Both of Walt Disney World’s water parks are open for the summer, and that makes this one of the best times of year to plan a splash day. Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon and Disney’s Blizzard Beach are both operating simultaneously now through September 8, 2026. This does NOT happen during most of the year. Even better, if you are staying at a Disney Resort hotel, you get free water park admission on your check-in day for arrivals between now and September 8, 2026. That means you can hit the slides before you ever tap into a theme park, no extra ticket or park reservation required.

So what is there to eat once you are there? Disney water park dining is casual, mostly quick service, and built around the kind of food you want after a few hours in the sun. Here is a full review of the dining at both parks, what is worth ordering, and how the two compare so you can plan your day around the food as much as the rides.

Dining at Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon

Typhoon Lagoon leans into its tropical, shipwrecked theming, and the food follows suit with rice bowls, jerk chicken, seafood, and frozen treats. All of the dining here is quick service or grab-and-go, so you will not need a reservation anywhere in the park. Mobile order is available at the two largest locations, which is the single best time-saver in either park.

Leaning Palms

Leaning Palms is the main quick-service restaurant and the spot with the widest menu, so it is where most families land for lunch. Standouts include the Chicken and Shrimp Rice Bowl ($15.79), the Pork Elote Nachos ($12.99), and a Barbeque Chicken Flatbread ($13.29), plus an Angus Cheeseburger ($12.29) and an Island Impossible plant-based burger ($13.29). It offers mobile order, so you can skip the line and pick up at a separate window.

Elote Nachos from Leaning Palms Photo Credit: Disney

Typhoon Tilly’s


>>>>>Typhoon Tilly’s is the smaller counter-service spot and the pick for seafood, with shrimp baskets, chicken wraps, and a turkey pesto sandwich regulars rave about. It is more limited on standard fare than Leaning Palms, but it also offers mobile order.

Grab-and-Go and Snacks at Typhoon Lagoon

Beyond the two main counters, Typhoon Lagoon has several smaller stops for quick bites, sweets, and drinks:

  • Lowtide Lou’s: Near the Keelhaul Falls slides and the Ketchakiddee Creek kids’ area. Simple premade sandwiches, wraps, and salads, plus a kids’ turkey sandwich or PB&J Uncrustable. Handy if you are based near the children’s play area.
  • Snack Shack: Sandwiches, wraps, and a few more unusual salads for a fast bite without leaving your section.
  • Surf Doggies: Hot dogs and the classic Disney turkey leg.
  • Happy Landings: A kiosk near the Castaway Creek lazy river focused on ice cream and frozen treats.
  • Funnel Cakes: Grab-and-go funnel cakes and quick desserts.
  • Let’s Go Slurpin’: The park bar, with specialty cocktails like the Typhoon Tilly and a Strawberry Daiquiri plus beer and hard seltzer.

For all-day visits, the Typhoon Tilly Sipper is a souvenir cup with all-day refills at Typhoon Lagoon quick-service locations, listed at $22.49 on Disney’s official menu. A simpler refillable mug has been offered in past seasons at a lower price, but availability shifts year to year, so check the My Disney Experience app before you buy.

Dining at Disney’s Blizzard Beach

Blizzard Beach runs with a melted-ski-resort theme, and the dining names lean into the joke with spots like Lottawatta Lodge and Frostbite Freddy’s. The food here is arguably a notch more interesting than Typhoon Lagoon, with a couple of standout counter-service options that fans consider some of the better water park eats at Disney World. As with Typhoon Lagoon, everything is quick service and no reservations are needed.

Lottawatta Lodge

Lottawatta Lodge is the park’s primary quick-service restaurant, a snow-capped chalet near the entrance that got a refresh when the park reopened, including new covered seating with Mount Gushmore views. The menu covers burgers, flatbreads, salads, rice bowls, and pie, with Impossible-brand plant-based options. It is the most convenient stop, though regulars consider it the most basic of the three main counters.

Whitecap Flatbread Pizza from Blizzard Beach Photo Credit: Disney

The Warming Hut

The Warming Hut is a smaller, easy-to-miss spot off a lazy river exit, and it is widely considered the best place to eat at Blizzard Beach. The Jerk Chicken Sandwich is the item to beat, backed by Pulled Pork Nachos, Jerk Chicken Nachos, and a Meatball Sub. If you eat at one place here, make it this one.

Avalunch

Avalunch is your hot dog headquarters, with new items added at reopening like an Italian Sandwich, a Sauerkraut Mustard quarter-pound hot dog, and a Nacho hot dog. It is also where you grab a turkey leg. Quick, affordable, reliable.

Frozen Treats and Snacks at Blizzard Beach

Blizzard Beach takes its frozen treats seriously, with several stops worth knowing:

  • Arctic Expeditions: Near Avalunch by the bridge to Tike’s Peak, home to two of the more creative desserts at either water park, the S’mores Churro and the Banana Split Churro.
  • I.C. Expeditions and Cooling Hut: Sundaes, floats, waffle cones, and frozen novelties.
  • Frostbite Freddy’s: Loaded nachos, frozen drinks, and ice cream.
  • Mini Donuts by Joffrey’s Coffee: A fan favorite at both parks, and worth a stop on its own.
  • Polar Pub: The full-service beach bar serving cocktails and light snacks.

