Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Why we really, really hated it – Disneyland Paris review

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is my review of our painful day at Disneyland Paris aka EuroDisney.

Are you allowed to dislike Disneyland?  I don’t hear many people giving it a hard time.  Although, in retrospect, I realised that not many of the people we know have actually been to the Paris one.  Perhaps that should have been a warning.

It was a truly painful experience that I doubt we will repeat.

For background, the weather last Saturday was perfect and we were there with a 6-year old and a 3-year old. It started OK.  We got an RER train outside InterContinental Le Grand and in 40 minutes were deposited literally outside the gates of the park.  It could not be easier. Then the trouble started.

We had got our tickets from Avios as a redemption.  They did not send us actual tickets – we got a voucher which needed to be exchanged at the Guest Relations desk (shockingly long queue) or the ticket office (shockingly long queue).  As Disney could not be bothered to open all their ticket windows, it took 45 MINUTES to get to the front of the ticket queue. I mean, 45 MINUTES?  What sort of place that charges over £200 for a family of four would make you wait for 45 minutes to buy a ticket?!

It is also hugely self defeating.  Saving €15 per hour on an extra ticket office staffer costs them hundreds of Euros in lost income from spending inside the park.  You can’t spend much money in a queue.

Buying food was even worse.  We noticed fairly quickly that most people had brought sandwiches.  Smart move.  We managed to keep the kids going until 2.30pm with some popcorn but they had to eat in the end.  We picked a quiet corner with a McDonalds-style takeaway.  It took ONE HOUR to get served.  Of course, one third of all of the counters were closed.

They were also astonishingly inefficient.  A similar sized queue in a real McDonald’s would have been dealt with in a fraction of the time.  It was also disturbingly expensive, but I was expecting that.

The length of the ride queues is also farcical.  If you want to go on the Space Mountain etc roller coasters for adults, you can use Fast Pass and walk straight on at the appropriate time.  You can’t do that with the little kids rides.  We had to queue for 50 MINUTES to go on a flying elephant ride which lasts about 5 minutes.

There was even a lengthy queue for a simple carousel ride – not helped by the fact that they force everyone to wear a seatbelt (ever worn a seatbelt on a carousel?) which the staff enforce – see photo below.  They also play a safety warning before the ride.  For a carousel.

Max Burgess

For little kids (ie 6 and 3 years old, like ours) it is a complete waste of time.  The quality of rides is genuinely no better than you get at Winter Wonderland in Hyde Park every Christmas – where there are no queues for the kids rides – or even at the funfair that occasionally pops up in Battersea Park.

We arrived (ie got off the train) at 11.30 and left at 6pm after the parade.  Of the 6.5 hours inbetween, we spent at least 4 hours in queues.  The combined time on rides was, in all seriousness, under 15 minutes.  I felt sorry for my 6-year old daughter who was so happy to be going and who got so little out of it.  (We made up for it on Sunday with a fun day in Paris.)

They even managed to screw up something as simple as a ‘Frozen Sing-A-Long’ in one of the auditoriums.  There were a couple of hundred kids there, but all Disney bothered to serve up to lead it were two drama students (English girl, French boy) aged about 18 who were wearing their standard clothes.  How hard would it have been to have someone dress up as Anna and Elsa?

There is even graffiti inside the fairy castle.  And the pavements and footpaths have more potholes and cracks than your average London street. Honestly, give it a miss.  It really isn’t worth it – even if you don’t pay for your tickets.

(PS. For the record, this is how we structured the trip:

Eurostar – booked via Eurostar Frequent Traveller, with 100% of the points required coming from Amex Membership Rewards

Hotel – 2 rooms for 2 nights at InterContinental Le Grand funded with two 2 IHG Premium Visa free night vouchers and 2 x 50,000 point redemptions, with the points coming from the last ‘Big Win’ promotion and credit card spend

Disney – redeemed 34,000 Avios via avios.com for four tickets

Transfer to/from St Pancras – Uber using referral credit

The mini Eiffel Tower my daughter wanted as a souvenir was bought for cash!)

Comments (149)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Trevor says:

    I reckon that’s a generalisation of most big theme parks. I went to Thorpe Park on Sunday, got there early to make the most of the day and avoid queues which started at 10min just before 10am, but were up to 70min later in the day. As it turns out, as 2 adults we didn’t do kids rides and were not interested in the wet rides (in this often miserable weather, why are there so many – what is the attraction with getting wet?), so after doing all the main rides and spending collectively hours queueing for about 10min of fun (10 main rides x 1min/ride), we were still done by 14:00 – bit disappointing that there wasn’t more since we still had the rest of the afternoon. Guess on busier/worse days and arriving a bit later, can easily see how you can be there til closing just to get all the main rides in. Years since I’ve been to an adult theme park, years til I’ll go again (this was free thanks to Sun+ Perks).

