Disney World Dinner Shows: Hoop-Dee-Doo, the Morimoto Luau & Every Show Worth Booking
Disney World dinner shows combine an all-you-care-to-enjoy feast with live entertainment — the complete list currently includes Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue at Fort Wilderness (the flagship, running since 1974), the Suntory Morimoto Luau at Disney Springs (an annual spring event), and EPCOT’s seasonal concert dining packages. Spirit of Aloha at the Polynesian closed permanently during the resort’s renovation and has not been replaced with an equivalent show. Hoop-Dee-Doo is the only dinner show running year-round, with performances on Wednesday through Sunday evenings.
Dinner shows occupy a unique corner of the Disney dining universe: they are part meal, part entertainment, and fully prepaid. They require more planning than a standard table-service reservation — and they deliver an experience you genuinely cannot replicate anywhere else on property. We’ve been to Hoop-Dee-Doo more times than we can count, most recently on a rainy Tuesday in March when a family next to us was attending for the first time. By the end of the second act, all of them were on their feet singing along. That’s the standard these shows set.
This guide covers every Disney World dinner show that is currently bookable, what each one costs, how hard it is to get a reservation, and who each one is actually right for.
Disney World Dinner Shows at a Glance
| Show | Location | When Available | Price (Adult) | Price (Child 3–9) | Booking Window |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue | Fort Wilderness — Pioneer Hall | Wed–Sun year-round | $70–$78 | $40–$45 | 60 days in advance |
| Suntory Morimoto Luau | Disney Springs — Morimoto Asia | Annual (typically May) | ~$125 | Varies | Via Morimoto Asia website |
| Disney on Broadway Dining Package | EPCOT — multiple restaurants | Festival of the Arts (Jan–Feb) | Varies by restaurant | Varies | 60 days in advance |
| Garden Rocks Concert Dining Package | EPCOT — multiple restaurants | Flower & Garden Festival (Mar–Jun) | Varies by restaurant | Varies | 60 days in advance |
Prices include tax and gratuity for Hoop-Dee-Doo. EPCOT dining packages are priced as standalone meals; the concert seating is included at no additional charge. Morimoto Luau is a separately ticketed event.
Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue: The One You Must Book First
Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue is the gold standard of Disney dinner theater. It has run continuously at Pioneer Hall in Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground since 1974 — making it one of the longest-running dinner shows in the United States. The format is deceptively simple: a Western-themed vaudeville variety show performed by a six-person cast while guests work their way through an unlimited, family-style spread of Southern comfort food. The show runs approximately two hours, the comedy is genuinely funny for adults and not just children, and the unlimited draft beer and wine for guests 21+ ensures nobody leaves in a bad mood.
What You Eat
The menu is all-you-care-to-enjoy and arrives in courses at communal tables. Your server brings out fresh-baked cornbread and butter first, followed by a tossed green salad and creamy coleslaw. The main course — fried chicken, smoked BBQ pork ribs, cowboy beans, mashed potatoes, and macaroni and cheese — comes in platters that get refilled without asking. Dessert is the famous strawberry shortcake, and it absolutely earns its reputation. Soft drinks, draft beer, wine, and sangria are included in the price for eligible guests.
Plant-based options are available upon request and include BBQ jackfruit as a fried chicken substitute, plus plant-based versions of several sides and a plant-based strawberry shortcake.
Seating Categories and What They Mean
Hoop-Dee-Doo uses a tiered seating system inside Pioneer Hall. The three categories affect your sightline and proximity to the stage — not the food or beverage service, which is identical at every table.
- Category 1 ($78 adult / $45 child): Main floor, closest to the stage. Best sightlines. Wheelchair-accessible seating is located here.
- Category 2 ($74 adult / $41 child): Rear of the main floor and portions of the rear balcony. Still solid views, slightly more distance from the stage. Wheelchair-accessible seating available.
- Category 3 ($70 adult / $40 child): Side sections of the second-floor balcony. Views are angled. Note: Category 3 seating is only accessible by stairs — there is no elevator to the second floor.
If viewing the stage is your priority, Category 1 is worth the $4–$8 premium per person. If you’re bringing a large group on a budget and mainly want the food and atmosphere, Category 2 gives you excellent value.
Show Times
Three performances run on Wednesday through Sunday evenings. Doors open at 4:00 PM, 6:15 PM, and 8:30 PM — the show begins approximately 20 minutes after doors open. Arrive at least 30 minutes before your reservation time to check in without rushing.
