There are Disney World hotel rooms people rave about, like they personally descended from the heavens on a cloud of pixie dust and refillable mug coffee.
And look, some of them are lovely. But “lovely” and “worth that price” are not always the same thing.
Sometimes you’re paying extra for a view you’ll barely enjoy, a location that sounds better on paper than it feels at midnight after a 14-mile park day, or a room category that has somehow achieved icon status despite being wildly inconvenient in real life. Disney has a lot of genuinely great hotels, but not every fan-favorite room is the slam dunk people make it out to be.
So let’s talk about the overhyped hotel rooms, room types, and resort stays that might not deserve the pedestal. And because we’re not here just to stir the pot and flee, we’re also giving you smarter alternatives for each one.
1. Savanna View Rooms at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge
Yes, the savanna is gorgeous. Yes, seeing giraffes and zebras outside your room is objectively cool. Yes, Disney leans hard into that selling point, with Animal Kingdom Lodge built around four lush savannas with more than 200 hoofed animals and birds roaming outside. Savanna View rooms are a major premium category, there for a reason.
But here’s the tiny chaotic detail nobody wants to say out loud: you are probably not in your room enough to justify what you’re paying for that balcony moment.
You’re up early for rope drop, breakfast, buses, snacks, the emotional roller coaster of mobile ordering, and then by the time you get back to the hotel, you are one pair of blistered feet away from becoming part of the bedding. That expensive savanna view often turns into, “Cool, a giraffe. I have 11 seconds to appreciate it before I collapse face-first into a Disney pillow.”
This room works best for people planning genuine resort time. If you’re doing a slower trip, a rest-heavy deluxe stay, or an anniversary where the hotel itself is part of the vacation, fine. But if you’re a park commando with a dining reservation addiction, this is probably a splurge you’ll barely use.
Try instead: A standard room at Animal Kingdom Lodge, then spend time in the resort’s public viewing areas and book a meal at Sanaa, which also offers savanna views.
2. Family Suites at Disney’s Art of Animation Resort
Art of Animation’s Family Suites are popular because they sleep up to six, come with more room to spread out, and give bigger groups a layout that is definitely more functional than stuffing everyone into a standard hotel room like caffeinated sardines. Disney specifically markets them as spacious suites for larger parties.
But this is where the math starts giving side-eye.
If you need all that space, great. But if you’re booking one of these for a smaller group “just because it would be nice,” the price jump can get awfully bold awfully fast. At that point, you’re paying a premium for themed square footage at a Value resort. A very fun Value resort, yes. Still a Value.
That’s the thing. These suites are best when you are truly maximizing them with a bigger family or group. If not, the price can creep into territory where you start wondering whether you should’ve just booked two standard rooms somewhere else and let everybody have breathing room and a second TV war zone.
Try instead: A family suite at All Star Music, or even a standard room at Art of Animation if the suites feel like overkill.
3. Pretty Much the Whole Riviera Resort
I said what I said.
Disney’s Riviera Resort is beautiful. It’s polished. It’s calm. It has good dining, fancy vibes, and Skyliner access to EPCOT and Hollywood Studios. Disney absolutely positions it as a stylish deluxe villa resort with upscale accommodations and convenient transportation.
But the nightly rates can feel like they were set by someone who looked at a nice tile floor and lost all restraint.
Riviera is one of those resorts where the appeal makes perfect sense until the price enters the chat. Then suddenly you’re asking harder questions. Like: “Do I love this resort, or do I love the Skyliner?” Because those are not the same thing. And if the answer is “mostly the Skyliner,” there are cheaper ways to get that benefit.
That doesn’t make Riviera bad. Not even close. It just makes it a resort that often costs more than the average guest really needs to spend to get a lot of the same practical perks.
Try instead: Pop Century or Caribbean Beach if Skyliner access is your priority. If you want deluxe energy, look at BoardWalk or Beach Club when the price difference isn’t massive, especially if walkability to EPCOT matters more than elegant wallpaper.
4. Second- and Third-Floor Rooms at Caribbean Beach Resort
Caribbean Beach gets points for atmosphere, Skyliner access, and that “I am on vacation and possibly in a sunscreen commercial” energy. The resort has six villages and Skyliner transportation, both of which are part of the appeal.
But here’s the catch that can turn your magical return home into a full stair-climbing tragedy: many buildings are walk-up style. So if you’re on an upper floor, there’s a solid chance you’re hauling yourself, your backpack, your refillable mug, your sleeping child, and your increasingly hostile legs up stairs at the end of the day.
This is not just a problem for guests with mobility concerns. It’s annoying for literally anyone who has spent all day speed-walking from Fantasyland to France.
Upper-floor rooms here can feel like a trap disguised as a room request.
Try instead: Request a first-floor room at Caribbean Beach, or look at Pop Century if you want Skyliner convenience without the sprawling-island-marathon energy.
5. Saratoga Springs and Old Key West Rooms
These resorts have fans. Passionate fans. Loyal fans. The kind of fans who will appear in your comments with color-coded justifications and a map.
And to be fair, both resorts offer spacious villas, pools, dining, and easy access to Disney Springs. Disney highlights Old Key West’s sprawling grounds and multiple pools, while Saratoga Springs is positioned as a full resort-and-spa experience. Disney Springs transportation is also a real perk.
For a lot of regular vacationers, though, these resorts can feel overwhelmingly spread out, with more space than convenience.
The internal bus loop situation can feel like a side quest nobody asked for. You can be technically “at your resort” and still feel 14 business days away from your room. If you are the type of guest who values convenience, compact layouts, and not accidentally touring your own hotel before breakfast, these can be a hard sell.
