Is 'Ohana on the Disney Dining Plan? Credits & Value
Yes, ‘Ohana is on the Disney Dining Plan. It costs 1 table-service credit per person at both the all-you-care-to-enjoy dinner and the ‘Ohana Best Friends Breakfast featuring Lilo & Stitch. Because ‘Ohana is a higher-priced family-style meal (roughly $67 per adult at dinner), redeeming a single table-service credit here is one of the better-value uses of the Disney Dining Plan at Walt Disney World.
Located at Disney’s Polynesian Village Resort, ‘Ohana is one of the most in-demand table-service restaurants on property — and one of the most credit-friendly. Below, we’ll break down exactly how the dining plan applies to each meal, what you’d pay out of pocket, whether a credit is “worth it,” and how to actually land a reservation.
Quick answer: ‘Ohana and the Disney Dining Plan
- Does ‘Ohana take the dining plan? Yes. It participates in the 2026 Disney Dining Plan.
- How many credits? 1 table-service credit per person, for breakfast or dinner.
- Which meals? Both the character breakfast and the family-style dinner.
- Is it good value? Yes — among the strongest 1-credit redemptions thanks to its premium per-person price.
- Hard to book? Very. Reservations open 60 days ahead and go fast.
If you’re still deciding whether the plan itself makes sense for your trip, our overview of what the Disney Dining Plan includes and our breakdown of how the Disney Dining Plan works walk through credits, eligibility, and the fine print.
How the dining plan applies to ‘Ohana
The Disney Dining Plan sorts restaurants into a few credit categories. ‘Ohana falls into the standard table-service bucket, which means it draws one table-service credit per guest per meal — the same as most sit-down restaurants on the plan. It is not a Signature restaurant, so it does not require two credits the way fine-dining spots like some steakhouses do.
That single-credit status is the headline. Many guests assume a popular, premium-feeling restaurant like ‘Ohana must cost two credits. It doesn’t — and that’s precisely why it’s such a popular redemption.
A few practical notes on how the plan works here:
- One credit covers your entrée(s) and a non-alcoholic beverage. At ‘Ohana, the “entrée” is the entire family-style feast, so you get the full all-you-care-to-enjoy spread for that single credit.
- Gratuity is not included. As with every dining-plan meal, tax is covered in the cash price but tip is paid out of pocket. Budget roughly 18–20% on the pre-discount menu total.
- Specialty alcoholic beverages and the famous bread-pudding-to-go aren’t part of the credit. Anything beyond the standard meal and included drink is an extra charge.
For the full mechanics of entrées, beverages, and what a single credit buys you, see our guide to Disney Dining Plan meals.
‘Ohana dinner on the dining plan
Dinner is the meal most people picture when they think of ‘Ohana. It’s an all-you-care-to-enjoy, family-style experience served straight to your table — Polynesian-inspired dishes that keep coming until you wave the white flag.
The dinner lineup typically includes:
- A salad and the signature ‘Ohana noodles
- Pork dumplings and chicken wings
- Wood-fire-grilled proteins served family-style — teriyaki beef, shrimp, and chicken
- ‘Ohana bread pudding served à la mode with homemade caramel sauce for dessert
Cost on the plan: 1 table-service credit per person.
Cost out of pocket (2026): approximately $67 per adult and $44 per child (ages 3–9), before tax and gratuity. A standard non-alcoholic beverage is included.
Characters do not appear at dinner — it’s a food-and-atmosphere experience, not a character meal. If you’re picturing Stitch hopping table to table, that’s the morning service.
‘Ohana Best Friends Breakfast on the dining plan
Morning service is the ‘Ohana Best Friends Breakfast featuring Lilo & Stitch — a full character meal. Stitch leads the cast, joined by Lilo, Mickey Mouse in his Hawaiian best, and Pluto, who make their way around the dining room while you eat.
Like dinner, breakfast is served family-style/all-you-care-to-enjoy and brought to your table. Expect Mickey-shaped waffles, scrambled eggs, breakfast meats, fried potatoes, fresh fruit, and ‘Ohana’s signature sweet bread.
Cost on the plan: 1 table-service credit per person — the same single credit as dinner.
Cost out of pocket (2026): approximately $53 per adult and $33 per child (ages 3–9), before tax and gratuity, with a standard non-alcoholic beverage included.
Because the breakfast is a character meal, it’s an especially appealing way to spend a credit if you want character interaction baked in. For more ways to combine characters with your credits, see our roundup of Disney Dining Plan character meals and our picks for the best character dining at Disney World.