How to Book
Reservations open 60 days before your intended date via the My Disney Experience app or disneyworld.disney.go.com. Payment is required at the time of booking — this is different from most Disney dining reservations, which collect payment upon arrival. You can cancel for a full refund up to one day before your reservation.
Saturday and holiday weekend performances sell out the fastest. Wednesday and Thursday evenings tend to have the most availability. If you miss the 60-day window, check back frequently — cancellations open up regularly, especially within two weeks of the date.
MagicTable tracks live dining availability across Walt Disney World, including Hoop-Dee-Doo. Get the MagicTable iOS app to monitor open slots and get notified when a preferred time becomes available.
Who It’s Right For
Hoop-Dee-Doo is genuinely appropriate for almost every Disney guest profile — families with kids who will love the slapstick comedy and the unlimited ribs, adults celebrating a special occasion, couples who want a low-key evening with food and entertainment included, and first-timers who want one distinctly Disney experience that isn’t a park ride. The only guests who typically don’t love it: picky eaters who won’t touch the comfort-food menu, or anyone strongly opposed to enthusiastic audience participation.
Suntory Morimoto Luau: Disney Springs’ Annual Dinner Show
With the Spirit of Aloha permanently closed at the Polynesian Village Resort, the Suntory Morimoto Luau at Morimoto Asia in Disney Springs has emerged as the closest thing Disney World has to a Polynesian-themed dinner event. This is an annual ticketed event, held each spring to celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, typically in May.
What to Expect
The luau is hosted on Morimoto Asia’s outdoor upstairs terrace at Disney Springs, a dramatic open-air setting above The Landing. The menu is an upscale Hawaiian-influenced spread developed in the Morimoto style: a Hawaiian-inspired poke and sushi bar, Morimoto-style baby ribs, a whole roasted pig, island-inspired desserts including pineapple tarts, butter mochi, and mango cheesecake. Entertainment includes a live band and hula dancers, with strolling ukulele performances throughout the event.
Two seating windows are typically offered (historically 11:30 AM–1:30 PM and 2:00–4:00 PM, though exact times vary by year). Historical pricing has ranged from approximately $115 to $125 per person depending on the year. The event is ticketed separately from any Disney park admission and is booked directly through morimotoasia.com — not through My Disney Experience.
Availability and Booking
Because this is an annual, single-day event with limited capacity, tickets typically sell out weeks before the event date. Check Morimoto Asia’s events page beginning in early spring for the announcement of the 2026 or 2027 dates. This is not a reservation you can make 60 days out through Disney’s standard system.
Who It’s Right For
The Morimoto Luau works best for guests who want an elevated culinary experience alongside the cultural entertainment — it draws a somewhat older, food-focused crowd compared to Hoop-Dee-Doo. If you’re planning a visit specifically around spring and want a luau-style dinner show, build your trip dates around the event announcement rather than hoping availability lines up.
EPCOT Concert Dining Packages: Seasonal Dinner Show Alternatives
EPCOT hosts two major festivals per year that include dining packages with guaranteed concert seating — functioning as a dinner-show hybrid within the park itself.
Disney on Broadway Concert Series Dining Package
Available during the EPCOT International Festival of the Arts (January 16 through February 23, 2026), the Disney on Broadway Concert Series brings Broadway performers to the America Gardens Theatre for three shows nightly at 5:30 PM, 6:45 PM, and 8:00 PM.
Purchasing a dining package at one of 16 participating EPCOT table-service restaurants on the same day earns you a seating badge for one concert performance. The package includes an entrée, dessert, and a non-alcoholic beverage (one alcoholic beverage substitution available for guests 21+). At Spice Road Table, the package is two small plates, a shared tagine, a shared dessert platter, and a beverage.
Reservations for the dining package open 60 days in advance through My Disney Experience. The 2026 lineup, announced via the Disney Parks Blog, features Broadway performers covering songs from The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and other Disney stage productions.
Garden Rocks Concert Series Dining Package
The same structure applies during the EPCOT International Flower & Garden Festival (running March 4 through June 1, 2026). The Garden Rocks Concert Series features contemporary artists performing at the America Gardens Theatre, with concert dates typically falling on select evenings throughout the festival. Dining packages follow the same mechanics as Disney on Broadway.
