Back to Blog Disney Cruise Line Just Refreshed Menus on 4 Ships — Here's What's Different

Disney Cruise Line Just Refreshed Menus on 4 Ships — Here's What's Different

Magic Table Team
Disney Cruise LineDisney DiningRotational DiningDisney MagicDisney WonderDisney FantasyDisney DreamCruise Ship Dining

Disney Cruise Line quietly rolled out updated menus across multiple rotational dining restaurants on its four classic ships this week, and if you have a cruise booked on the Magic, Wonder, Fantasy, or Dream, you’ll want to know what to expect before you sail.

According to a report published May 13, 2026 by WDW News Today, six rotational dining restaurants have debuted revised menus — and the changes range from subtle dish tweaks to broader structural overhauls in how the menus are organized.

Which Ships and Restaurants Are Affected?

The updates apply to Disney Magic, Disney Wonder, Disney Fantasy, and Disney Dream — the four original ships in the fleet, often referred to as the “classic” or pre-Wish-class vessels. The restaurants receiving new menus include:

  • Animator’s Palate
  • Enchanted Garden
  • Lumiere’s
  • Royal Court
  • Royal Palace
  • Triton’s

That covers the majority of the formal rotational dining experiences on these ships, making this a fairly significant fleet-wide refresh.

What Exactly Changed?

Animator’s Palate

The beloved animation-themed restaurant — a staple on all four classic ships — has seen some notable menu edits. A few highlights:

  • The Tomato Tarte appetizer has been renamed the Baked Tomato and Goat Cheese Tarte
  • The Arugula Leaves salad and Chicken and Walnut Salad have been replaced by a Watermelon, Orange, and Jicama Salad and an Iceberg Wedge
  • The Pennette Bolognese now features a more descriptive listing — “Slow-Cooked Veal, Beef, and Tomato Ragu, Thyme, Parmigiano-Reggiano, Toasted Garlic Ciabatta” — replacing the simpler previous description
  • The “Lighter Note” chicken and salmon options have been removed entirely from the menu

Enchanted Garden

The French garden-inspired restaurant on the Disney Dream and Disney Fantasy saw some of the most significant changes, particularly in its small plates section:

  • The Ahi Tuna and Avocado Tower has been swapped for Ahi Tuna Tartar
  • The North Atlantic Lobster Ravioli now comes with a “Tomato-Tarragon Bisque, Brown Butter Crumb” rather than the previous roasted garlic and sweet basil broth
  • The Applewood-Smoked Bacon Wild Mushroom Tart has been replaced by a Jarlsberg Cheese and Rosemary-Ham Tart

Across All Restaurants: A New Menu Format

Beyond individual dish changes, the menus have been structurally reorganized across the board. Key format changes include:

  • Specialty drinks are no longer listed on the food menus for each restaurant — a change already introduced with the new Pirate Night menu
  • Appetizers, soups, and salads have been combined into a single “Small Plates” section
  • “Lighter Note Offerings” are no longer called out as a separate section
  • Each restaurant’s “Signature Dessert” is no longer highlighted separately

Why the Change? Aligning with the Wish-Class Experience

The driving force behind these updates appears to be consistency across the fleet. According to WDW News Today, the menus were revised to bring the classic ships more in line with the dining experience found on the Wish-class ships — the Disney Wish, Disney Treasure, and Disney Destiny — which launched with a more modern menu format and updated culinary offerings.

This is a smart move by Disney Cruise Line. As newer ships raise the bar with more polished and contemporary dining experiences, it makes sense to bring the older vessels up to speed so that guests sailing on any ship in the fleet can expect a comparable level of quality and presentation.

What This Means for Your Next Cruise

If you’re a returning Disney cruiser who has sailed on the Magic, Wonder, Fantasy, or Dream before, you’ll likely notice these changes — especially if you have strong feelings about specific dishes. The removal of the “Lighter Note” chicken and salmon at Animator’s Palate in particular may disappoint guests who relied on those as a lower-calorie option.

On the other hand, the structural format changes — combining small plates into one section and removing the separate signature dessert callouts — actually make the menus feel less cluttered and more in line with what you’d find at a quality land-based restaurant.

For first-time cruisers, none of this will feel like a loss. The rotational dining experience itself remains one of Disney Cruise Line’s greatest strengths — the novelty of visiting a different themed restaurant each night while your servers follow you throughout the voyage is something no other major cruise line offers.

Keep an Eye on More Details

At the time of writing, full updated menu details for all six affected restaurants have not yet been published by Disney Cruise Line directly. WDW News Today noted the changes as they became available, but additional dish-level changes on Lumiere’s, Royal Court, Royal Palace, and Triton’s may surface as guests share their experiences onboard.

If you have a sailing coming up on any of these four classic ships, we’d recommend checking updated menus closer to your departure date — and going in with an open mind. Disney’s culinary teams have a strong track record, and a menu refresh like this is usually a sign of investment in the product, not a step backward.

We’ll be watching for more details as they emerge.


Source: WDW News Today — “Animator’s Palate, Enchanted Garden, and More Disney Cruise Line Restaurants Debut New Menus” (May 13, 2026)

Never Miss a Disney Reservation

MagicTable monitors availability and alerts you the instant a table opens up at your favorite restaurants. Set it and forget it.