Some souvenirs at Disney parks exist purely to take your money. A magnet, a keychain, a coffee mug with a castle on it. Fine. Functional. Forgettable. And then every once in a while, Disney drops something that actually earns the purchase. Something with thought and detail and a little bit of history baked into it that makes you want to tell people about it before you have even left the park.
That is exactly what just landed at Test Track inside EPCOT, and if you have a trip coming up, this is worth adding to the plan.
What It Is
Inside the Test Track Gear Shop at the attraction’s exit, Disney has installed photo booths where guests can create a custom Future Driver ID card for fifteen dollars. The experience is straightforward. You tap the screen, see a preview of the finished card, pay, choose a photo filter, take three photos inside the booth, pick your favorite, and collect your card when it prints outside.
For guests who cannot enter the enclosed booths, an accessible screen on the outside of one booth handles the entire process without requiring anyone to step inside. Disney built the accessibility option directly into the experience rather than treating it as an afterthought, which is worth noting.
The filters available give the photo a distinctive look beyond a standard headshot. Options include black and white, sepia, sketch, glitch, solarized, and more. The countdown gives you three chances to nail the pose before you commit to one image.
The Card Itself
This is where the experience separates itself from a standard photo souvenir. The finished card is partially translucent, with a blue gradient background and geometric designs inspired by Test Track’s visual language. The Test Track logo sits in the upper right corner, and the card identifies itself as a Future Driver ID across the top.
The details packed into the design reward anyone paying attention. The Record ID number reads WOM_1982_EC, a reference to World of Motion, the original EPCOT attraction that occupied the Test Track pavilion before it was replaced, the 1982 opening year of EPCOT, and EPCOT itself. The listed location on the card is Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow, the full meaning behind the EPCOT name. The issue date is the actual date you received the card, making every single one unique to the guest who made it.
The EPCOT logo is in the lower-right corner. The whole thing fits in a wallet and looks like something that belongs there.
This New EPCOT Souvenir Lets You Become A Future Driver https://t.co/oMOH2INF7V
— Theme Park Scope (@tpscopeofficial) June 8, 2026
Why It Feels Like a Disney Comeback
This experience is not entirely new. A version of the driver’s license souvenir existed at Test Track in an earlier era of the attraction before quietly disappearing. What is back now is a significantly upgraded version made by the same company behind the custom Star Wars galactic IDs at Disneyland, which gives you a sense of the production quality involved.
The return of what guests missed is now enhanced by improved technology and intentional design. It is precisely the kind of decision that fosters goodwill with Disney’s devoted park audience. While it may seem like a minor detail in the grand scheme of a Walt Disney World vacation, these small improvements add up. This particular change is well-received.
Where to Find It at Disney
The photo booths are located inside Test Track Gear Shop at the exit of the attraction in World Discovery at EPCOT. The experience costs fifteen dollars per card and is available during regular park hours. Additional cards can be added to an order after the initial purchase.
If you are the kind of person who usually walks past the gift shop on the way out. This one is worth slowing down for. The finished product is one of the more thoughtfully designed souvenirs currently available anywhere on Walt Disney World property. The best part is that it is fifteen dollars. It earns the price in a way that most theme park keepsakes simply do not.