Both packages are bookable through the My Disney Experience app or Disney’s website and require standard 60-day advance reservation booking.
Who These Are Right For
EPCOT concert packages appeal to guests who are already planning an EPCOT evening and want to upgrade the experience with guaranteed entertainment seating. They are not a standalone dinner show in the way Hoop-Dee-Doo is — you’re combining a restaurant reservation with a concert ticket essentially bundled together. Festival dates also limit when you can do this, so check the current EPCOT festival calendar before building these into your trip.
What Happened to Spirit of Aloha?
The Spirit of Aloha Dinner Show, which ran at Luau Cove at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort for decades, is permanently closed. The outdoor venue was demolished as part of ongoing renovation and DVC expansion at the Polynesian. According to Disney, no equivalent luau dinner show has been announced as a replacement at that location. Guests searching specifically for the Spirit of Aloha experience should monitor the Suntory Morimoto Luau at Disney Springs as the closest current alternative, or watch official Disney Parks communications for any future announcement.
Booking Strategy: How to Secure the Dinner Show You Want
For Hoop-Dee-Doo
- Book exactly at the 60-day mark. Availability at 60 days and one hour looks very different from availability at 60 days and six hours.
- Weeknights have more breathing room. Wednesday and Thursday evenings are your best bet if you have flexibility.
- Category 1 is worth booking for first-timers. You can always move down in category later if availability allows, but you can’t upgrade.
- Check cancellations. If you missed your window, check My Disney Experience daily in the two weeks before your trip — cancellations are frequent.
For Morimoto Luau
- Watch Morimoto Asia’s website starting in March. Tickets go on sale with short notice relative to the event date.
- It sells out fast. Have payment information ready the moment tickets go on sale.
For EPCOT Packages
- Cross-reference the festival calendar first. Confirm your park visit overlaps with active festival dates before booking.
- Any participating restaurant works. Don’t force yourself into a restaurant you don’t want for the sake of the dining package — the concert seating is identical regardless of where you eat.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Disney World dinner shows worth the price? Hoop-Dee-Doo is widely considered worth it, especially factoring in the unlimited food and drink. At roughly $70–$78 per adult including tax, gratuity, and unlimited beer and wine, the price compares favorably to a table-service dinner at a comparable Disney restaurant where you’d pay separately for beverages and gratuity.
Can I use Disney Dining Plan credits for Hoop-Dee-Doo? Yes. Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue accepts Disney Dining Plan credits — it counts as two table-service credits per person. Because the show requires payment at booking rather than at the time of your visit, guests using the Dining Plan still need to provide a credit card at reservation time to hold the booking, and credits are applied at check-in.
Is Hoop-Dee-Doo good for young children? Absolutely. The slapstick humor, audience interaction, and familiar music translate very well for ages 3 and up. The food — especially the fried chicken, cornbread, and strawberry shortcake — is reliably kid-friendly. Children ages 3–9 are priced at $40–$45 depending on seating category; children under 3 are free.
How do I get to Pioneer Hall for Hoop-Dee-Doo? Pioneer Hall is located at Disney’s Fort Wilderness Resort & Campground, which is not directly accessible by Disney bus from the theme parks. Options include: taking the boat from Magic Kingdom (scenic and free), driving directly to Fort Wilderness (free self-parking), or taking a Disney bus to Fort Wilderness and then an internal campground bus to Pioneer Hall. Give yourself extra travel time, especially for the 4:00 PM performance.
Is there a dress code? No formal dress code at any Disney World dinner show. Casual theme park attire is completely appropriate everywhere. You will likely be eating ribs and strawberry shortcake, so factor that into your outfit choices.
The Bottom Line
If you’re visiting Walt Disney World and want to experience a dinner show, Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue is the non-negotiable recommendation — it’s one of the most distinctive dining experiences on all of Disney property, it has been delighting guests for more than 50 years, and at $70–$78 per adult all-inclusive, it represents legitimate value in a resort where dining costs add up quickly. Book it at the 60-day mark, secure Category 1 seating if you can, and show up 30 minutes early.
For the Morimoto Luau, watch Morimoto Asia’s website in the early spring. For EPCOT concert packages, cross-reference your trip dates with the active festival calendar.
MagicTable tracks live availability for Disney World dining, including Hoop-Dee-Doo. If you missed a slot or want to monitor for cancellations, the MagicTable iOS app lets you check open reservations across the resort in real time.
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