Epic Universe Crowd Calendar: Best Dates to Visit in 2026

It has become a common trend for Epic Universe to go from 1/10 crowd levels followed to 9/10 crowds on back-to-back days, with wait times doubling overnight. Universal’s new park has great days to visit & awful ones to avoid; this crowd calendar shares a list of dates to target in 2026 to assist in planning upcoming trips.

One of the points we keep stressing is that Epic Universe’s opening year has been a wild ride. Universal’s new park has had sky-high wait times and crowd levels, but also rock bottom attendance and days with lots of walk-on lines and. There have been some absolute operational meltdowns, along with bona fide ‘best days ever.’

The good news is that we’ve been watching wait times closely, and a very clear pattern has emerged. It’s not an anomaly or outlier at this point. There’s a sharp contrast in good vs. bad dates to visit Epic Universe, and this day-to-day swing in crowd levels is shockingly common and predictable. Yet other crowd calendars continue getting it wrong.

As a warning before we get going, this does not always work; weather and ride reliability remain wildcards. You could set yourself up for success by choosing the best date, but still get unlucky due to other variables.

Epic Universe’s opening year has been a low capacity and inefficiency story, and not one of overwhelming demand. The park is hitting high crowd levels with relatively low attendance. There’s potential for things to get much worse if Epic Universe doesn’t find its footing on ride throughput.

We already know dates around Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Eve have sold out or will sell out. There are likewise days in the next couple of months that are detached from holidays but still selling out.

As an example to underscore this daily divergence, there were two recent days that had 29 minute average waits and 70 minute average waits.

On the same dates that Epic Universe had 29 minute and 71 minute waits, Walt Disney World’s average wait times were 23 minutes and 20 minutes, respectively. Zooming out, Walt Disney World has seen monthly averages of around 30 minutes, whereas Epic Universe has been in the 55 to 63 minute range. All of those numbers are averages, not peaks.

It’s also worth noting that before Epic Universe had that 29 minute and 70 minute day-to-day spread in wait times, there was a similar lull. That’s the day I shared in My Excellent Epic Universe Experience.

As discussed there, I targeted that day over two months in advance turned out to be the least-busy day at Epic Universe since opening weekend (up until that point–it was since surpassed), with a 32 minute average wait time and 1/10 crowd level.

More recently, Epic Universe had its busiest day ever in early 2026. Not just the highest wait times ever for Epic Universe, but for any park at Universal Orlando or Walt Disney World since at least 2019–and by a very wide margin. The average wait on that date was 107 minutes, with peak waits of over 300 minutes and multiple headliners hitting 200+ minutes throughout the day.

Fast forward less than 10 days later, and daily average wait times plummeted to 43 minutes (for a 2/10 crowd level). Notably, this happened on one of our “best days” below. And in all likelihood, this won’t even be the slowest day of the next few months–there will be many dates with average wait times in the 30-45 minute range, which is excellent by Epic Universe standards.

Point being, this is predictable–at least, to a degree. In fact, most of what you’re going to read here we’ve already covered to some extent in other posts. We’ve been consistent in our advice, and also transparent in the limitations in our recommendations.

In response to previous Epic Universe crowd avoidance recommendations, we’ve received reader pushback. Apparently, our advice does not align with that of other crowd calendars. As an illustrative example, here’s what Google’s top-ranked Epic Universe recommends:

  • Avoid weekends (especially Saturdays)
  • Avoid holidays (including Labor Day)
  • For the least crowded days, visit midweek (especially Tuesday through Thursday)

I hate to call out other resources, as I’ve been wrong plenty of times, but these recommendations are–quite literally–the exact opposite of correct.

Here’s a rundown of reality at Epic Universe crowds:

  • The three busiest days of the week at Epic Universe are Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday
  • Weekends are consistently the least busy two days of the week (especially Sundays)
  • Labor Day was the slowest day at Epic Universe since May 25th
  • Mid-tier holidays are the biggest exception to the above, and cause the day before them to be busier (even Sundays)

These are not new developments. We’ve been covering them since last June when first publishing our Epic Universe Crowd Calendar. Even at that point, the first two trends had started to emerge, and the underlying rationale was logical and comprehensible for anyone who understands bigger picture Florida guest dynamics. Labor Day hasn’t been a busy holiday in years.

The problem is that many resources base their predictions on the existing theme parks in Central Florida, especially Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure. That might seem like a correct approach at first blush and it does result in correcting calling tourist trends that revolve around school breaks. But it misses a lot.

The problem is that Epic Universe is a totally different beast. It’s like modeling your zoo for genetically-engineered dinosaurs after a petting zoo for bunnies and baby goats. You’ll get the easy stuff like enclosures and sidewalks right. But we’ve all seen that movie and know how it ends.