Try instead: French Quarter for a smaller footprint, or BoardWalk/Beach Club if you want a deluxe stay where location does more of the heavy lifting.
6. Moderate Resort Rooms in General
This is the category that starts fights at family group dinners.
Disney’s Moderate resorts sit between Value and Deluxe, which sounds sensible enough. They generally offer more immersive grounds, nicer theming, and a few upgraded amenities over the Value tier.
But if your priority is mostly a place to sleep, shower, and recover before your next theme park sprint, the jump from Value to Moderate can feel a little… aspirational. Like you’re paying a hefty premium for vibes, a slightly calmer pool situation, and the privilege of saying, “Well, it’s not a Value.”
Sometimes the upgrade is worth it. But sometimes it’s just a prettier path back to your room.
Try instead: Pop Century if transportation matters, or spend the extra money strategically on a Deluxe only when the location radically changes your trip.
7. Rooms Near Elevators
This is the room request people make because it sounds smart.
And in theory, it is smart. Less walking. Easier luggage hauling. Faster exits in the morning. Great.
In practice? Congratulations on booking yourself front-row seats to Elevator: The Musical.
You get the dinging. The rolling suitcases. The children are discovering indoor acoustics at 6:12 AM. The late-night hallway chats from people who have just returned from EPCOT and are suddenly philosophers. It is convenient with a side of ambient chaos.
If you’re a heavy sleeper, maybe you can power through it. If not, this is one of those “helpful” room locations that can backfire hard.
Try instead: Request a room that is close-ish to transportation or amenities, but not directly next to the elevator or ice machine. There is a middle ground, and it is much less shouty.
8. Grand Floridian Rooms
Here we go.
The Grand Floridian is iconic. It’s one of Disney World’s flagship deluxe resorts, famous for its Victorian style, dining, and proximity to Magic Kingdom. It is, without question, fancy.
But depending on your taste, it can also feel less “whimsical luxury” and more “wealthy aunt’s very serious sitting room where you are not allowed to touch anything.” For some guests, that elegant atmosphere reads sophisticated. For others, it reads vaguely like a high-end retirement community with better scones.
And when you factor in the rates? You really have to want that specific aesthetic.
Some people adore it. Others spend the whole stay wondering why they paid that much to feel like they should lower their voice in the hallway.
Try instead: Wilderness Lodge if you want deluxe magic with more personality, or Beach Club if you want a premium resort that feels a little more relaxed and vacation-y.
The Bottom Line
Not every expensive Disney World hotel room is a bad choice. But some of them are being sold to people who don’t actually vacation in a way that makes those upgrades worthwhile.
That’s the trick.
The “best” room is not the one with the flashiest label, the fanciest balcony, or the strongest fan club. It’s the one that matches how you travel. If you’re barely in the room, don’t overpay for the view. If convenience matters, don’t let sprawling-resort propaganda sweet-talk you. If your budget has limits, don’t let a pretty lobby convince you to make reckless financial decisions in mouse ears.
Because at Disney World, there is a big difference between a room that looks impressive online and a room that actually makes your trip better.
At the end of the day, the best Disney hotel room isn’t the one with the biggest hype machine. It’s the one that helps you have a better trip without making your wallet file a formal complaint.
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Which Disney resort hotel rooms are your favorites? Let us know in the comments below!






















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We are dvc members from u k last year we came to wdw for a month and did 9 yes 9 hotels !!!
Being dvc it’s a bit different to these reviews but our favourite and we literally did all the deluxe hotels except wilderness lodge considering room location transport pools was drum role !!! Riviera !!!
My experience is that these observations are very wise advice for most travelers. And of course as was also said, it depends on what you’re looking for. The family suites at AoA in particular were underwhelming for us. They do have large footprints, and great theming, but the way they’re laid out, each space feels (and is) very cramped. If you fold out or pull down the beds, there are places the space becomes unnavigable (including near the door to the room). The ‘kitchenette’ is a microwave, a wet bar sink, and a refrigerator that is maybe/maybe not a larger refrigerator than in other rooms (not a factor to pay more for in most cases). The only reasons to stay there IMO are if 1) you’re a super fan of the featured theming (I just had to stay in a Cars suite, at least once), or 2) you need two bathrooms but you also need to keep everyone in one space (as opposed to connecting or adjoining rooms elsewhere). The parking is not great for the price. We were able to get spaces not far from our building, but it’s always a long walk at value resorts. You’re also not necessarily very close to the resort amenities either. But there are great reasons to stay in Moderate resorts. We love the Royal Guest Rooms at Port Orleans (and Boatwrights, and River Roost), and I know people who will not stay anywhere but Coronado Springs.
Our last stay at WL when they were building the bungalows was not great. The daytime construction was one thing, BUT for hours in the middle of the night we could not sleep due to the deliveries with the trucks constantly beeping each night. Due to this we checked out early. All we got was sorry, no other offer. Other than that we liked WL.
As a longtime Disney World fan, my first visit 50 years ago, as well as a DVC member from the very earliest days of its inception, I could not disagree more. We have pointed out at Boardwalk and Riviera, sold our point at Saratoga and GF. We love the Boardwalk but it’s tired; I needs a general redo. We LOVE Riviera for many reasons, but chief among them being because it was built “up” instead of “out”, it is much more convenient to navigate. Also, their order ahead cafe on the ground floor operates incredibly efficiently. There are many other wonderful attributes to Riviera, and the Boardwalk and Riviera are comparable in price. I don’t think those who choose a deluxe resort need to feel as though they’ve made an irresponsible choice.