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Disney Parks Confirm New Dress Code Policy With Specific Start Date

Theme park dress codes are rarely controversial — but they are carefully enforced. Disney parks around the world maintain detailed rules about what guests can and cannot wear during a typical day inside the gates.

Those policies exist for a mix of reasons, including safety on attractions and maintaining the parks’ family-friendly atmosphere.

Now, two international Disney resorts are making adjustments to one of the most widely discussed parts of those rules.

A family of four takes selfie with Donald Duck
Credit: Disney

Disney parks enforce a casual dress code designed to maintain a family-friendly atmosphere and ensure guest safety on attractions. Clothing must be appropriate for a public setting, meaning outfits that are excessively torn, revealing, or feature offensive language or imagery may be denied entry.

In the past, guests have faced issues for wearing a wide range of outfits.

Some visitors have attempted to enter parks wearing politically themed clothing, while others have experienced issues wearing more revealing outfits.

One of the strictest policies involves costumes.

At most Disney parks, guests aged 14 and older are generally prohibited from wearing full character costumes during normal park operations. The rule exists largely to prevent confusion between visitors and official Disney performers working inside the parks.

There are a few exceptions.

Mickey and Minnie wear their Halloween costumes and pose in front of the Haunted Mansion for Mickey's Not So Scary Halloween Party
Credit: Disney

Special events such as Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party at Magic Kingdom Park and Oogie Boogie Bash at Disney California Adventure Park allow adult guests to wear costumes that follow specific guidelines.

Outside of those events, however, the rule typically remains in place.

Tokyo Disney Resort Expands Costume Access

Tokyo Disney Resort will allow guests to wear full character costumes during certain periods later this year.

Visitors will be able to dress in costume between September 15 and September 30, as well as October 16 through October 31.

Pumpkins on World Bazaar during Halloween at Tokyo Disneyland
Credit: Tokyo Disney Resort

During these windows, guests will also have access to paid changing facilities inside the resort.

Parkgoers are asked to “refrain from changing clothes or applying makeup in public facilities, including restrooms inside and outside the park, multi-purpose restrooms, and coin lockers,” or to change at their hotels or homes.

The park will still briefly return to its standard costume rules.

From October 1 through October 15, the resort will prohibit entry for “ages 12 and over dressed in full character costume.”

Cinderella Castle at Tokyo Disneyland, Disney Tokyo Resort expansion.
Credit: Tokyo Disney Resort

Even with that restriction, Tokyo Disney Resort allows more flexibility than several other Disney destinations.

Costume Rules Vary Across Disney Parks

Disney resorts around the world do not follow identical costume policies.

At Walt Disney World Resort and Disneyland Resort, guests can only wear costumes during regular park hours if they are under the age of 14. Adults are permitted to dress up only during specific ticketed events.

Disneyland Paris has similar rules but typically allows costumes on Halloween itself.

Outside that day, guests aged 12 and older are generally prohibited from wearing full costumes or masks unless the mask is required for medical reasons.

Walt Disney statue in front of Enchanted Storybook Castle
Credit: Disney

Shanghai Disneyland has taken an even more flexible approach in recent years.

In 2025, the park allowed adult guests to wear Halloween costumes between October 4 and November 1, provided the outfits met certain requirements.

Those guidelines included restrictions on costumes longer than ankle length, limits on props larger than 50 centimeters, and a ban on items that could be mistaken for weapons.

The different policies highlight how each Disney resort adjusts its rules depending on local audiences and operations.

What do you think of Disney’s dress codes?

Chloe James

Chloë is a theme park addict and self-proclaimed novelty hunter. She's obsessed with all things Star Wars, loves roller coasters (but hates Pixar Pal-A-Round), and lives for Disney's next Muppets project.

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