The bottom line is that crowd dynamics for Epic Universe are almost the complete opposite of Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure. If you see a crowd calendar that lumps them all together, or has similar predictions for the trio, that’s the tell-tale sign that they have no clue what they’re talking about. The wait times data is conclusive as to this point, and clear trends have emerged.

I’ve been incredibly lucky with Epic Universe, and have had nothing but great days. This is probably a big part of why I love Universal Orlando’s third gate so much, as my experiences have been unequivocally positive. To be sure, I have encountered some friction, but being flexible and quickly pivoting when problems arise has helped me avoid disaster on several occasions.

Despite this, I’m quick to plug our rundown of Why You Should Skip Epic Universe. Our advice for the majority of tourists is to stay on the sidelines and wait until Epic Universe improves its operations and efficiency.

Among other things, one of the major points raised in that article is “Ride Breakdowns & Downtime.” This continues to be the overriding issue with Epic Universe, as the new park continues to be a veritable roller coaster of daily downtime–and that’s reflected in crowd levels and average wait times.

I set myself up for success by picking a great day with my most recent visit to Epic Universe. I also got very lucky. The weather was favorable as the rain held off, and aside from two attractions, there wasn’t a whole lot of downtime. This took a good day of week selection and made it a great date.

Things could’ve easily gone the other direction. It could’ve been a stormy day and more rides could’ve had prolonged breakdowns, ballooning wait times (and the overall crowd level) at those attractions that were operational. The following day could’ve been smiled upon by the theme park weather and ride reliability gods, and ended up being better despite the on paper stats up to that point.

All of this is worth underscoring because you can do everything to set yourself up for success with Epic Universe–choosing the right dates, leveraging the savviest strategy, etc–and still have a negative experience due to the unpredictability of it all. Such is the nature of the beast with a new theme park.

As previously noted, the two days of the week with the lowest average wait times over the last few months have been Saturdays (#2) and Sundays (#1, by far). Friday is third-lowest. The easiest explanation for this is that Epic Universe single-day tickets are most expensive on weekends, so budget-conscious tourists are seeking out less expensive dates.

There’s less consistency for Mondays through Thursdays, and not enough data points to draw definitive conclusions. Statistically, Wednesdays and Thursdays have been worst since opening. More recently, we’ve seen Tuesday emerge as the busiest day several weeks. This dynamic could be a byproduct of tourists starting out their weeks at Walt Disney World, visiting a couple parks there, then doing Epic Universe. Or starting out at Universal’s legacy parks.

To that point, the rest of Universal Orlando is busiest on Fridays, Saturdays and Mondays, followed by Sundays. This is fueled largely by locals and Annual Passholders over the weekends, and then tourists being most inclined to visit on Mondays. Midweek is the absolute best time to visit the other parks, with average wait times bottoming out on Wednesdays.

This makes sense for the rest of Universal Orlando or Walt Disney World! Floridians work on weekdays, making weekends their best time to visit the other parks for Annual Passholders.

There’s only one little problem with extrapolating from this that the new park will follow a similar trendline: Epic Universe doesn’t have Annual Passes! Epic Universe also does not have meaningful Florida resident ticket deals, which are another strong driver of weekend attendance at the rest of Universal Orlando and Walt Disney World.

Many locals have already gotten their “fix” of Epic Universe and are waiting for Annual Passes or aggressive ticket deals. The result has been a similar dynamic as we saw at Walt Disney World when AP sales were suspended for so long (it still exists to this day, but isn’t as exaggerated).

One thing to note is that as soon as Annual Pass sales or Florida resident ticket deals start for Epic Universe, this dynamic flips. Saturday and Sunday will become the busiest days of the weekend. Moreover, there are exceptions to all of the above when weather rears its ugly head. Nothing throws a monkey wrench into Epic Universe wait times like a stormy day!

Best Dates to Visit Epic Universe in 2026

  • January 10-11, 2026
  • January 19, 2026*
  • January 24-25, 2026
  • January 31, 2026
  • February 1, 2026
  • February 7-8, 2026
  • February 22, 2026
  • February 28, 2026
  • March 1, 2026
  • March 7-8, 2026
  • April 11-12, 2026
  • April 18-19, 2026
  • April 25-26, 2026
  • May 2-3, 2026
  • May 9-10, 2026
  • May 16-17, 2026
  • May 25, 2026*

The asterisked date in January 2026 is the backside of the MLK Day holiday weekend. The asterisked date in May is Memorial Day. These recommendations are playing with fire to some degree, but we have decent data suggesting that these Mondays will be better than the Sundays before them.

Epic Universe’s underperformance on recent holiday weekends reinforces this. I wouldn’t plan a visit around this advice if I were a local, but if I were already heading down for these dates and needed to pick within this range, those are the dates I’d choose.

You will also note that there’s a big gap from mid-March to mid-April. This is Spring Break season, which is likely to be busy across the board. Since these recesses are week-long breaks for most schools, it should remain the case that Sunday is the least-bad day, followed by Saturday.

