Disney Expands Transportation Shutdowns Before Busy Summer Crowds
We talk about Disney transportation here more than most food blogs do, mostly because getting around Walt Disney World efficiently is part of making the most of a trip and the boat routes specifically are some of our favorite underrated experiences on property. The Sassagoula River Cruise in particular, the water taxi between Disney Springs and the Port Orleans resorts, is one of those genuinely lovely ways to move through the resort that more guests should know about.

Which is why this week’s update landed a little differently for us.
A screenshot of a Disney guest services chat was shared on X by @Heatherb733038, and it contains the official word on what is changing and when. Here is the full relevant portion: “Beginning June 28, 2026, Guests boarding Disney Resort hotel buses and the Sassagoula River Cruise from Disney Springs will be required to present a valid Disney Resort hotel room key, dining reservation, or experience reservation for the Resort they are visiting. Disney Resort Guests may also use their MagicBand to verify their Resort hotel stay.”
So. The buses and the Sassagoula. Both. June 28.
— Heather b (@Heatherb733038) June 16, 2026
Let us talk through what this actually means.
What You Need to Board Starting June 28

Three things qualify you to board Disney Resort hotel buses or the Sassagoula River Cruise from Disney Springs after June 28. A valid Disney Resort hotel room key. A confirmed dining reservation at a Disney resort. A confirmed experience reservation at a Disney resort. MagicBands linked to an active resort stay also work.
No qualifying credential means no boarding. That is the policy and it is confirmed directly from Disney.
The bus portion of this is the less surprising part. Disney tested verification at Disney Springs bus boarding areas during the Easter period and according to reporting from WDW Magic on June 15, the test was viewed as successful internally. Disney saw it as a way to free up capacity and reduce what it considers misuse of a transportation system intended for guests with legitimate resort-related business. July 4 was the expected permanent rollout window and June 28 lands right on schedule.
The Sassagoula inclusion is the part worth paying attention to.
Why the Boat Being in This Policy Is a Big Deal
Disney Springs bus verification getting formalized is a logical next step in a process the company has been building toward for years. But the Sassagoula River Cruise is a boat. And this is the first time we have seen Disney extend a transportation verification requirement to its water transit system, at least from Disney Springs.
That matters because WDW Magic’s June 15 report included a line about Disney investigating the feasibility of expanding verification to other areas of the property and other forms of transportation in the future. The Sassagoula being in the June 28 announcement alongside the buses tells you that investigation has already produced results. Disney is not just thinking about buses. It is thinking about boats. And based on that report, potentially more.
Other Disney boat routes like the Friendship Boats, the Magic Kingdom ferries, and the various resort water taxis are not part of this policy as of now. The Skyliner and monorail are also unaffected. But the framework is clearly being built with expansion in mind and the Sassagoula inclusion is the proof of that.
The Problem Disney Is Actually Trying to Solve
Disney Springs has functioned for years as an informal back door into Disney’s resort transportation network. Guests would park at Disney Springs, which is free, and then board resort buses or the Sassagoula to travel to resort hotels without holding a resort reservation or paying for park parking. It created load on a system Disney views as a resort guest benefit and the company finally decided to do something about it.
The Easter test showed Disney that credential checks at the boarding point worked. The June 28 permanent implementation is the direct result of that test going the way Disney wanted it to.
What This Actually Changes for Real Guests
Here is the practical breakdown, because we know this is what you actually need to know.
If you are staying at a Disney Resort hotel, this policy barely affects you. Your room key works. Your MagicBand works. If you have a dining reservation at a resort, that works too. You show your credential and you board. The only change is the 30 seconds the credential check takes.
If you are a resort-hopper, meaning you visit Disney hotels for their restaurants, lounges, and atmosphere without staying at them, the policy requires a bit more planning but does not end the experience. A dining reservation at your destination resort satisfies the requirement. An experience reservation works too. Resort-hopping with a dinner or activity booked is completely fine. What is no longer possible is hopping onto the Sassagoula or a resort bus from Disney Springs without a qualifying reservation at your destination.
If you were using Disney Springs parking as a free alternative to park parking and then catching resort transportation from there, that practice is done as of June 28.
The Resort-Hopping Note Specifically
We want to address this because it comes up a lot in our community. Resort-hopping is one of those Disney activities that regular guests and Annual Passholders build their own traditions around. Visiting the Gran Destino Tower bar, grabbing beignets at Port Orleans, exploring the Grand Floridian lobby before dinner. All of that continues to be available to guests who are not staying at those resorts.
The change is only about how you get there using Disney transportation from Disney Springs. If you have a dining reservation at Port Orleans Riverside, you can board the Sassagoula from Disney Springs with that reservation as your credential. If you do not have a reservation and were planning to take the boat for a casual visit, you will need to find another way to get there.
For guests planning a Disney trip after June 28 and wanting to incorporate resort visits, booking a dining or experience reservation at each resort stop you want to make is the cleanest solution. It is also, genuinely, a great excuse to finally book that dinner at a resort restaurant you have been meaning to try.
If you have questions about how this affects your specific trip or want help thinking through your resort-hopping plans given the new requirements, drop them in the comments. We will give you an honest answer based on what the policy actually says and how it is likely to be enforced. And if you have already experienced the verification process at Disney Springs and want to share what it was like, we want to hear about it.



