Hollywood Studios 1-Day Itinerary With Kids — A Plan That Actually Works | KidsParkGuide
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Hollywood Studios 1-Day
Itinerary With Kids
A Plan That Actually Works

KidsParkGuide.com  ·  Disney World Guides

Hollywood Studios has some of the most thrilling rides in all of Disney World — and some of the longest waits. Here’s exactly how to sequence your day so you ride what matters most without spending half of it in line.

Hollywood Studios is a park of extremes. Rise of the Resistance is one of the greatest theme park attractions ever built. Slinky Dog Dash delights kids who’ve never been on a roller coaster. Toy Story Land is pure joy for ages 3 and up. And the afternoon waits, on a busy day, can make you feel like you’re spending more time standing than doing anything at all.

The families who have the best Hollywood Studios days are the ones who arrive at rope drop with a clear first move, knock out the high-demand rides before 11am, and then enjoy the rest of the day without the urgency. Here’s exactly how to do that.

Before you go

Five things that define the Hollywood Studios day

Rise of the Resistance is the non-negotiable first move. It’s the best ride in the park and waits hit 60–90+ minutes by 9:30am. Rope drop is your best option — or buy Individual Lightning Lane at 7am.

Slinky Dog Dash is the family ride priority. Kids under 10 love it, waits build fast, and it doesn’t have Individual Lightning Lane — so rope drop or Lightning Lane Multi Pass is your only skip-the-line option.

Hollywood Studios skews older than Magic Kingdom. Many of the best rides have height requirements of 40″+ or are simply more intense. Know your kids’ heights and ride tolerances before you build the day.

The park is smaller and more compact than it looks. You can cover the headliners efficiently — don’t try to rush everything, but don’t assume you need a second day unless you specifically want one.

Toy Story Land and Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge are the two anchor areas. Plan at least a dedicated hour in each — the immersive detail rewards slower exploration, not a quick pass-through.

The Itinerary: Hour by Hour

11am–12:30pm Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, then lunch

Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway is the park’s best family ride for younger kids — a trackless dark ride through cartoon worlds with no height requirement, beautiful animation, and a joyful tone that works for every age. It opened in 2020 and remains one of Disney’s most creative recent rides. Waits typically peak mid-morning; the 11am–noon window often sees slightly improved conditions as families shift toward lunch.

Lunch timing matters at Hollywood Studios. The park’s dining options are concentrated and the midday rush is real. Aim to eat before noon or wait until after 1:30pm. Docking Bay 7 Food and Cargo in Galaxy’s Edge is one of the more interesting quick-service options — themed as a galactic canteen with unique menu items and a genuinely immersive atmosphere. Woody’s Lunch Box in Toy Story Land is excellent for younger kids — toasted sandwiches and nostalgic treats in a fun setting.

Mobile order is essential here

Hollywood Studios’ quick-service restaurants get overwhelmed at lunch. Always mobile order through My Disney Experience 20–30 minutes before you’re hungry rather than waiting in the order line. The difference between a 5-minute pickup and a 40-minute wait is simply whether you ordered ahead.

12:30–2:30pm Galaxy’s Edge — explore, Millennium Falcon, and the full experience

Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is one of the most immersive themed lands Disney has ever built — a fully realized alien planet with its own language, its own street food, and a level of environmental storytelling that rewards slow exploration. Even families who aren’t Star Wars fans tend to find it genuinely impressive.

Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run puts your family in the cockpit of the most iconic ship in Star Wars. It’s a motion simulator where everyone has a job — pilots, gunners, or engineers — and the outcome varies based on how you perform. Height minimum is 38″. For Star Wars fans of any age, this is a must-do. For kids who don’t know the franchise, it’s still a well-designed ride that holds up on its own terms.

Beyond the rides, Galaxy’s Edge has genuine experiences worth your time:

  • Build a Droid at the Droid Depot — kids can customize their own R-series or BB-series droid. It’s an add-cost experience ($120+) but a genuinely memorable one for young Star Wars fans.
  • Savi’s Workshop — lightsaber building experience. Significantly more expensive ($270+) but deeply immersive for kids who are truly passionate about Star Wars. Book well in advance if this is a priority.
  • Oga’s Cantina — a reservation-only bar and drink experience inside the alien cantina. Adults love the atmosphere; kids can get non-alcoholic options. Worth the reservation for the experience even with young kids.
Galaxy’s Edge timing

The early afternoon is actually a good time for Galaxy’s Edge exploration — the early crowd has moved on and Smugglers Run tends to have its best post-morning wait window here. Avoid trying to cram Galaxy’s Edge into the first 30 minutes of rope drop; it’s better experienced at a slower pace once Rise is done.

2:30–4:30pm Shows, Tower of Terror or Rockin’ Roller Coaster, and the afternoon plan

Hollywood Studios has a strong lineup of live shows that are genuinely underrated by families who come primarily for the rides. The early afternoon, when ride waits peak and energy flags, is the perfect time to incorporate them.

Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular is a 30-minute live stunt show in a large covered amphitheater. It’s spectacular for kids ages 6 and up — real fire, real stunts, and a format that holds attention well. Check show times in the app and plan around them.

For thrill-seeking older kids (7+): The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror (40″ minimum) and Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster Starring Aerosmith (48″ minimum) are both in this area. Tower of Terror — a freefall drop experience in a haunted hotel — is genuinely terrifying for first-timers and beloved by kids who can handle it. Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster is a high-speed indoor coaster. Both have Lightning Lane Multi Pass availability.

Age note — younger kids

If your kids are under 7 or under 40″ and not ready for the bigger thrill rides, this afternoon window is well-spent in Toy Story Land for re-rides, at the Animation Courtyard for the Disney Junior Play and Dance show, or at the Star Wars Launch Bay for character meets with Chewbacca, Kylo Ren, or Darth Vader.

