges at Universal’s Islands of Adventure will soak you thoroughly. Lean into it.
Splash pads and interactive fountains throughout the parks are perfect for little kids who want to cool off without a ride. Disney’s Casey Jr. Splash ‘N’ Soak Station at Magic Kingdom is a fan favorite for families with toddlers. If your trip includes a SeaWorld day, the Sesame Street Land splash area and Infinity Falls river ride serve the same function.
Bring a lightweight change of clothes in your bag for each kid, or pack a quick-dry cooling towel that doubles as a wrap after a water ride. A small waterproof dry bag for wet clothes makes the rest of the day significantly easier — it’s a $8 item that earns its place every time.
Hydration is non-negotiable
In the Florida heat, you’ll need significantly more water than usual — and kids deplete faster than adults. Dehydration sneaks up quickly when everyone is distracted and excited.
Quick-service locations at Disney will give you free cups of ice water — just ask. At Universal, water is available on all the Coca-Cola Freestyle machines throughout the parks. Bring a refillable insulated water bottle for each family member; bottles with straws are great for walking and drinking at the same time. If your kids resist plain water, pack some electrolyte powder or drink enhancers to keep them sipping throughout the day. Our guide to snacks worth bringing has a full list of what to pack that keeps kids fueled and hydrated without relying entirely on park food.
Heavy sweating, pale skin, fast or weak pulse, nausea, and unusual fussiness. If you notice any of these, get to a cool indoor space immediately and find a First Aid station — they are located throughout both Disney and Universal parks and staffed by nurses. Don’t wait to see if it passes on its own.
Dress smart — yes, it really matters
What your family wears can make a measurable difference on a hot day. Keep your bag as light as possible too — a heavy backpack traps heat against your body and drains energy faster than you’d expect. Our full theme park clothing guide covers every age and every type of park day, but the essentials are straightforward.
- Lightweight, loose-fitting clothing in light colors — white, pastels, light gray reflect heat rather than absorbing it
- Moisture-wicking or breathable fabrics — avoid cotton if possible, it holds sweat and gets heavy over a long day
- Comfortable, broken-in shoes — not new sneakers you haven’t worn yet; blisters on Day 2 are one of the most common trip-derailing mistakes
- Hats with a wide brim for kids, or baseball caps at minimum — direct sun on a child’s head adds up quickly
- A lightweight park bag — less weight on your back means less heat buildup and less fatigue by afternoon
A clip-on stroller fan is one of the highest-impact items you can pack for a summer park trip. Kids in strollers have almost no natural airflow, especially in slow-moving queues. Even a basic USB-rechargeable fan changes the afternoon significantly — see our full guide to the best options by battery life and attachment style.
Use Florida’s afternoon rain to your advantage
Summer storms in Central Florida follow an almost clockwork pattern: clear mornings, building clouds by early afternoon, a short but intense downpour around 2 to 4pm, and clearing skies by early evening.
Most guests make a beeline for cover the moment rain starts. If you’re prepared, this is actually a prime window for shorter wait times — sometimes dramatically shorter — while the rain briefly cools the air and thins the crowds at popular rides. Post-storm conditions in the late afternoon are some of the best of the entire day.
Bring a lightweight poncho or rain jacket for each person. Our bad weather packing guide covers exactly what works — and what to skip. Avoid the overpriced ponchos sold in the parks. A pack of disposable ponchos from Amazon costs a few dollars and does the job just as well, with zero guilt about throwing them away if they get destroyed.
Create your own shade
Direct Florida sunlight is intense. Even short stretches of unshaded walking add up over a full park day — especially for kids in strollers who can’t duck under a tree when they feel like it.
A compact UV-blocking umbrella is a surprisingly effective tool — it blocks direct sun while you’re in queues and walking between lands. Look for one that’s lightweight enough to carry without thinking about it. Pair it with a good stroller canopy extender for younger kids.
Use the park’s natural shade strategically — benches under trees, covered queue areas, and shaded seating sections near food locations. On the Disney and Universal apps, you can scout your next stop and plan routes that minimize exposed walking during the hottest hours.
Eat and snack strategically
Heavy meals in extreme heat are a recipe for sluggishness. Keep midday eating light and use food as an opportunity to cool down and rest rather than push through.
- Frozen treats — Dole Whip, ice cream bars, slushies — are everywhere in the parks and genuinely refreshing; they also give you a built-in reason to sit in the shade for five minutes
- Cold water-rich foods like fruit cups help with hydration and energy at the same time
- Save the big sit-down meals for early morning, late afternoon, or after the evening crowds settle — a noon table-service reservation doubles as a long cooling break
- Pack snacks from home — pouches, granola bars, and crackers prevent hunger meltdowns between meals without the $6 pretzel tax
Many table-service restaurants at Disney are air-conditioned and can double as a long cooling break — especially if you snag a lunch reservation during the hottest part of the day. Our guide on whether character dining is worth it is worth reading before you book, since a character meal timed around noon can serve double duty as a heat break and a highlight of the trip.
Pace yourself — seriously
The biggest mistake families make in the Florida heat is trying to do everything in one day. Pushing hard through extreme temperatures doesn’t just make kids miserable — it can lead to heat exhaustion, which escalates quickly in young children.
Take breaks before you feel like you need them. Sit down for 10 minutes in the shade. Let the kids run through a splash pad even when you’re “on a schedule.” These small resets add up to a much better day overall — and they almost always pay off in the evening when kids still have energy for the fireworks.
The goal isn’t to survive the Florida heat — it’s to genuinely enjoy a day at a place your kids will talk about for years. With the right prep, a summer trip to Disney World or Universal Orlando can be just as magical as any other season. The most common Disney mistakes nearly all come down to some version of underestimating the heat or overestimating how long everyone can push through it. Plan for fatigue and you will be in better shape than most families around you.
Summer park day checklist
- Arrive early — park open or earlier with Early Entry; first 90 minutes are worth more than the entire afternoon
- Midday break at your hotel from roughly noon to 3pm — pool or nap, not another park
- Refillable water bottles for everyone — insulated keeps water cold longer; free ice water available at Disney quick-service locations
- Lightweight, light-colored clothing plus hats for every kid
- Ponchos packed and ready for afternoon rain — one per person, not shared
- Clip-on stroller fan for toddlers and stroller-age kids — non-negotiable in summer
- Cooling towels for each kid — wet, wring out, snap to activate; reapply every hour
- Sunscreen reapplied every two hours — easy to forget when rides are calling
- Electrolyte packets for kids who resist plain water — a small addition that keeps everyone drinking
- Snacks from home — hunger accelerates heat exhaustion and meltdowns in equal measure
First Aid stations are located throughout both Disney and Universal parks and are staffed by nurses. Don’t hesitate to stop in if anyone in your group is feeling unwell from the heat — they are well-equipped and see heat-related issues regularly during summer months.
Build your park itinerary — rest days included
Our Itinerary Builder lets you map out which parks to hit on which days, when to schedule rest days, and how to structure the whole trip so the heat is built into the plan from the start.
Build Your ItineraryReady to make the most
of your summer trip?
Step-by-step planning for families with young kids — parks, packing, and everything in between.