There are two kinds of Disney World vacation planners: the people who make spreadsheets, color-code snack goals, compare entrée prices like they’re day-trading cheeseburgers, and whisper “cost per credit” into the void…

And then there are the people who say, “I would like to sit down, eat food, not think about it, and have Future Me deal with whatever financial fog rolls in later.” Disney World’s new Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan, coming in 2027, is very much for that second group.
This is not the dining plan for someone trying to squeeze every possible penny of value out of their vacation like they’re wringing out a damp Mickey poncho after a 4PM thunderstorm. This is Deluxe with a capital D, a monogrammed napkin, and probably a pre-dinner cocktail.

Guests will have three Disney Dining Plan options: the Quick-Service Dining Plan, the Table-Service Dining Plan, and the new Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan. These plans are available as part of select Walt Disney World vacation packages that include a Disney Resort hotel stay, and dining credits are based on the number of nights in your package.

So, let’s break it all down. What’s included? What does it cost? Who should consider the new Deluxe Dining Plan? And who should back away slowly, protecting their snack budget like it’s the last Gideon’s cookie in Disney Springs?
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First, What Are the 2027 Disney Dining Plan Options?
For 2027, Disney World is organizing the dining plans into three tiers:
- Quick-Service
- Table-Service
- Deluxe Table-Service
Everyone in your party ages 3 and up must be on the same dining plan when it’s added to a qualifying vacation package, because Disney is many things, but “let’s make this administratively chill” is not always one of them.

Here’s the basic breakdown.
| 2027 Dining Plan | Adult Price Per Night | Child Price Per Night | What’s Included Per Night |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quick-Service Dining Plan | $62.78 | $25.82 | 2 quick-service meals, 1 snack/nonalcoholic drink, 1 resort-refillable mug per person per package |
| Table-Service Dining Plan | $99.87 | $31.94 | 1 table-service meal, 1 quick-service meal, 1 snack/nonalcoholic drink, 1 resort-refillable mug per person per package |
| Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan | $163.01 | $46.85 | 2 table-service meals, 1 quick-service meal, 1 snack/nonalcoholic drink, 1 resort-refillable mug per person per package |
And yes, that means the Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan is over $160 per adult, per night.
Not per trip.
Not per “we survived Magic Kingdom fireworks crowds and deserve carbs.”
Per night.
Let us all take a respectful moment of silence for the vacation budget.

The Quick-Service Dining Plan: For the “We’re Here for Rides” People
The Quick-Service Dining Plan is the most casual of the three. In 2027, it includes two quick-service meals per night, one snack or nonalcoholic drink per night, and one resort-refillable drink mug per person for the package.

Quick-service restaurants are the ones where you order at a counter or through Mobile Order, pick up your food, and find a table. Think Satu’li Canteen, Docking Bay 7 Food and Cargo, Columbia Harbour House, Regal Eagle Smokehouse, and all the other places where you can inhale lunch and be back in line for Haunted Mansion before your child finishes explaining the lore of their bubble wand.
This plan is generally best for guests who don’t want to plan their day around dining reservations. It’s for families who prioritize rides, shows, pool breaks, and snack chaos over scheduled sit-down meals.

It can also be helpful for guests who like having meals prepaid but don’t want to sacrifice major chunks of park time. Because let’s be honest: a table-service meal can be lovely, but it can also become a two-hour fork-and-napkin hostage situation when all you wanted was air conditioning and protein.
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The Table-Service Dining Plan: The Classic Middle Child
The Table-Service Dining Plan is basically the standard Disney Dining Plan under a clearer name. In 2027, it includes one table-service meal, one quick-service meal, one snack or nonalcoholic drink, and one resort-refillable mug per person for the package.

At table-service restaurants, your meal generally includes an entrée and beverage at breakfast, or an entrée, dessert, and beverage at lunch or dinner. Buffets and family-style meals are also included, where accepted. Guests 21 and older can choose an alcoholic beverage where available, which is one of those little details that makes the Dining Plan math suddenly start wearing sunglasses.
This plan is for the Disney guest who wants a little structure without turning the whole vacation into a culinary chessboard. Maybe you want one sit-down meal per day, but you don’t want your entire itinerary to revolve around Advance Dining Reservations. You can do a character breakfast one day, a relaxed dinner the next, and still keep enough flexibility to eat cheeseburger spring rolls in the middle of Main Street like a civilized goblin.

For many families, this is probably the “sweet spot” plan. It gives you one real sit-down break each day without making your Disney trip feel like a progressive dinner with occasional rides.
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The Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan: Here Comes the Big Fork Energy
Now we arrive at the shiny new beast: the Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan.
In 2027, the Deluxe plan includes two table-service meals per night, one quick-service meal per night, one snack or nonalcoholic drink per night, and one resort-refillable mug per person for the package.

