Guide / Walt Disney World

Complete Guide to Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party 2026

Magic Kingdom's Halloween party is back for 38 nights with 4 p.m. entry, trick-or-treating, a new Tomorrowland masquerade, fireworks, Boo-to-You, ride overlays, costumes, and plenty of reasons to plan before tickets get thin.

Mickey and Minnie in Halloween costumes for Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party at Magic Kingdom

Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party returns to Magic Kingdom on August 7, and the 2026 details are finally specific enough to plan around: 38 party nights, a new Tomorrowland character moment with Stitch, Lilo, and Angel, the familiar parade-fireworks-stage-show trio, costume rules, PhotoPass extras, ride overlays, and enough snacks and merch to make Main Street feel like October before summer is even over.

The party runs from 7 p.m. to midnight, but ticket holders can enter Magic Kingdom starting at 4 p.m. That early-entry window matters. It is the best time to eat, take daylight photos, knock out a ride or two, and get positioned before the party-only entertainment starts pulling people into the hub.

Event datesAugust 7 through October 31, 2026
Party time7 p.m. to midnight
Early entry4 p.m. for party guests
LocationMagic Kingdom at Walt Disney World
Ticket range$119 to $229 per ticket, plus tax
New in 2026Stitch, Lilo, and Angel masquerade in Tomorrowland

Official Disney Parks post

Dates and tickets

The 2026 party calendar starts Friday, August 7 and runs through Halloween night on Saturday, October 31. Tickets range from $119 to $229 per person, plus tax. Annual Passholders and eligible Disney Vacation Club Members can save $10 on August and September party dates, plus October 1 and October 2.

Halloween night is the toughest ticket, as usual. It disappeared first again this year, and that tracks with the last few party seasons. If you are aiming for late October, do not treat the calendar like it will politely wait for you. The cheapest and most forgiving nights are usually earlier in the season, especially August and early September weekdays.

  • August: 7, 11, 14, 18, 21, 23, 25, 28, and 30.
  • September: 1, 4, 8, 11, 13, 15, 18, 20, 22, 24, 25, 27, and 29.
  • October: 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 9, 13, 15, 16, 18, 22, 23, 25, 27, 29, and 31.

The big entertainment pieces

Mickey's Boo-to-You Halloween Parade is still the party's signature. The Headless Horseman, grave diggers, villains, Haunted Mansion dancers, pirates, and candy-colored character floats give it a very different feel from a regular daytime parade. If you only see one party-exclusive thing, make it this.

Disney's Not-So-Spooky Spectacular takes over Cinderella Castle and the sky with Jack Skellington hosting. It is the main fireworks show of the night, and it usually pulls a heavy hub crowd. Hocus Pocus Villain Spelltacular brings the Sanderson Sisters to the castle stage with Disney villains, music, and a crowd that knows the lines before the show starts.

Frontierland also gets the Cadaver Dans Barbershop Quartet. They are easy to underrate until you catch a set. Dark humor, tight harmonies, Halloween riverfront atmosphere. Very simple, very Disney, and very much worth a few minutes.

Mickey's Boo-to-You Halloween Parade at Magic Kingdom
The Cadaver Dans perform in Frontierland during Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party

Characters and the new 2026 masquerade

The new character hook for 2026 is in Tomorrowland, where Stitch, Lilo, and Angel are hosting a masquerade with intergalactic party vibes. That should pull plenty of early attention because Stitch meet-and-greet energy is never subtle.

Mickey and Minnie return in Halloween outfits, and the party is also a magnet for rare character hunters. Jack Skellington and Sally, Pooh characters in costumes, Disney villains, and other seasonal friends have historically driven long waits. If a rare meet is the whole point of your night, build the plan around that first. Do not assume you can casually drop in between parade showtimes and still have a short line.

Trick-or-treating

Trick-or-treat trails are included with the party ticket, and guests can collect candy around the park throughout the night. Disney provides treat bags, but frequent partygoers often bring something sturdier. Candy gets heavy faster than expected, especially if the group includes kids who treat every trail like a personal quest.

Allergy-friendly options are available too. Guests can pick up a teal treat bag from a cast member, collect tokens at treat locations, and trade those tokens for allergy-friendly treats at designated centers.

