To take advantage of the recent three-day weekend, my family went to Disney World along with some other members of our extended family. I also went to Disney World in 2014, and after that trip I wrote about all of the useful Disney-related apps that you can use. Just about everything that I wrote in that post remains true today, but here is some additional and updated information that you can use if you have a trip to Disney World in your future. Consider this a pocket part update to my 2014 post. I doubt that very many of you are currently packing your bags to head to Disney World, but remember that this post is here, and come back to it when you do next find yourself headed to the Most Magical Place on Earth, because the most important thing that I can tell you is that an iPhone is an incredibly useful tool while you are at Disney World and will vastly improve your trip. And while I haven't yet been to Disneyland in California, I suspect that many of these tips work for that park as well (although I'd have to defer to my friend and California attorney David Sparks, who has deep roots in Disneyland).
Wi-Fi
I should have mentioned in that prior post that there is free Wi-Fi throughout all of the Disney parks. The network is called Disney-Guest. For the most part I got a good AT&T signal throughout the parks as well, but I figured that I might as well use free data rather than use up some of my monthly AT&T data allotment. And there were many times that the free Disney Wi-Fi worked better than the AT&T signal, although to be fair there were also a few times when the Wi-Fi felt slow and I got better service with AT&T. It is nice to have the ability to switch back and forth. And if you are using a device without built-in cellular such as certain models of the iPad or an iPod touch, then having free Wi-Fi is fantastic.
Note that whenever you are using a public Wi-Fi network, there is a risk that someone else on the network, with the right tools on their computer, could monitor your unencrypted traffic on the Wi-Fi network. As I've discussed in the past, I recommend using VPN when you are any public Wi-Fi network, whether it be a VPN service that you have through your office or a third-party service such as the one provided by Cloak, an app that I reviewed in 2014. I've continued to use Cloak since I wrote that review, including throughout my recent trip to Disney World. I love that the service automatically turns itself on when you connect to a public Wi-Fi network without you having to even remember to do so.
Find My Friends
Apple's free Find My Friends app is a great tool to use when you are with others at a large place like Disney World. Once you add someone as a friend (and they accept the invitation), you can see where they are located and they can see where you are located. So when my son and I are finished riding the roller coaster at Space Mountain, I can quickly see on a map that my wife and daughter are across the Magic Kingdom on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride. I can start walking that way and by the time that they are finished with their ride, I am already half-way there. Sometimes the accuracy is pinpoint perfect, and other times not quite as accurate, but in a large place like the Magic Kingdom, it always works well enough for your friends and family to have a general sense of where you are located — whether it be the general area of the same park, or even to show you that your cousin is in EPCOT while you are at the Animal Kingdom. If you ever need privacy, flip a switch to disable the app from sharing your location, and when your trip is over you can delete people from your Find My Friends list.
My Disney Experience — Walt Disney World
Besides services like Wi-Fi and Find My Friends that can be useful most anywhere, there are a number of apps that are specifically designed to assist you during a trip to Disney World. The one app that you need to get is the free official Disney World app, called My Disney Experience.
The main reason that this app is so useful is that it shows you each FastPass that you have — along with anyone else linked to your My Disney Experience account, which can be folks in your immediate family and extended family members and friends. Effective use of a FastPass can be crucial to a successful trip to Disney World. As much as I love many of the fantastic roller coasters that Disney offers, I just cannot see waiting up to two hours for a ride that lasts two minutes. But by using a FastPass, you can walk right past the long and winding line and in just a few minutes find yourself riding the train, mine cart, spaceship, etc.
Not only does the app show you each of your FastPasses, you can also use the app to change your FastPasses while you are in the park. You might want to change a FastPass to accommodate a change in your schedule that you might not have foreseen when you booked the FastPass many weeks ago — perhaps you are spending more time at lunch than you expected. Or, there were times when I saw that a ride didn't have a long wait in the normal "Standby" line, so I cancelled an upcoming FastPass to use it for another, more popular ride. There are kiosks throughout the park that you can use to change a FastPass, but you need to find them and then wait in line to use them. With this app, you can do it all yourself, no matter where you are, without waiting.
The app also does a great job of showing you the wait times for rides, so that you can decide whether it is worth heading to Fantasyland to ride Peter Pan's Flight, or if you should avoid that ride for now because the wait is just so long.
I discussed these features in my post last year, but what I didn't mention is that you need to be careful because sometimes the app doesn't show you the current wait times but instead shows you the wait times the last time that the app loaded data, which might have been several hours ago. In theory the app should refresh its data automatically, but you can always swipe down to see an indication at the top of when the app last refreshed the wait times. If you notice that you are using old data, I recommend that you force-quit the app. (Press your Home Button twice to see a list of running apps, swipe up on this app to force your iPhone to close it completely, and then launch the app again.) That trick always resulted in me getting current wait times when the app wasn't refreshing on its own.
As that last tip indicates, one of the frustrating things about this app is that it sometimes has trouble loading data. Everyone once in a while, I would start the app to look at my FastPasses, but they wouldn't appear. Force-qutting the app usually fixed it, but not always; there was one Saturday morning when I was in Hollywood Studios and I just could not get it to work at all, forcing me to use a FastPass kiosk. But then an hour later, it started working again. I mentioned in my post last year that the app had this problem, and to be fair it worked much better in 2015 then it did in 2014, but it still wasn't perfect, so be warned.
Disney World Maps
For me, the most useful Disney-centric app besides the official app was an app called Disney World Maps by VersaEdge. I actually moved another app that normally lives at the bottom of my home screen to another page so that I would also have fast access to this app during my trip to Disney World. Launching the app quickly shows you a full screen map of the park and includes a blue dot to show your current location. You can zoom out to get an overall sense of the park, or zoom in to see every specific ride, restaurant, bathroom, etc. Yes, the official Disney app also includes some maps, but it isn't nearly as fast and useful as this app.
Although the app purports to also show you the current wait times for rides, in my experience these wait times were not as accurate as the ones in the official Disney app. They were usually close enough to give me a sense of what rides were more or less busy, but for more accurate information on wait times you will want to use the official Disney app.
Disney World Dining
Another app that I mentioned last year that I also find very useful is the VersaEdge Disney World Dining app. This app is better than the dining information that you get in the official Disney app for several reasons. First, like the maps app, the dining app is very fast to use, quickly presenting you a list of restaurants organized by the area of the park. Second, this app gives you additional information. For example, the official Disney app will tell you the names of the items on a menu at a restaurant, but this app will also give you descriptions of each item. Here is an example from my 2014 post: the official Disney app (the first picture below) will simply tell you that you the Chicken Breast Provencal is an item on the menu at the new (and popular) Be Our Guest Restaurant in Fantasyland, but the Disney World Dining app (the second picture below) explains that this dish is "Pan-seared and simmered in a rustic blend of Heirloom Tomatoes, Olives, White Wine, and fresh Herbs with Seasonal Vegetables and Roasted Fingerling Potatoes."
When we were walking through the park and wanted to quickly see what restaurants were nearby and what they offered to eat, this app was incredibly useful.
Use these apps to enhance your next trip to Disney World, and your vacation will be even more enjoyable.
Click here to get Cloak (free):
Click here to get Find My Friends (free):
Click here to get My Disney Experience — Walt Disney World (free):
Click here to get Disney World Maps ($2.99):
Click here to get Disney World Dining ($1.99):