That is a lot of food.
That is also a lot of scheduled eating.
This is where we need to be painfully honest, because that’s what we do. We visit the parks constantly, test the theories, watch the trends, track the menus, stare deeply into the abyss of Disney vacation math, and then report back like mildly caffeinated theme park raccoons with spreadsheets.

The Deluxe Dining Plan is not primarily about saving money.
Could some people make the math work? Sure. If you order expensive entrées, choose pricier restaurants, use your credits strategically, drink alcoholic beverages with included meals where available, and hit enough higher-value experiences, you may be able to make the numbers less terrifying.

But for most guests, this is not a “look how much we saved!” situation. This is a “we paid upfront so we don’t have to think about it later” situation. And honestly? That is a valid vacation style.
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This Plan Is for Convenience, Not Coupon Clipping
The new Deluxe Dining Plan is for guests who prioritize ease, predictability, and convenience over maximum savings.

It is for the person who wants to walk into the trip knowing most of the food is prepaid. It is for the family that does not want to play “how much was that meal?” after every receipt. It is for the guest who would rather pay more upfront than spend the whole vacation mentally calculating whether a $19 entrée has betrayed them.
Disney vacations already come with enough decisions. Which park? Which Lightning Lane? Which snack? Which child is crying? Which adult is pretending they are not also crying? Do we rope drop? Do we go back to the resort? Why is everyone suddenly hungry five minutes after we passed food?
For some travelers, removing even one category of decision-making is worth money.

The Deluxe Dining Plan is built for that person.
It is not a budget hack. It is a brain-space purchase.
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It’s Also for People Who Love Sit-Down Meals
The Deluxe plan makes the most sense for guests who already plan to eat multiple table-service meals during their Disney trip.

Not “maybe we’ll do one character breakfast.” Not “we might grab a reservation if something pops up.” We mean the people who are building their vacation around meals.
If your dream Disney day includes breakfast at a character meal, a late lunch at a resort restaurant, and dinner somewhere with cloth napkins and a steak that costs more than your first car payment, the Deluxe plan may fit how you already travel.

This is also a plan for guests who use dining as built-in breaks. A table-service meal can be a magical little reset button. You sit down. Someone brings you water. You stop walking. Your feet briefly forgive you.
For families with kids, older adults, multi-generational groups, or anyone who doesn’t want to go from 8AM to 10PM fueled only by popcorn and defiance, table-service meals can be an actual survival strategy.

But there is a catch, because of course there is.
The Catch: Time Is Also Currency
Disney Dining Plan math is not just about dollars. It’s also about time.
A quick-service meal can take 30 to 45 minutes if things go smoothly. A table-service meal can take 60 to 90 minutes, sometimes longer. Character meals, signature restaurants, and dinner shows can easily become major itinerary anchors.

Now multiply that by two table-service meals per day.
Suddenly, your “easy” dining plan may become the thing steering the entire vacation ship. And that ship is wearing mouse ears and yelling “reservation at 5:20!”
This isn’t automatically bad. Some people love that structure. Some people want their Disney days organized around meals, breaks, and reservations. Those people are thriving. Their phones are charged. Their ADRs are stacked. Their children probably know what time dinner is. We fear and respect them.

But if you are someone who likes to decide in the moment, follow your stomach, chase low wait times, snack around EPCOT, or spontaneously leave a park because the vibes have gone feral, the Deluxe plan may feel restrictive.
And that brings us to the awkward little truth biscuit.
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The Deluxe Dining Plan Is Not for Free Spirits With Snack Goblin Tendencies
This is where I personally step into the confessional booth.
I am anti-Deluxe Dining Plan.

Not because I don’t spend money on food at Disney World. I absolutely do. My snack budget has seen things. But if I am going to spend that kind of money eating around Disney World, I want to eat exactly what I want, when I want, where I want, with no credit categories whispering rules in my ear.
Maybe I want a lounge dinner of appetizers and cocktails. Maybe I want to spend half the day at EPCOT festival booths. Maybe I want a full meal made entirely of snacks because I am an adult and no one can stop me. Maybe I want to graze through Disney Springs like a raccoon who discovered disposable income.

The Deluxe Dining Plan does not always love that kind of chaos.
Yes, dining credits roll over day to day and can be used throughout your stay, but unused meals and snacks expire at midnight on your checkout day, and they are not transferable between party members. That means you still need to use them thoughtfully enough to avoid the dreaded last-day panic where you’re buying snacks with the energy of someone defusing a churro-shaped bomb.

For people who want total dining freedom, paying out of pocket can feel better, even if it costs more. Because sometimes the “value” is not having to make your vacation fit the plan.
Sometimes the value is nachos at 10:07PM because your soul requested cheese.
It May Work for Character Dining Fans
One big group that may be tempted by the Deluxe Dining Plan: character dining families.

