DISNEY WORLD SPRING BREAK CROWDS IN 2016
Walt Disney World Spring Break crowds are typically governed by two and a quarter factors:
- Public school Spring Break calendars, which are still largely framed around Easter but vary more than you might think
- The demand of snow-belters for a break from winter weather, which peaks in March, and
- The quarter factor, the date of President’s day. Later President’s Days (which can range from February 15 to February 21) tend to make the first part of March better
An early Easter combines the first two factors, making for more than the usual horrible crowds in March but a great April; a late Easter spreads the first two factors out, yielding some good early March and early April weeks.
Easter 2016, on March 27, is early in its possible range. President’s Day 2016–covered in more detail here–is also early, February 16. Unusually, Passover 2016 is decoupled from Easter, and begins April 22.
As a result, 2016 Spring Break crowds at Walt Disney World will be
- Bad Presidents Day Week
- Fine the weeks beginning February 20th and February 27th
- Bad the week beginning March 5
- Very rough the weeks beginning March 12, 19, and 26
- ..and back to fine after April 2.  The weeks of April 2nd and 23rd may in fact have more crowds than I am forecasting, but not enough to move them into the “bad” category.
2016 PUBLIC SCHOOL SPRING BREAKS AND THEIR EFFECTS ON WALT DISNEY WORLD CROWDS
Although more and more school districts are moving away from an Easter-centered Spring Break, the plurality of kids still have the weeks before Easter or following Easter off.
As a result, the single biggest factor determining better and worse Spring Break weeks at Walt Disney World is the date of Easter–which can range from March 22 to April 25.
A later Easter has a couple of different effects: first, it spreads out the dates of breaks for school districts that don’t frame their breaks around Easter, and second, if particularly late, will push districts that typically take the week after Easter off into the week before Easter instead, to keep from compressing their May academic calendars. Â
An earlier Easter has the opposite effects. Districts that traditionally try to take the week after Easter off will be able to do so, and districts that don’t base their calendars on Easter will be largely compressed into a couple of March weeks.
The date of President’s Day–which can range from February 15 to February 21–also has an effect. Because many districts both have a spring break and also take the week of President’s Day off, the later President’s Day is, the better early March will be–as parents avoid taking their kids out of school the weeks after a long President’s Day break.
The effect of the various dates in 2016 is to compress most 2016 school spring breaks into three consecutive weeks: those beginning March 12, March 19, and 26.  There’s also breaks clustered the weeks of April 2, 16, and 23rd, but since these weeks are not nearly as attractive to snow birds, I don’t forecast they will be bad.
ACTUAL 2016 SPRING BREAKS
The chart above illuminates this.
It’s based on data from a weighted sample including more than 165 of the largest relevant US public school districts.
(For how the database is built, see this. Weekends are in black, except Easter, in red. Click the image to enlarge it.)
President’s Day week–not charted, but see this–has a crowd ranking of 10/higher. Crowds will start to show beginning the Thursday before and remain high through the 20th.
Next to no kids are on break in 2016 between the week after President’s Day and March 5. I rate the week beginning February 20 4/low-plus crowds–higher early in the week, better later. The week beginning February 27 is rated 3/low crowds. Both of these are recommended weeks.
The week beginning March 5, 2016 has fewer kids on break than I thought I’d see when I published my draft crowd calendar 9 months ago, so I’ve bumped it down to 8/high-minus crowds. It may even turn out to be a moderate crowd week–but don’t bet on it.
The weeks beginning March 12, 19 and 26 have a lot of kids on break, and even more visitors coming to take a break from the snow. For 2016, I rate all three as 11/highest crowds.
Only scattered districts are on break in April 2016–e.g., Georgia districts the week of the 2nd, Massachusetts districts the week of the 16th, and New York districts the week of the 23rd–and people escaping winter are much less prevalent in April compared to March.
So I don’t see any real crowding issues from April 2, 2016 through mid-May. Almost all of these later spring weeks are recommended. If I’m wrong, the weeks of the 2nd and 23rd will be worse than I’m forecasting–but still OK.
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13 Comments on "Disney World Spring Break Crowds in 2016"
Brandy I expect spring break crowds to start building in 2016 the 6th. If I am wrong–and this is the hardest part of the year to forecast–they will be OK your dates, and start building the 13th instead.
We are planning our trip for March 5-7th. What do you think the crowds will be like those dates?
Bryce the buses do average 20 minutes or less between buses, but natural variability means that longer and shorter waits are possible. There’s not really much you can do except allow extra time.
And yes, school breaks as I note are only a part of spring break crowds–cold northerners wanting to get away are the other part, and they peak in later March. The week may well be much better than 11–these are the hardest weeks to forecast–but crowds will be high.
Maggie, I expect it–like the other Disney running evens–to have next to no impact on crowds.