But this is a low confidence prediction, and keep in mind that we’ve purposefully used the word least-bad as opposed to good. If you’re a tourist visiting Central Florida and have no other options, choose weekends. If you’re a local looking for something fun to do during your break, do something else! Come back and visit Epic Universe on a different Sunday, outside this window.

Note that we have yet to make any predictions beyond Epic Universe’s 1-year anniversary. This is largely due to potential Florida resident ticket deals that could throw a monkey wrench into things, or the (unlikely) possibility of APs. See When Will Epic Universe Have Annual Passes? for why we do not expect that to happen just yet–and when it could occur.

In general, these recommendations become lower confidence the further out we go. There are so many moving parts when it comes to Epic Universe that predicting crowd levels is very difficult. In particular, Epic Universe is going to have park hopping and less restrictive ticketing rules starting in 2026. This should not materially impact day of the week trends (which, again, are driven by locals), but it might! We’re in unprecedented territory.

Another thing that makes me especially weary about Winter 2026 is that this has become an increasingly popular time to visit for theme park fans, with crowds and occupancy from January through March increasing at both Walt Disney World and Universal increasing in recent years.

On top of that, we’ve heard from many readers who are “waiting out” the opening year crowds and targeting their first visits in Winter 2026. Anecdotes are obviously not data, but it’s incredibly common for major new theme park additions to have this type of dynamic–an initial lull due to fears of crowds, followed by an influx of demand. If the opening season wait times of Epic Universe do turn out to be a “lull” (attendance has not been high relative to theoretical capacity), we are in for a world of hurt in 2026!

This is not an Epic Universe crowd calendar, per se, for the simple reason that we’d avoid all other dates not on the above list. But if, for whatever reason, I absolutely couldn’t do Epic Universe on a weekend, I’d be inclined to go Friday. If that weren’t possible, Monday is the date I’d choose.

Wednesdays and Thursdays are the worst days to visit. This is statistically speaking, which means we’re smoothing data out over a long duration. In looking more closely, midweek is all over the place. There have been stretches recently when Tuesday is worse than the two days that follow, and it appears to be “catching up” to Wednesdays and Thursdays.

The thing is, you aren’t visiting on a statistical average of all weeks. You’re visiting on an actual date, in the real world. So if I had to do a Tuesday through Thursday for whatever reason, I’d wait until the absolute last minute to make a decision and then decide on the basis of the weather forecast, minimizing my exposure to rain (although a good early afternoon downpour works wonders at clearing out Epic Universe–shockingly so).

Honestly though, I just would not visit midweek. I’m only going on Sundays from here on out–the park has too many problems to visit on a non-weekend. To each their own on that, though.

Looking further into the future, if planning a trip later in 2026 or 2027, I’d target all of the same dates on our Best & Worst Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World in 2026 & 2027. That’s a mix of quantitative and qualitative, and the latter arguably matters more at Epic Universe than Walt Disney World.

Use that best & worst weeks advice to target timeframes for your Walt Disney World and/or Universal Orlando vacation, and then use the above day of week recommendations to narrow your visit dates to Epic Universe.

We would strongly recommend prioritizing Epic Universe when choosing which park to visit. It should be the overriding factor, as there’s far more variance for Epic Universe than any other park at either resort.

As mentioned above, timeframes to target include mid-January, before winter break, early spring, and post-Easter 2026. All of those windows are appealing, especially on weekends. Basically, the dates with the highest likelihood of lowest attendance and best weather.

While I’m planning more solo research trips to Epic Universe throughout the year, our big family vacation will happen in early spring. Weather is the deciding factor for us–we also would not go on a “for fun” family trip with our toddler from May through September, even on “empty” days like I’ve experienced before.

Need trip planning tips and comprehensive advice for your visit to Central Florida? Make sure to read our Universal Orlando Planning Guide for everything about Islands of Adventure and Universal Studios Florida. Also check out our Walt Disney World Vacation Planning Guide for everything about those parks, resorts, restaurants, and so much more. For regular updates, news & rumors, a heads up when discounts are released, and much more, sign up for our FREE email newsletter!

YOUR THOUGHTS

Have you visited Epic Universe? What did you think of wait times and crowds? Experience any operational meltdowns due to breakdowns or weather? Will you visit Epic Universe in 2026, or will you wait for crowds to settle down (in theory)? Agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions? We love hearing from readers, so please share any other thoughts or questions you have in the comments below!

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26 Comments

  1. Tom this post is super useful. I would love an update or at least a note whether you’re still feeling good about May 25th. We’re local and would be paying out of pocket so I’d love to hit the right day in case we won’t make it back anytime soon.

  2. We are doing the week of Memorial day. Did not realize this at first but it was good because it was one less day to ask off from work. We will be there Monday through Thursday and trying to figure out which park to do which day. Thanks for your help

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