Character meals can be expensive, especially for families with kids who want to meet princesses, Mickey, Stitch, Pooh, or whoever has been selected by your child’s very specific emotional monarchy.
However, not every character meal works the same way on the Dining Plan. Some character dining experiences require two table-service meals per person, including Cinderella’s Royal Table, Story Book Dining at Artist Point with Snow White, and lunch and dinner at Akershus Royal Banquet Hall.
That matters.

If you’re planning several character meals, especially the higher-credit ones, the Deluxe plan may help you build a trip where those experiences are prepaid and easier to manage. But you still need to compare what you’d actually order, which meals require two credits, and how many credits you’ll realistically use.
Because “we have enough credits” and “we got a good deal” are cousins, not twins.
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It May Work for Signature Dining People, Too
The Deluxe Dining Plan could also appeal to guests who want multiple signature dining experiences.
Signature dining restaurants, dinner shows, and some dining experiences may require two table-service meals per person. Signature dining also tends to involve higher menu prices, so if you’re trying to maximize a dining plan, this is where the math starts getting more interesting.
That said, this is also where the plan can get complicated. If a signature dinner uses two table-service credits, your Deluxe plan’s two table-service meals for that night may be gone in one sitting. That could be perfectly fine if that’s how you want to dine. But it also means you still need to plan.
And yes, that’s funny, because one of the supposed perks of the Deluxe plan is not thinking about dining so much.

Welcome to Disney planning. The floor is lava, and the lava has cancellation policies.
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Remember: Gratuities Are Usually NOT Included
This is a big one.
Dining plans may help you prepay for meals, but gratuities are not included except at select experiences, including Hoop-Dee-Doo Musical Revue, Cinderella’s Royal Table, and Private Dining at Disney’s Grand Floridian Resort & Spa. Disney also notes that an 18% gratuity is automatically added for parties of six or more.

That means the Deluxe Dining Plan does not make your food budget disappear entirely. If you’re doing two table-service meals per day, you may also be tipping two table-service meals per day. And those tips are based on the cost of the meal, not on your emotional readiness to continue spending money.
So, while the Deluxe plan can make the vacation feel prepaid, it is not fully all-inclusive. The tip line still comes for us all.
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Who the Deluxe Dining Plan Is Really For
The Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan is probably best for:
- Guests who want most of their dining prepaid before they arrive.
- Families or groups who plan to eat multiple table-service meals per day.
- Travelers who enjoy structure and don’t mind building park days around reservations.
- Guests who love character meals, buffets, family-style restaurants, and signature dining.
- People who prioritize convenience over savings.
- Visitors who don’t want to micromanage every meal cost while they’re in the parks.
- Guests who have someone else handling the planning.
And yes, that last one matters.

Because the Deluxe Dining Plan is much easier to use well if someone is actually thinking through the reservations, credit usage, restaurant choices, and timing. That might be you. That might be the planner in your group who is already six tabs deep in My Disney Experience. Or it might be a travel agent, because yes, those magical humans exist, and they can help with this exact kind of thing.

The Deluxe Dining Plan is not necessarily for people who hate planning. It is for people who hate thinking about money once they arrive, and are willing to plan ahead to make that happen.
9 Absolutely Free Things a Disney World Travel Agent Can Do For You
Who Should Skip It
You should probably skip the Deluxe Dining Plan if you’re trying to save money first and foremost.

You should also skip it if you prefer lounges, festival booths, snack meals, spontaneous dining, or splitting entrées. If your ideal Disney dining day is “coffee, spring rolls, three EPCOT booth items, a margarita, and half of someone else’s fries,” then the Deluxe plan is going to look at you like you brought a kazoo to a string quartet.

It’s also not ideal for people who don’t want multiple dining reservations. Some guests underestimate how tiring table-service meals can become when they happen over and over again. A sit-down meal is great. Two sit-down meals every day can start to feel like your vacation is being run by a tiny maître d’ with a clipboard and no mercy.

And if your travel party includes picky eaters, light eaters, toddlers who survive on vibes and ketchup, or teens who suddenly refuse breakfast after you paid for the GDP of a small village in dining credits, be careful.
The Deluxe plan wants commitment. Some vacation stomachs simply want freedom.
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The Bottom Line
Disney World’s new Deluxe Table-Service Dining Plan is not here to be the hero of budget travel.
So, who is the new Deluxe Dining Plan for?
It’s for the eaters. The planners. The table-service devotees. The “we vacation through food” people. The families who need built-in breaks. The guests who value convenience more than savings. The people who don’t want to count dollars once they’re in the Disney bubble.

And it is absolutely not for everyone.
Which, honestly, may be the whole point.
We’ll keep testing, tracking, analyzing, and side-eyeing the math, because that’s what we do. Disney gives us a dining plan, and we respond by turning into accountants with churros.
You’re welcome. Stay tuned to AllEars so you don’t miss a thing!
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