Typhoon Lagoon vs. Blizzard Beach Dining: Which Park Wins?

Both parks serve the same general category of casual water park food, but there are real differences worth knowing before you pick a park, especially if you only get one free check-in day visit.

Typhoon Lagoon has the more adventurous main menu thanks to Leaning Palms, with rice bowls, elote nachos, and tropical flavors that feel a step above standard park fare. It is also the better pick for seafood lovers, since Typhoon Tilly’s offers shrimp baskets and options you will not find at Blizzard Beach. The tropical theming makes the whole dining experience feel like a beach vacation.

Blizzard Beach counters with the single best individual item across both parks, the Jerk Chicken Sandwich at The Warming Hut, plus the most fun dessert lineup with those S’mores and Banana Split Churros. If your group prioritizes a memorable standout meal and creative snacks over menu variety, Blizzard Beach edges ahead.

For families who want the widest range of options in one place, Typhoon Lagoon and Leaning Palms is the safer bet. For foodies chasing the best single bite, Blizzard Beach and The Warming Hut deliver. Either way, both parks keep prices in the same ballpark, with most adult entrees landing under $16.

Disney Water Parks Ice Cream Photo Credit: Disney

Tips for Dining at Disney’s Water Parks

  • Use mobile order whenever you can. At Typhoon Lagoon, both Leaning Palms and Typhoon Tilly’s accept mobile orders through the My Disney Experience app. This lets you skip the line and pick up at a dedicated window.
  • Take advantage of the free check-in day admission. Resort hotel guests arriving between now and September 8, 2026 get free water park admission on check-in day. You can enjoy a full day of slides and water park dining before your room is even ready!
  • Consider a refillable cup for all-day visits. The souvenir Typhoon Tilly Sipper, listed at $22.49 on Disney’s official menu, includes all-day refills. This will pay for itself if your group drinks a lot of soda over a long, hot day. Check the app for any lower-cost mug options available that season.
  • Bring a waterproof phone pouch. You will want your phone for mobile ordering and digital payment, and most water park transactions are cashless.
  • Eat early or late to beat the rush. The lunch hour gets crowded at the main quick-service spots. Eating before 11:30 a.m. or after 1:30 p.m. means shorter lines and an easier time finding a table.
  • Hydrate with free water. Quick-service locations will provide cups of ice water at no charge, just ask.

Planning a Summer Water Park Trip

If a water park day has you thinking about a full Walt Disney World vacation this summer, the timing lines up well with one of the better ticket deals Disney has offered in a while. The 4-Day, 4-Park Magic Ticket is back for summer 2026, starting at $100 per day, and it covers visits from May 26 through September 26, 2026. And better yet, you can add the Water Park and more option for even more water park days. It’s a strong value for families building a multi-day trip, and it pairs naturally with a relaxed water park day mixed in between your theme park days. For everything else that’s happening, check out our complete guide to what’s new at Walt Disney World this summer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are both Disney water parks open for summer 2026?

Yes. Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon and Disney’s Blizzard Beach are both open simultaneously from May 26 through September 8, 2026. Typhoon Lagoon reopened on May 12, 2026 after its seasonal refurbishment.

Do I get free water park admission with a Disney resort stay?

Yes. Walt Disney World Resort hotel guests receive free admission to one water park, either Typhoon Lagoon or Blizzard Beach, on their check-in day for arrivals between now and September 8, 2026. You can only choose one park, and no separate park reservation or theme park ticket is required.

Do you need a dining reservation at the water parks?

No. All dining at both Typhoon Lagoon and Blizzard Beach is quick service or grab-and-go. There are no table-service restaurants and no reservations required at either park.

Can you mobile order at the Disney water parks?

Yes, at select locations. At Typhoon Lagoon, Leaning Palms and Typhoon Tilly’s both offer mobile order through the My Disney Experience app. Using mobile order is the fastest way to skip the line during the busy lunch period.

What is the best place to eat at Typhoon Lagoon?

Leaning Palms has the widest menu and is the most popular lunch spot, with rice bowls, flatbreads, and burgers. For seafood, Typhoon Tilly’s is the better choice with its shrimp baskets and turkey pesto sandwich.

What is the best place to eat at Blizzard Beach?

The Warming Hut is widely considered the best dining spot at Blizzard Beach, thanks to its Jerk Chicken Sandwich and barbecue-leaning menu. For dessert, the S’mores and Banana Split Churros at Arctic Expeditions are a must-try.

How much does water park food cost?

Disney water park dining is priced in line with other Disney quick-service locations. Most adult entrees fall under $16, with sandwiches and snacks running lower. The souvenir Typhoon Tilly Sipper, which includes all-day refills, is listed at $22.49 on Disney’s official menu. Prices are subject to change, so confirm in the My Disney Experience app.

Typhoon Lagoon Surf Pool Photo Credit: Disney[/caption]

Plan Your Summer Water Park Day

With both water parks open all summer and free check-in day admission for resort guests, there has never been a better time to work a splash day into your Walt Disney World trip. Disney water park dining is part of the fun, whether you go for the tropical menus at Typhoon Lagoon or the standout sandwiches at Blizzard Beach. And when you are ready to plan the table-service meals for the rest of your trip, head to MouseDining.com to set a dining alert and get notified the moment a hard-to-book reservation opens up for your date and party size.

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