4:30–6pm Midday reset and anything you missed

By late afternoon, families with young kids start exiting the park. This is a natural second wind window where wait times often improve slightly and the park atmosphere shifts toward a more manageable pace.

Use this time to revisit a favorite from the morning, catch anything you missed, or take a genuine sit-down break before the evening. If you have Lightning Lane Multi Pass selections left, this is the time to deploy them on whatever’s still on your list.

  • Re-ride Slinky Dog Dash — waits often improve in the late afternoon as families depart
  • MuppetVision 3D — a classic 3D show that’s funny, air-conditioned, and short. Good low-key filler in this window.
  • Star Tours — The Adventures Continue — a randomized Star Wars motion simulator (40″ minimum) that rides differently every time. Worth doing if you haven’t yet and kids meet the height requirement.

Hollywood Studios for Different Ages

Kids under 4

Honest assessment: Hollywood Studios is the weakest of the four Disney parks for very young kids. Most of the headline rides have height requirements that exclude them, and the park’s overall tone skews older. If you’re visiting with toddlers as part of a broader Disney trip, keep the Hollywood Studios day short — half a day is enough. Focus on Toy Story Land (Alien Swirling Saucers and the atmosphere), Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, and the Disney Junior show. Don’t try to fill a full day.

Kids ages 4–7

This is where Hollywood Studios starts to work properly. Slinky Dog Dash (38″), Toy Story Mania!, Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, Millennium Falcon (38″), and the shows all land well for this age range. Rise of the Resistance is appropriate from age 5 or so for kids who can handle mild intensity — preview it on YouTube beforehand to set expectations. A full day is realistic and enjoyable for most kids in this range.

Kids ages 7–12

Hollywood Studios hits its peak for this age group. Every major ride is accessible, Star Wars lands powerfully for kids who know the franchise, Tower of Terror and Rock ‘n’ Roller Coaster provide genuine thrills for kids ready for them, and Fantasmic! caps the day in a way older kids genuinely appreciate. This is the ideal Hollywood Studios age and the park delivers accordingly.

Common Mistakes at Hollywood Studios

  • Not deciding on Rise of the Resistance before you arrive. Rope drop it or buy Individual Lightning Lane at 7am. Showing up without a plan for Rise and hoping for a short line almost never works. Waits exceed 60 minutes on most days by 9:30am.
  • Skipping Toy Story Land because it “looks like a kids’ area.” Slinky Dog Dash is a legitimately fun coaster for adults too, and Toy Story Mania is one of the most re-rideable attractions in the park. Don’t skip it assuming it’s beneath older kids or parents.
  • Trying to walk-up to Oga’s Cantina or Savi’s Workshop. Both require advance reservations and both fill up well in advance on busy days. If these are priorities, book at the 60-day window. Walk-up availability is rare during peak periods.
  • Not mobile ordering lunch. Hollywood Studios’ quick-service lines during the noon hour are among the longest at any Disney park. Mobile order always — without exception.
  • Leaving before Fantasmic!. Families who pack up and leave after the afternoon rides miss one of the most memorable endings to a Disney day. Plan to stay, find your amphitheater seat early, and let the day finish the way it was designed to.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Hollywood Studios worth it for young kids?

For kids under 4, it’s the weakest Disney park. For kids ages 4–7, it’s a solid full day focused on Toy Story Land, Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway, and the shows. For kids 7 and up, it’s genuinely excellent — many families with older kids rank it their favorite of the four parks. Know your kids’ ages and height requirements before you build the day.

What is the best ride at Hollywood Studios for kids?

For younger kids (ages 4–7): Slinky Dog Dash and Mickey & Minnie’s Runaway Railway. For older kids (7+): Rise of the Resistance, which is one of the best theme park rides anywhere. Toy Story Mania is a crowd-pleaser for all ages and tends to be the one ride young kids want to repeat.

Do I need Lightning Lane at Hollywood Studios?

More than at EPCOT, less than at Magic Kingdom during peak season. Rise of the Resistance is most efficiently handled with Individual Lightning Lane (purchased at 7am) unless you’re doing rope drop. Slinky Dog Dash benefits from Lightning Lane Multi Pass on busy days. During slow-crowd periods, rope drop plus smart morning sequencing often covers the headliners without paying for either.

Can you do Hollywood Studios in half a day?

For families with very young kids, yes — half a day in Toy Story Land plus a show or two is a complete and satisfying visit. For older kids who want Rise of the Resistance, Galaxy’s Edge, and the major thrill rides, you need a full day. The park isn’t as content-rich as Magic Kingdom, but the experiences are longer and the waits are often longer too, which fills the day efficiently.

Is the Star Wars experience worth it if my kids don’t know Star Wars?

Rise of the Resistance absolutely is — the scale and spectacle don’t require franchise knowledge to be awe-inspiring. Millennium Falcon is also enjoyable on its own merits as an immersive simulator. Galaxy’s Edge as a walking area is visually stunning and worth exploring even without the IP investment. The Droid Depot and Savi’s Workshop are where franchise love really pays off, but even non-fans tend to be impressed by the environment itself.

The bottom line

Decide on Rise first, rope drop it or buy Lightning Lane, then let Toy Story Land anchor the morning.

Hollywood Studios rewards decisive planning at rope drop more than any other Disney park. The gap between a family that arrives knowing exactly where to go first and one that arrives without a plan is measured in hours of waiting — not minutes.

Get Rise of the Resistance handled early. Spend the mid-morning in Toy Story Land. Explore Galaxy’s Edge at a slow, immersive pace in the early afternoon. Use the shows as natural rest breaks. Stay for Fantasmic!. That sequence covers everything that matters — and it produces a day your kids will talk about for a long time.

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