Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Review: Is It Worth It?
We recently stayed at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge at Disney World, followed by a cruise on the Disney Dream. This was a hot two weeks filled with a whole bunch of family togetherness. There were times the Torrance family from The Shining had it more together than we did. Overall though, the trip was amazing. I would do it again in a heartbeat.
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Is Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Worth It? The Quick Verdict
Yes. This is my favorite hotel on Disney property, and I’ve toured a lot of them. You wake up to zebras and giraffes outside your balcony, the lobby is the best on property, and the whole place feels calmer than the resorts that sit on top of the parks. The catch is the price tag and the fact that you ride a bus to every theme park. Here’s the short version before we get into it:
- Best part: The animals. You will watch zebras eat breakfast while you eat yours.
- Worst part: No monorail. Buses only, and no park is walking distance.
- Room to get: A Savanna View. I wouldn’t stay here without one.
- How to afford it: Rent Disney Vacation Club points instead of booking directly with Disney.
- Class: Deluxe (translation: expensive).
How Do You Book Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge for Less?
Renting Disney Vacation Club Points
We have stayed at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge twice. The pictures throughout this post are from both trips, hence the time warp. On our most recent trip, we booked through David’s Vacation Club Rentals. This company rents out Disney Vacation Club points from owners who aren’t using them. The rate worked out to roughly half of what Disney wanted to charge us directly. I have found David’s to be easy to use. They accept credit cards and are very responsive.
If you want the full breakdown of point rentals and other ways to cut the cost of a Disney trip, I get into the weeds in my guide to saving money on Disney trips.
Perks of Staying on DVC Points
You get nearly all the perks regular guests receive even when you’re booked on someone else’s points. That includes the free buses to Disney Springs and every theme park, plus the early entry that comes with staying on property.
Here’s a money note that’s changed since I first wrote this post: overnight self-parking at the Disney resort hotels is now free for everyone, points or no points. Disney spent a few years charging up to $25 a night to park at the hotel, then quietly killed that fee in January 2023. So parking is no longer the secret DVC perk it used to be. What resort guests still get for free is standard theme-park parking, which otherwise runs $35 a day. That alone adds up fast over a week of park days.
Downsides to Renting DVC Points
There are some downsides to renting DVC points. You have to book pretty far in advance to find availability. The home-resort booking window opens about 11 months before your travel date, so I always put in the request the first possible day. You pay in full up front, and rentals are generally nonrefundable. If you think you might need to cancel, book directly with Disney or buy trip insurance. Confirm the specific terms with whatever rental company you use before you hand over a credit card.
You get limited housekeeping, but seriously, who cares? You are barely going to be in the room anyway. I don’t make my bed at home. Why would I care if it is made in a hotel room? We were told we would not get trash removal and fresh towels every day, but we did. I heard they started doing this so they have daily access to the rooms for safety reasons, but I don’t know for sure. Regardless, with the fresh towels, we did not miss housekeeping at all.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Overview
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge is beyond impressive. The lobby is immaculate. It is my favorite hotel on property. Disney World has resort hotels across the Value, Moderate, and Deluxe tiers, and this one sits in the bend over and take it Deluxe class. The hotel is African themed. There is art throughout the hotel which I assume is authentic, but would have no idea if it wasn’t.
The resort is massive. Some rooms are located pretty far from the lobby. If a long walk everyday bothers you, make a specific room request.
Where Is Animal Kingdom Lodge and How Do You Get Around?
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge is an on-property hotel, but none of the theme parks are walking distance. People complain about the location. While other deluxe properties sit closer to the parks with monorail access, Animal Kingdom Lodge only has buses. However, we never had to wait more than a few minutes, and the routes go direct to each theme park and Disney Springs. The kids were able to get a seat most of the time, despite the middle-aged, Minnie ears-wearing park goers in turkey leg-induced tryptophan comas.
While the buses may be annoying, I have visited some of the other hotels. Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge feels more calm. As I have mentioned before, I get a teeny bit irritated with entitled people in crowds. I will take a slightly longer bus ride over having to exercise self control any day.
It also happens to be next door to the Animal Kingdom park, which makes the bus ride there laughably short. If you’re trying to decide whether that park earns a day, I broke it down in my Animal Kingdom tips.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Room
We booked a basic Savanna View room when we rented points. The room came with a king sized bed and pullout couch. The DVC villas often come with different sleeping arrangements than the regular rooms. If you decide to book this way, you should double check the bed situation. Our kids had to sleep on a couch. I cannot think of anything in life about which I feel less guilty, but you may care more if you have older kids who will voice an opinion. The room is nice enough, but it is a basic hotel room with nowhere to go to avoid your family.
