Back to Blog Disney World Quick-Service Restaurants That Serve Alcohol: Park-by-Park Guide

Disney World Quick-Service Restaurants That Serve Alcohol: Park-by-Park Guide

MagicTable Team
disney-diningwalt-disney-worldGuidesepcothollywood-studiosanimal-kingdommagic-kingdom

Whether Disney World quick-service restaurants serve alcohol depends entirely on which park you’re in. Magic Kingdom counter-service locations serve no alcohol at all — beer, wine, and cocktails there are limited to table-service restaurants and lounges. But EPCOT, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and Disney’s Animal Kingdom all have counter-service and walk-up spots that pour beer and wine, with EPCOT being by far the easiest place to grab a drink at a quick-service window. One thing to know: at spots that serve alcohol you can often add beer or wine right to a Mobile Order — you’ll just show a valid photo ID at pickup, and Disney caps you at two alcoholic drinks per order.

Menus, venue types, and offerings change constantly at Walt Disney World. Everything below is accurate as of 2026, but always confirm on the My Disney Experience app before you go.

If you’ve read our companion guide on Magic Kingdom restaurants with alcohol, you already know that park is the outlier. This guide zooms in on quick-service and counter-service specifically — the mobile-order windows, food-court-style spots, and grab-and-go stands — across all four Walt Disney World theme parks. That’s a meaningfully different question than “which table-service restaurants have a bar,” and the answer varies a lot park to park.

Quick reference: which parks pour at quick-service?

ParkQuick-service alcohol?Notes
Magic KingdomNoCounter service and carts are fully dry; alcohol only at table-service + lounges
EPCOTYes — extensiveWorld Showcase counters, festival booths, “drinking around the World”
Hollywood StudiosYes — several spotsMix of true quick-service and walk-up bars; know the difference
Animal KingdomYes — a fewSatu’li Canteen, some stands; plus the Nomad Lounge nearby

Magic Kingdom: quick-service is completely dry

Let’s state this plainly because it surprises people every time: Magic Kingdom quick-service restaurants serve no alcohol. Not the counter-service spots, not the snack carts, not the walk-up windows. If you order at a register and grab your food off a tray, you will not find beer or wine there.

For years Magic Kingdom served no alcohol anywhere, and even now the options are narrow: alcohol is available only at a handful of table-service restaurants and at lounge-style venues. So if you’re set on a drink inside Magic Kingdom, you’re looking at a sit-down reservation or a lounge, not a counter. Our full breakdown of where those pours actually happen lives in the Magic Kingdom restaurants with alcohol guide.

The practical takeaway: don’t plan your Magic Kingdom day around grabbing a quick beer between rides. It isn’t going to happen at quick-service. Save the “drink while you walk” strategy for the other three parks.

EPCOT: the counter-service alcohol capital

EPCOT is the polar opposite of Magic Kingdom. This is where counter-service alcohol shines, and it’s the whole reason “drinking around the World” is a Disney tradition.

Around World Showcase, most of the pavilion quick-service and kiosk locations pour something regional: beer in Germany, wine and beer in Italy and France, sake in Japan, margaritas from the Mexico pavilion’s walk-up spots, a Guinness-style pour near the United Kingdom, and so on. You order at a window or a counter, show ID, and walk off with your drink. No reservation, no table required.

During EPCOT’s festivals — the Festival of the Arts, Flower & Garden, Food & Wine, and the Holidays festival — the outdoor festival booths dramatically expand what’s available. Many of those booths pour beer, wine, cider, or festival cocktails alongside their small plates. Festival booths are the definition of quick-service alcohol: a walk-up window, a short line, ID check, done.

A few things to keep in mind at EPCOT:

  • Offerings rotate. Which pavilion window is pouring what — and which festival booths are open — changes by season and even by year. Confirm on My Disney Experience.
  • We’d caution against naming specific signature cocktails at specific windows, because those menus turn over frequently. Beer and wine availability by pavilion is the reliable part; the fancy stuff moves around.
  • The rest of the World Showcase and World Celebration dining is worth planning too; our EPCOT restaurants ranked guide covers the table-service side.

When we’ve done a lap of World Showcase, the counter-service pours are genuinely the easiest alcohol experience at all of Walt Disney World — no other park comes close for sheer walk-up convenience.

Hollywood Studios: several spots, but mind the labels

Hollywood Studios does serve alcohol at quick-service and stand locations, but this is the park where the quick-service vs. walk-up bar vs. lounge distinction matters most, so let’s be careful.

