Disneyland Guest Learns the Hard Way That Disney Tracks Children’s Ages
One family’s attempt to save money on a theme park ticket turned into a year-long ban from Disneyland Resort, and the TikTok video documenting the fallout is serving as an expensive warning to anyone considering the same shortcut.
The Policy That Caught Them Out

Disneyland Resort and Walt Disney World Resort both offer free park admission to children under three years old. For families whose child turns three during a vacation, the parks apply the child’s age at the trip’s start — so a two-year-old who celebrates a birthday mid-vacation doesn’t need a ticket for the remainder of that stay.
Magic Key Passholders at Disneyland Resort and Annual Passholders at Walt Disney World Resort operate under a stricter version of this rule. Because their Pass covers year-round access rather than a single trip, they’re required to purchase a new Pass for their child on the first park visit after the child’s third birthday. That distinction is exactly where one family ran into trouble.
The Influencer Tip That Backfired

TikToker @thatmomvalerie shared a video earlier this month explaining what happened when she followed advice from an unnamed social media influencer who claimed a three-year-old could still enter Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure Park for free on his birthday. She attempted to bring her newly three-year-old child through the gates as a Magic Key Passholder without purchasing a ticket.
@thatmomvalerie Our magic is on hold till 2027😭 #magickeypass #disneylandcalifornia #disneylandresort #mickeymouse
Disneyland Resort caught it. The family received a year-long ban from the Southern California Disney parks, effective immediately.
“Our magic is on hold till 2027😭,” the TikToker wrote.
The financial consequences extend well beyond missing out on Disney Park visits. Under the Magic Key Pass contract terms, @thatmomvalerie remains obligated to keep paying for her Annual Pass throughout the ban period, regardless of whether she can use it. Any outstanding payments must be cleared in full before the family can purchase a new Magic Key Pass or theme park ticket when the ban lifts in 2027.

In the comments, she raised the question of whether the Disney cast member at the gate bore some responsibility for what happened:
“The lady at the gate didn’t tell me anything either?! Like why didn’t she just tell me no he needs a ticket instead of letting us in and then us getting banned.”
How Others Are Getting Away With It
Rather than expressing sympathy or caution, many users shared their own successful attempts at the same thing.

“Girl my kid was turning ‘3 next week’ for over a year,” @wtfranay commented. “Yall just be saying too much info lol answer their question minimally and keep walkinggggg😩.”
@mommys3babies described a different tactic:
“This, I sat my daughter in a stroller put a blanket over her legs & a binky in her mouth. Nobody even asked her age.”

Others pointed out the obvious lesson buried in the whole situation: social media influencers are not a reliable source for Disney admissions policy, and that the official Disneyland Resort website exists for exactly this reason.
Disney uses sophisticated technology to track theme park admissions. Guests with children approaching their third birthday are strongly encouraged to review the official admissions policy before their next visit. The cost of a child’s ticket is considerably less than a year-long ban and a Magic Key payment obligation that doesn’t pause while you’re sitting at home.
Did this guest deserve to be banned from Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure Park? Share your thoughts with Disney Dining in the comments!