The balcony overlooking the animals made up for the small space for the most part. We could only sit on the balcony for limited periods of time because this resort is located in the core of the sun. The balcony comes with a small table and chairs, both of which I promptly moved because I wanted to check out of the resort with both children. It seemed unlikely an animal would get involved to help if one of them fell. No opposable thumbs and all.
Do you need a Savanna view room to enjoy your stay? Probably not, but I wouldn’t stay here without it. Standard View and Pool/Savanna View rooms cost less, but the animals are the entire reason to book this hotel. Paying deluxe prices for a parking-lot view would be a shame.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Animals
The highlight of this resort is the animals. They have a ton, and not just wild alligators. The savannas are home to zebras, giraffes, ankole cattle, and a rotating cast of birds and hoofstock, and I have never stayed at a hotel with any of them wandering around before. We woke up to some variation of this view from our balcony each morning:

I feel guilty about visiting establishments with animals. Obviously not enough to stop doing it, but I talk a good game. I googled the resort before I booked with visions of giraffes tied to trees dancing through my head. A PETA article didn’t come up on page one of the search, so it must be just like the wild. The animals were free roaming. Not one of them rode a tricycle the entire time we were there.
Insider tip: The animals are most active in the cooler early morning and around dusk. Midday they’re doing the same thing you are in that Florida heat, which is hiding in the shade. There are also overlooks with cast members and night-vision goggles so you can spot the nocturnal animals after dark.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Pool
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge has the Uzima Springs Pool on the Jambo House side, and it’s big, around 11,000 square feet. The pool didn’t feel crowded despite having a lot of people in it all the time. It’s zero-depth entry, so kids of any age can splash in it, and it has a 67-foot waterslide. There’s a bar in the area with hyper vigilant lifeguards to scold you for drinking in the pool.
There is also a small arcade located right outside the pool entrance. This was brilliant on Disney’s part because people congregate in there (and spend money) when it starts raining.
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge Activities
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge has a few activities throughout the day. The selection was fairly limited, probably because most people go to the theme parks during the day. We came upon drum lessons in the lobby one evening, which was really cute. Offerings change, so check the My Disney Experience app or the front desk for the current schedule when you arrive.

We saw movies playing outside at night. There were some arts and crafts in the lobby. There is also a small playground at the resort. None of it is a reason to skip a park day, but it’s nice on an arrival or rest day.
Kidani Village
When you stay at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge, you have access to Kidani Village, which consists of timeshare villas. You can walk to Kidani or ride the bus.
The lobby at Kidani Village is much less impressive. It seems to be lacking in food options. What it does have going for it is Samawati Springs Pool. The pool itself is much smaller, but it boasts the resort’s longer slide at 128 feet, plus the Uwanja Camp water playground with a splash pad, climbing structures, and water cannons. When we were there during the day, it was not crowded at all.
Is Animal Kingdom Lodge Club Level Worth It?
On our first trip, before I learned about renting DVC points, I booked through Disney directly. We had the option to add Club Level to our stay. The “club” is a room accessible by key that has food and non-alcoholic beverages throughout the day, and includes cocktails and beer in the evening. I added Club Level because it made financial sense at the time. We saved on meals by eating breakfast there and grabbing a couple of cocktails. We were always at the parks during the day, so we didn’t get much use of it beyond that.
The breakfast was not that exciting for anyone, and particularly not so if you are gluten free. The food was pretty limited. I ate a lot of bananas and boxed cereal. I did appreciate the mini fridge that fed my Diet Coke addiction throughout the trip.
The club has a TV and some tables, but not much else. Notably, it does not overlook the animals. It seems like they missed something important here. This is supposed to be a premium experience. I think most people expect it to have a view. The club also comes with concierge service to help with reservations, but we never used it.
You can book Club Level using Disney Vacation Club points. I read it is harder to get, and you are not guaranteed a Savanna view, so I didn’t even try for it the second trip. Be warned that the cash upcharge has climbed a lot since my first stay, so run the math on current pricing before you assume it pays for itself. If it makes financial sense to add it, I would, but it is not a premium experience.
Is the Disney Dining Plan Worth It?
The Disney Dining Plan has changed a lot since my trips. For 2026, Disney is selling two plans: the Disney Quick-Service Dining Plan and the standard Disney Dining Plan. The old Deluxe Dining Plan has been suspended for years, though Disney has announced a new Deluxe Table-Service plan tier arriving in 2027. Each plan comes with a certain number of credits based on the number of nights of your stay.
