Not long ago, a typical Orlando vacation followed a predictable pattern. Families would fly in, check into a Disney resort, and spend nearly a full week exploring Disney parks without ever needing to leave the property.

That style of vacation became known as the Disney bubble. Everything guests needed—from transportation to dining to entertainment—was built around keeping visitors inside Disney’s world for the duration of their trip.
For years, that approach made perfect sense. Walt Disney World offered four theme parks and enough attractions to easily fill five to seven days of vacation time.
But Orlando isn’t a one-company town anymore.
A major shift is happening in the way travelers plan their trips, and it’s being driven by one big development: Epic Universe.
Epic Universe Changed the Balance
Universal Orlando has been growing steadily for years, but Epic Universe dramatically changed the resort’s scale.
When the park opened in May 2025, it added an entirely new dimension to Universal’s lineup. Instead of just two theme parks, Universal suddenly offered three, each with major attractions and immersive lands.

Epic Universe features themed areas based on popular franchises, including How to Train Your Dragon and the Wizarding World of Harry Potter’s Ministry of Magic. There’s also Dark Universe, which brings Universal’s classic monsters into a fully realized land filled with rides, restaurants, and atmospheric environments.
The park instantly gave visitors a reason to spend multiple days at Universal.
That one change reshaped Orlando vacation planning.
The Rise of the Two-Resort Vacation
Instead of dedicating an entire trip to Disney, many families now split their time between Disney and Universal.
The strategy is simple. Travelers might spend several days enjoying Disney parks before moving to a Universal hotel for the rest of the trip.
Others do the reverse—starting their vacation at Universal before finishing at Disney.

Either way, the traditional “Disney-only” itinerary is becoming less common.
Part of the reason is that Universal now offers enough attractions to fill a significant portion of a vacation. Epic Universe alone can easily take an entire day or more to explore.
Add Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure, and the resort becomes a three- or four-day destination.
A New Era for Orlando Tourism
Disney World remains the largest theme park resort in the world, and its parks continue to draw huge crowds every year. But the company no longer dominates the entire Orlando vacation the way it once did.
Universal’s expansion—especially with Epic Universe—has introduced a level of competition that’s changing how guests plan their trips.

Instead of choosing between Disney or Universal, travelers increasingly want both.
For visitors, that means a more diverse vacation experience. They can enjoy Disney’s storytelling and classic attractions while also experiencing Universal’s high-energy thrill rides and cinematic worlds.
In many ways, Orlando has evolved into a destination built around multiple theme park experiences rather than a single resort.
And if current trends continue, the classic seven-day Disney-only trip may soon become a thing of the past.
Epic Universe didn’t just add a new park to Orlando. It helped reshape the way people vacation there.