Trick-or-treat candy and Halloween treats from Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party

Rides and overlays

Let rides fill the gaps after you choose the Halloween entertainment you care about most. Lower waits can be part of the appeal once the parade and fireworks start dividing the crowd. The 2026 event lineup includes party-night access to classics and headliners across the park, including Pirates of the Caribbean, Jungle Cruise, Tiana's Bayou Adventure, Haunted Mansion, Seven Dwarfs Mine Train, Space Mountain, and TRON Lightcycle / Run.

The Halloween overlays are the extra fun. Mad Tea Party gets a special lighting and music treatment. Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor gets a Halloween twist. Space Mountain has also been a party favorite for riders who want the darker, louder version of the attraction.

Do the party-only entertainment first if this is your first MNSSHP. You can ride Space Mountain on a regular park day. You cannot see Boo-to-You in February.

Food, drinks, dining, and merch

The announced food lineup includes Auntie Gravity's Enchanted Glade Loaded Bowl of Bones, a Minnie Witch Hat Cake Pop, a Mickey Mouse-shaped Cheesecake, and the Madame Leota Séance Candle. The names are half the fun, which is about right for this party.

Party-night dining has a few pieces worth planning around. The Plaza Restaurant serves dinner during the event, Cinderella’s Royal Table and Be Our Guest Restaurant have event-exclusive offerings, and The Beak and Barrel joins the snack-and-refreshment mix. Quick-service spots expected to stay open include Aloha Isle, Auntie Gravity’s Galactic Goodies, Casey’s Corner, Cosmic Ray’s Starlight Café, The Friar’s Nook, Pecos Bill Tall Tale Inn & Café, and Sleepy Hollow.

The Disney’s Not-So-Spooky Spectacular Dessert Party with Plaza Garden Viewing requires an advance reservation and a valid party ticket for the same night. That can help guests who want fireworks viewing settled before the party starts, but it also eats into a short five-hour event window.

There is also Halloween merchandise, including party-specific apparel, seasonal souvenirs, and the sort of limited-time pieces that tend to move fast when the design is good. If a popcorn bucket, sipper, or party shirt is high on your list, check early. Waiting until the end of the night can turn a fun errand into a scavenger hunt with worse lighting.

PhotoPass and magic shots

PhotoPass is a big part of the night, especially for guests in costume. Main Street, U.S.A. and the castle area will be busy before sunset, but that is also when costumes and character outfits look best in natural light. Disney's PhotoPass additions usually include Halloween props, Magic Shots, and party-themed backdrops.

Plan one photo pass before dark if outfits matter to you, then use the party lighting later for the moodier castle and Main Street shots. That keeps the night from turning into one long photo line.

Disney's Not-So-Spooky Spectacular fireworks above Cinderella Castle

Costume rules

Costumes are allowed, which is part of the charm. Disney's rules still matter, especially for guests 14 and older. Costumes should be family-friendly, may not be obstructive or offensive, and cannot include weapons or anything that looks too much like a real weapon. Masks are generally not allowed for guests 14 and older. Capes for older guests should not go below the waist.

Kids under 14 have more flexibility with masks, as long as the mask does not cover the entire face and the eyes are visible. The practical version: dress up, keep it comfortable, and make sure you can walk, sit, ride, eat, and survive Florida humidity without regretting every creative decision by 8:15 p.m.

How to plan the night

Arrive close to 4 p.m. if you can. Use the early window for dinner, photos, wristband logistics, and one or two regular rides. Once the party starts, stop behaving like it is a normal Magic Kingdom evening. The ticket is expensive because of the Halloween entertainment, characters, candy, atmosphere, and shorter nighttime ride windows. Spend the night on those things.

Families with young kids should decide before arrival whether the parade or fireworks is the must-do. Trying to squeeze every show, every character, every treat trail, and every ride into five hours is how the evening gets weird. Pick the non-negotiables and let the rest be bonus candy.

Adults without kids can have a great night by going later on rides, catching the second parade if offered, and using the busiest hub periods for attractions or treat trails. The second half of the party often feels looser once the youngest guests start fading.

Best dates to consider

August and early September usually give you the best shot at lower ticket prices and lighter demand, though the weather can be hot and stormy. Late September feels more Halloween-adjacent without jumping all the way into the October rush. Late October is the premium stretch, with Halloween week sitting at the top of the demand pile.

If costumes are a major part of the night, do not ignore the weather. A brilliant costume that melts in August is not a brilliant costume for very long.

Image credit: Disney Parks Blog.

Official sources

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