You must be staying on Disney World property to add a dining plan. It can be added even if you are staying on Disney Vacation Club points. You must book a dining plan for the entire length of your stay, and every guest age 10 and up in your hotel room must purchase one. Unlike Six Flags, Disney World has mastered the art of preventing you from sharing.
Here’s the genuinely good news for families: in 2026, kids ages 3 to 9 eat free on the dining plan when the adults in the room buy in as part of a package. That changes the math considerably if you’ve got little ones.
The credits are divided between quick service and table service. You can use your credits any way you want, so you could theoretically blow them all the first day. You can also convert a quick service credit into three snack credits. The receipts you receive at restaurants show how many credits you have left.
All meal credits come with a beverage, alcoholic or otherwise. Before you get too excited about this, understand that Magic Kingdom is seriously lacking in alcohol. The rest of the theme parks and resorts offer it more liberally.
The plans also come with refillable drink mugs. The refillable mugs can only be used at the resorts, not the theme parks.
Disney Quick-Service Dining Plan
The Quick-Service plan comes with two quick service meals and two snacks per person per night of your stay. For 2026, it runs about $60 per adult per night, with kids 3 to 9 free as noted above. And yes, a 10 year old is an adult at Disney World. Apparently the age of majority in this country is attained in 5th grade.
Disney Dining Plan
The standard Disney Dining Plan includes one table service credit, one quick service credit, and two snack credits per night. For 2026, it runs a little under $99 per adult per night (tax included), again with kids 3 to 9 free. Check Disney’s site for the exact current figure before you book, since they adjust it most years.
Deluxe Dining Plan
The old Deluxe Dining Plan, with three table service credits and two snacks per night, isn’t being sold right now. Disney has announced a new Deluxe Table-Service tier for 2027, but it’s a different plan than the one I once considered, so I’ll hold my opinion until I can actually use it.
Is it Worth it?
Why would anyone buy a dining plan at those prices? Your family doesn’t spend nearly that much on food!
Your family doesn’t live at Disney World.
I do not think the Quick Service Dining Plan has value. You’ll have a hard time getting your money’s worth, and it limits where you can eat. The big exception is now the kids-eat-free angle, which can tip the value if you have a couple of children ages 3 to 9 eating off the plan for nothing.
I like the standard Disney Dining Plan if you were going to do table service meals anyway. If you do a couple of character meals and order some alcohol, the plan can pay for itself. Most of the menus and prices are on Disney World’s website, so do the math to figure out if it makes sense for you. For more ways to keep costs down, see my honest guide to saving money on Disney trips.
I purchased fruit and donuts from The Mara with snack credits for breakfast each morning. We had a few snack credits left at the end of the trip. I stocked up on bags of trail mix and Mickey treats to take home to help with the Disney withdrawal. I’m sure we could have eaten for less at quick service restaurants, but I think we got value for what we wanted to do.
I also like the idea of everything being prepaid. I personally enjoy not paying along the way on vacation. It feels more all inclusive, and it’s nice not to worry about the cost of things while we’re there. I paid for the dining plan using Disney gift cards I purchased at a discount. You could also just buy Disney gift cards and use them to pay at Disney World if you don’t want a dining plan at all.
I would definitely skip the dining plan if you do Club Level. The combination of the two would be way too much food.
When Can You Make Disney Dining Reservations?
You often need them! The booking window is now 60 days before check-in, not the 180 days it used to be, and on-site guests can book the whole trip, up to 10 days, on that first morning. I did not realize that on my first trip. I woke up each morning at 5am to make one day’s reservations. Amateur.
Gluten Free Dining
Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge has restaurants at the hotel. The buses will also drop you at Disney Springs. If you want to eat at another resort, there is no direct route. You have to take a bus to one of the theme parks or Disney Springs, then change buses. This takes a very long time. Uber has car seats. Just saying.
Between our two stays, we tried several restaurants at Animal Kingdom Lodge, Disney Springs, and other resorts on days we did not visit the theme parks.
Boma
Boma – Flavors of Africa is a buffet at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge. There are no characters. It serves breakfast and dinner. It has African food, but also some American stuff. We tried the dinner. The location was obviously convenient and the food was decent, but it was pretty crowded.
It is one table service credit on the dining plan. Paid out of pocket, it’d be steep. As of this writing, dinner runs about $58 per adult and $34 per child. It would be difficult to justify that price in my mind without a credit covering it.
With that said, it has a lot of meats, soups, and salads. I could eat the vast majority of it, and it was actually relatively high quality. I am not sensitive to cross contamination, so I declined, but they do offer to have a chef walk you around and bring you safe food from the back. We will likely eat here again in the future.