Comparison: dinner vs. breakfast at a glance
| Detail | Best Friends Breakfast | ’Ohana Dinner |
|---|---|---|
| Dining plan cost | 1 table-service credit | 1 table-service credit |
| Approx. adult price | ~$53 | ~$67 |
| Approx. child price (3–9) | ~$33 | ~$44 |
| Characters | Yes — Stitch, Lilo, Mickey, Pluto | No |
| Service style | Family-style, all-you-care-to-enjoy | Family-style, all-you-care-to-enjoy |
| Included beverage | Standard non-alcoholic | Standard non-alcoholic |
Prices are approximate 2026 figures and exclude tax and gratuity; Disney adjusts menu pricing periodically.
Is ‘Ohana a good value use of a dining-plan credit?
Yes — and the math is the reason. The value of a table-service credit comes down to a simple question: how much would this meal cost in cash? The higher the out-of-pocket price, the more “stretch” you get from a single credit.
At roughly $67 per adult, ‘Ohana dinner sits near the top of the value range for a 1-credit table-service meal. Plenty of sit-down restaurants on the plan run $40–$55 per adult, so redeeming your credit here squeezes meaningfully more cash value out of it. Dinner is the stronger redemption of the two purely on price; the ~$53 breakfast is still solid and adds character interaction.
A few things to keep in mind when weighing credit value:
- Adults benefit more than young kids. The bigger your appetite for the all-you-care-to-enjoy format, the better the value. Light eaters and toddlers extract less.
- You’re paying gratuity either way. A credit covers the meal, not the tip, so factor that into your real cost.
- Compare against your other plan options. ‘Ohana stacks up well against other premium 1-credit spots like Le Cellier, Space 220, and Morimoto Asia.
If you’re still on the fence about the plan overall, our analysis of whether the Disney Dining Plan is worth it lays out the break-even math for different traveler types.
Reservation strategy: how to actually book ‘Ohana
‘Ohana is consistently one of the toughest tables to land at Walt Disney World, so booking isn’t an afterthought — it’s the whole game.
- Know your window. Dining reservations open 60 days in advance through My Disney Experience. Set a calendar reminder and be ready the moment your window opens.
- Book early in the morning. Reservation inventory releases around 6:00 a.m. Eastern. Log in beforehand, have your party set, and refresh at open.
- Pick your meal first. Remember: characters appear only at breakfast. If seeing Stitch is the goal, you must book a morning slot — a dinner reservation won’t include characters.
- Don’t give up if it’s full. Cancellations surface constantly, especially in the days before a date as other guests adjust plans. Check back often.
This is exactly the kind of high-demand table where waiting and refreshing manually gets exhausting. The MagicTable iOS app tracks live ‘Ohana reservation availability and alerts you when a table opens in your window — handy when you’re trying to snag a hard-to-get character breakfast without camping on the booking page. It’s a low-key way to let an app do the refreshing for you.
Frequently asked questions
Does ‘Ohana take the Disney Dining Plan?
Yes. ‘Ohana participates in the 2026 Disney Dining Plan and costs 1 table-service credit per person at both breakfast and dinner.
How many dining plan credits is ‘Ohana?
One table-service credit per guest, per meal. It is a standard table-service restaurant, not a two-credit Signature restaurant.
Is the ‘Ohana character breakfast on the dining plan?
Yes. The ‘Ohana Best Friends Breakfast featuring Lilo & Stitch costs 1 table-service credit per person, the same as dinner. Characters appear only at breakfast.
How much does ‘Ohana cost without the dining plan?
In 2026, dinner runs approximately $67 per adult and $44 per child (ages 3–9). Breakfast is approximately $53 per adult and $33 per child. Both prices exclude tax and gratuity and include a standard non-alcoholic beverage.
Is ‘Ohana worth a dining plan credit?
For most adults, yes. Its premium per-person price — especially at dinner — makes a single table-service credit go further than at many lower-priced restaurants, so it’s one of the better 1-credit redemptions on the plan.
Do dining plan guests still pay gratuity at ‘Ohana?
Yes. The dining plan covers the meal and an included beverage but not tip. Plan on roughly 18–20% of the menu total out of pocket.
The bottom line
‘Ohana is firmly on the Disney Dining Plan, charging just one table-service credit per person for either the character-filled Best Friends Breakfast or the famous family-style dinner. Given dinner’s ~$67 adult price tag, it’s one of the smartest single-credit redemptions you can make — provided you can land the reservation. Book the moment your 60-day window opens, choose breakfast if characters matter to you, and you’ll get genuine value out of every credit you spend at the Polynesian.
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