  • Docking Bay 7 Food and Cargo in Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is a true quick-service restaurant, and it has offered beer and wine alongside its themed entrees. This is your closest thing to “mobile-order-style counter service that also happens to serve alcohol,” and at participating counters you can often add the beer or wine right to your Mobile Order (more on that below).
  • BaseLine Tap House is a walk-up bar, not a mobile-order quick-service restaurant. It pours craft beer, wine, and cocktails, and it’s excellent — but categorize it as a bar you order at in person, not a counter-service meal spot.
  • Dockside Diner and similar grab-and-go stands have at times offered beer; these come and go, so verify same-day.
  • Oga’s Cantina is a lounge, full stop. It’s a themed bar with (usually) a reservation or a virtual queue, not a quick-service window. Don’t lump it in with counter service.

The reason we’re picky here is that the whole point of this guide is the counter-service question. Calling BaseLine or Oga’s “quick-service” would mislead you about how you actually get a drink there. If you want the sit-down dining rundown for this park, see Hollywood Studios restaurants ranked.

Animal Kingdom: a handful of counter pours

Animal Kingdom lands in the middle. It’s not the pour-everywhere paradise of EPCOT, but unlike Magic Kingdom, some of its quick-service and stand locations do serve beer and wine.

  • Satu’li Canteen in Pandora — The World of Avatar is a standout quick-service restaurant that has served beer and wine, making it one of the more reliable counter-service alcohol spots in the park.
  • Flame Tree Barbecue and Pizzafari are counter-service locations that have offered beer at various times; confirm current availability before counting on it.
  • Nomad Lounge, next to Tiffins, is a lounge/bar, not quick-service. It’s a fantastic place for a drink, but you order there in person as you would at a bar — don’t file it under counter service.

Pandora in particular is worth a beer stop when we’ve been there; the theming makes even a simple counter pour feel like part of the experience. For the sit-down options, our Animal Kingdom restaurants ranked guide has the details.

What about Disney Springs and the resorts?

Two quick notes beyond the theme parks:

  • Disney Springs is loaded with places to drink, but most of them are table-service restaurants, bars, and lounges rather than mobile-order quick-service. There are quick-service and walk-up spots that pour, but the vibe is more “sit and sip” than “grab and go.” See Disney Springs restaurants ranked for the lay of the land.
  • Resort quick-service varies. Many Disney resort food courts and pool bars serve beer, wine, or cocktails — a resort’s quick-service food court and its pool bar are often your easiest non-park pours. Availability differs by resort, so check on-site.

Can you add alcohol to a Mobile Order?

Short answer: yes — at locations that serve it. At participating alcohol-serving counters, you can add beer or wine right to your Mobile Order in the My Disney Experience app, alongside your food. The age check simply happens in person: a cast member verifies a valid photo ID at pickup when you collect your order.

Here’s how that plays out in practice at a quick-service spot that serves alcohol:

  1. You Mobile Order your food and your drink together in the app, if the location lists beer or wine on its mobile-order menu.
  2. At the pickup window, a cast member checks your photo ID before handing over the alcohol — you must be 21 or older.
  3. Disney limits guests to two alcoholic beverages per transaction.

One caveat: not every alcohol-serving counter lists drinks on its mobile-order menu, so availability varies by location — check the app’s menu for that specific spot, since Disney adjusts what’s offered. If you want the full walkthrough of how Mobile Order works, we cover it in the Disney World Mobile Order guide. And if you like to see which spots are accepting Mobile Orders and track dining availability in real time, that’s exactly the kind of thing the MagicTable app is built to help you keep tabs on.

Frequently asked questions

Does Magic Kingdom have any quick-service alcohol? No. Magic Kingdom counter-service and carts serve no alcohol. Beer, wine, and cocktails there are limited to table-service restaurants and lounges.

Which Disney park is easiest for grabbing a drink at a counter? EPCOT, without question. World Showcase pavilion counters and the festival booths make walk-up beer and wine the norm rather than the exception.

Can I use Mobile Order for beer or wine? Yes, at participating locations. Where a counter lists beer or wine on its mobile-order menu, you can add it to your order; you’ll show a valid photo ID at pickup, must be 21 or older, and Disney caps you at two alcoholic drinks per transaction. Availability varies by spot, so check the app’s menu.

Is BaseLine Tap House or Oga’s Cantina quick-service? No. BaseLine Tap House is a walk-up bar and Oga’s Cantina is a themed lounge. Neither is a mobile-order quick-service restaurant, even though both serve alcohol.

Do I need to be 21 to buy alcohol at Disney World? Yes. You must be 21 or older and show a valid photo ID at the point of purchase, and per-guest quantity limits apply.


Quick-service alcohol at Walt Disney World really is a park-by-park story: dry at Magic Kingdom, everywhere at EPCOT, several spots (with careful labeling) at Hollywood Studios, and a reliable handful at Animal Kingdom. At participating spots you can often add the drink right to your Mobile Order (just show ID at pickup); confirm the specifics on My Disney Experience the day of your visit, and you’ll always know exactly where to grab that beer or glass of wine between attractions.

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.