I made an advance dining reservation right at the booking window, but I’m not sure that was actually necessary for Boma.
The Mara
The Mara is the quick service location at Jambo House. The food leans toward fast food, but it’s OK, and the menu has shifted toward African-inspired bowls alongside the American breakfast and burgers. You can order hot meals. There are baked goods, snacks, and refrigerators full of premade stuff. You can use quick service and snack credits here.
There are several gluten free options. I ordered a flatbread. It was not half bad. This resort gets excited about its Zebra Domes, which are little cakes. These are available gluten free and were also pretty good.
The employees get very worked up about food allergies. This is unnecessary in my case, but I’m sure people with severe allergies appreciate it. To order from the gluten free menu, you have to wait for a special chef to take the order. Apparently said chef has a magic pen that protects your food from gluten. I’m pretty sure this chef has to walk over from EPCOT with his pen to take your order. Ordering food from the allergy menu takes substantially longer. Plan on being there awhile.
Chef Mickey’s
This restaurant is located in the Contemporary Resort. You can get there from Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge by riding a bus to Magic Kingdom, then walking or riding the monorail to the Contemporary. You can also ride a bus to one of the theme parks or Disney Springs, then change buses to the Contemporary. Alternatively, you can accept that that will take a ridiculous amount of time and make other arrangements for a nominal fee.
Chef Mickey’s is similar to Goofy’s Kitchen at the Disneyland Hotel. It is a buffet with American fare. Mickey, Minnie, Donald, Goofy, and Pluto, affectionately referred to as the Fab Five by Disney nerds lovers, walk around taking photos with the kids and periodically wave napkins in the air. The waving of napkins is even less exciting than it sounds. The food is fine, but not worth the price they charge. The draw is definitely the characters.
If you are sensitive to cross contamination, a chef can walk you around and bring you stuff from the back. You will have to wait for the one allergy chef at all of Disney World to walk over from The Mara. On this occasion, I told the server I didn’t need the chef, but she insisted I did. I didn’t want to get kicked out of Disney World, so I complied. I waited. And waited. And waited.
When the chef finally came out, I told him I really thought I could figure it out. He granted me permission to go to the buffet unsupervised. There were no gluten free desserts on the buffet, but he brought me a gluten free cupcake from the back. This was nice and all, but I’m pretty sure it was baked the same weekend Free Willy hit the theaters. It was the consistency of a rock. Even the kids wouldn’t touch it.
If you are on a dining plan and your kid cares about the characters, it is probably worth a stop. It is one table service credit. Paying out of pocket would have been steep: dinner can run around $69 per adult these days (WTF).
This was not our first character meal of the trip, so the kids were becoming less impressed by the minute. My youngest could not be bothered to put his food down to take a picture. That pineapple wasn’t going to eat itself.
This restaurant is popular, so book it well in advance if you want to eat here. If you’re weighing which character meals are worth it, my Magic Kingdom extras breakdown covers the area’s other options.
Ohana
‘Ohana is located at the Polynesian Resort. It serves breakfast and dinner. You can get here the same ways you get to the Contemporary Resort. It’s also accessible by monorail. Heads up if you’re planning breakfast: it’s now a Lilo & Stitch character meal, while dinner has no characters.
We had dinner. It is basically a poor man’s Fogo de Chao. The internet led me to believe there would be Hula dancing and coconut races. I could hear some noise in the distance from our table, but we could not hear or see what was going on, and no one walked around to try to involve the kids in whatever they were doing.
The servers come around with skewers of meat. The sides are family style. They had gluten free rolls. This was the best meal we had anywhere at Disney World.
I’m glad it was tasty because it was crazy expensive. Dinner now runs around $65 per adult. Maybe I’m cheap, but that price would be tough to swallow out of pocket. It is, however, a great use of one dining plan table service credit.
This is a coveted reservation. You want to book this one right at the 60-day mark. We tried to add another couple to our reservation the day we were going, and they couldn’t even accommodate that.
Pro tip: The Electrical Water Pageant floats by the Polynesian in the late evening. If you book your reservation time correctly, you can watch the show. This show basically consists of some objects with lights floating along the water slowly.
Second pro tip: Skip the Electrical Water Pageant. It is lame. Eat when you want.
The Polite Pig
The Polite Pig is a quick service barbecue restaurant at Disney Springs. Buses from Animal Kingdom Lodge go directly to Disney Springs. In addition to restaurants, Disney Springs has several stores of interest, such as The LEGO Store, if you like overpaying for things readily available on the internet.