  • Scott says:

    Last time I was in Florida, I arrived before rope-drop (9am/9:30am?) and quickly rushed to things like Toy Story Mania and got a Fast Pass ticket (for say 10:30am onwards) and then joined the queue for a general ride. Still quite a few people doing his even in January but it did massively reduced queuing times.
    Did stay in a Disney hotel as it was convenient for things like the marathon weekend and the buses were very useful for getting about the parks etc.
    Probably best if you can book with free dining – might be a lot of burgers etc. but kids will probably be happy with that. (The unlimited soft drinks etc. at my hotel was great as well)

    Longest queue I ever had was a good 2 hours for Test Track.
    Space Mountain maybe an hour.
    Some of the characters a good half hour or so.

    Paris isn’t Disney in my opinion. Miserable, weather problems, French and just not the real thing.

  • Simon says:

    Orlando beats Paris hands down. The whole experience is head and shoulders above Paris. Whilst even Orlando the food is overpriced, it is good quality. The food we bought in Disneyland Paris was atrocious both in relation to cost and quality, and we experienced the same in the restaurants just outside the park.

    As many have mentioned for all these places you need to arrive early, and school holidays are always going to be busy. We went to Orlando in the summer holidays and yes it was busy, but we still managed to get on plenty of rides without queueing for too long. It appears that the Orlando parks offer a lot more choice with the fastpass and many childrens rides are included.

    I personally would never stay in a hotel in Orlando when you can rent a 4 bed house with a private swimming pool for around £400 a week in August! We were 20 minutes drive from Disney so popping back mid afternoon for a few hours for a rest and refresh worked well!

  • Scott says:

    My major problem with the Florida parks is the timing of various things.

    For example, you want to watch a certain fireworks show on Main Street. Sometimes this may only be on certain days at say 8:30pm
    Another show at say Epcot is on only two days a week at the same time or within an hour so there’s no way you can do both the same night and you may have to wait 3 days or so to see both shows.
    Then if you get stuck in a queue for a ride or buses are packed, you’ve got to allow a lot of extra time to get somewhere with a good viewing position.

  • Sam says:

    Having similar demograph to ‘entertain’ you’ve basically re-emphasised why I won’t go to Disneyland Paris. Never wanted to, but felt I should entertain the possibility for the kids.

    Really captures why I won’t (unless a random strike day means a midweek, non holiday day makes it a possibility). Thanks for being the crash test dummy on this one!

  • SJC says:

    Consider the queue to get in, a precursor to the queues for the rides. It’s Disney, they can do what they want!

  • Rob says:

    Sorry to hear you and the family didn’t enjoy the day. Have to say, however, that if someone wanted to plan to have the worst possible day at Disneyland Paris (or any theme park I guess), it would be your plan they follow. Managing queues is always an issue, and turning up towards the end of the morning will guarantee that you hit the worst of the queues and might well miss out on schemes such as Disney’s Fastpass which allow you to reserve a particular ride time (e.g., Peter Pan ride Fastpasses at DLP often completely allocated for that day by midday). We are frequent visitors to Disney and other theme parks (although the youngest age children we have taken is 6). We get to the park before opening time to make sure we are amongst the first through the gate (if staying at a Disney hotel this normally means early entry before the rest of the public), then charge around like mad things riding as many attractions as we can before the queues get too bad. We would typically get on half dozen of the headline attractions with not much more than a 10 minute wait, by choosing the very popular ones first and making sure we take advantage of the Fastpass scheme. By 11am or midday the queues get very bad as more people trundle through the gates, so that is the time to slow down, have a break and start to enjoy the little things around the park such as walk through attractions, playgrounds, places to discover, etc, etc. An afternoon break for a swim or a snooze then always us to go back for the evening when the queues for some attractions dwindle to no wait times, and the simply amazing nighttime show that DLP currently plays during peak periods.

    A bit of planning in advance, and perhaps staying closer to the park, would have allowed you to have a completely different experience, and one significantly more enjoyable for all concerned.

  • N says:

    … and that’s why it’s known as Eurodismal in our household

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.