The food was average. Most meats and salads can be made gluten free. It gets a big thumbs down from me for not offering gluten free buns. It also applied the dining plan in weird ways. On our visit, a $22 piece of salmon was included, but we had to pay $5 extra to add a piece of chicken to an $11 salad. The Polite Pig was OK, but I wouldn’t make a special trip.
T-Rex Cafe
This is Rainforest Cafe with dinosaurs instead of gorillas. It is heavily themed. The kids appreciated the decor.
T-Rex Cafe is located in Disney Springs, so a direct bus is available. I am not sure it is completely necessary, but it takes advance reservations, so I would recommend making them.
The food was pretty standard. I ordered a Cobb salad. It was good, but nothing special. They do have gluten free buns. They do not offer fried items, so I hope you like seasoned vegetables with your burger. If your kids are into dinosaurs, I would consider a visit. This restaurant is one table service credit on the dining plan.
Animal Kingdom Lodge FAQ
Do you need a Savanna View room to see the animals?
Not technically. There are public viewing areas around both Jambo House and Kidani Village where any guest can watch the animals. But waking up to giraffes outside your own balcony is the whole point of this hotel, so I personally wouldn’t book it without a Savanna View.
Is parking free at Animal Kingdom Lodge?
Yes. Overnight self-parking at Disney resort hotels has been free for all guests since January 2023, no longer something only DVC stays got. Resort guests also park free at the theme parks, which otherwise costs $35 a day.
How do you get to the theme parks from Animal Kingdom Lodge?
By bus. The resort has no monorail, but the bus routes run direct to each park and to Disney Springs. We rarely waited more than a few minutes. If a no-monorail life is a dealbreaker, this isn’t your hotel.
When can you book dining reservations at Disney World?
Sixty days before check-in. On-site guests can book the whole trip, up to 10 days, on that first morning. The popular tables like ‘Ohana go fast, so log on early on day 60.
Final Thoughts
I love Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge. It is one of my happy places. The hotel is unique, it feels serene, and there is constant entertainment from the animals. It is very expensive, so I recommend trying to rent Disney Vacation Club points to save money. It is definitely worth a try if you have not been. If you’re building out a longer Florida trip, you might pair it with our take on whether a Disney cruise is worth it or our Orlando packing list. We will be back.


You always do such a great job on how detailed and helpful your posts are! I have been to Animal Kingdom, but we only spent a couple hours there. I didn’t realize how many dining options there are, so it is awesome that you gave a description of so many of them! Thank you for sharing!
Looks like a really fun trip!
Sounds like a fun place to stay with the kids. We just had a quick trip to Animal Kingdom when the kids were small and said we’d go back when they’re bigger. It’s great to read a thorough and honest review so we know what to expect when we do go back.
I didn’t know you could rent Disney Vacation Club points…thanks for the info! Animal Kingdom is my favorite park, and I would love to stay at the lodge!
Disney‚Äôs Animal Kingdom Lodge sounds absolutely brilliant. I actually prefer the resorts which are a little further out, they’re just much calmer for visiting with kids.
We loved our stay at AKL! it is such an amazingly unique resort.
Fantastic review, we are hoping to go to Disney land next year so I Have bookmarked to come back and re read all the great tips you gave
We’ve stayed at the Lodge multiple times, but I didn’t know about all of this good stuff. We’ll have to check it all out next time. We love the view of the animals especially in the early morning.
Hello 🙂
I would love love to go to Disney‚Äôs Animal Kingdom Lodge. Even though it might be expensive, I think is a cool experience you can share with friends or family. Maybe planning and saving before is a very good idea. So exciting you were able to go to this hotel and enjoy. Cool pics by the way 🙂
I love how informative this post is! It’s been years since I’ve been to Animal Kingdom, so I’d love to go back again. Hopefully, soon. And maybe this time around it won’t be for just a day trip, but for a few days like you did.
Love this and your perspective on everything especially the dining plan. Lol
This post took me back in time to our visit in 2010. I guess the busses and table service haven’t changed much! The experience was worth the small annoyances for us, and I’m glad it was for you too. Loved this post and the great ideas for when we return.
I am happy to read this today. I searched this hotel many years ago but never been there yet and it’s the place where I like to stay when we visit Disney. Thank you for the thoughtful posts on where to eat and the tips on how can we make it cheaper. Happy Travels!
Oh my goodness. You have me laughing out loud. This line steals it all “Table service meals move about as fast as the grandma in The Wedding Singer.” LOL Thanks for the laughs and the info on your Disney experience!