It’s notorious that theme parks have extremely long wait times for the most popular rides, and at Tokyo Disney Resort, the amusement park of this country where some people even joke that lining-up is a national hobby, it is not uncommon to see 120mins wait time for the fruitiest rides in the park.
Fortunately, Disneylands across the globe have established the FastPass Service to deal with this issue and to ensure you a fantastic trip to remember for life. They are essentially priority tickets that you can claim at the FP stations beside each ride by scanning the QR code on your park ticket, so when you come back at the scheduled time, you can skip the long queue and head to the front.
If you are visiting Tokyo Disneyland and Tokyo Disney Sea soon, here is some advice for you to take on the road as you travel through Mickey and Friends’ Japanese home.
The Time-gap rule
First and foremost, you should understand that there is a time-gap between you getting the FastPass and the time you can get your next one. It also means that you CAN in fact, be holding multiple FastPasses simultaneously.
When you get your first FP of the day, the thing to immediately do is to look at the time indicated on the pass. It is the time you can snatch the next set, so match the time and plan your travel route accordingly. The maximum cool-down time is 2 hours and it could even be as quick as an hour, so don’t miss it.
Get the FP Before You Get on the Ride

Sweet, your FP for Buzz Lightyear’s Astro Blaster says 11:30-12:30, so you return to TomorrowLand and ride it at the first moment possible .That’s a rookie Space Ranger mistake, my friend. Look at your FP again. Does it say, “The time you can get the next FP is from 11:30”? If so, snatch your next FP first and come back later. As long as you’re within time range, your priority doesn’t disappear. At the same time, other FastPasses are running out and their priority scheduled time is getting later and later. This would also delay your next chance to get your next FP.
Therefore, the rule of thumb is: the earlier you get your FastPasses at the next possible time, the more FPs you can get during your stay overall. So, go get the pass, THEN come back to defeat Zurg.
High priority FP rides
When you plan your route in Disneyland or Disneysea, you should note the rides that have FP but run out very quickly. If you arrive at the FP station too late, your scheduled riding time might be in the evening, or the worst case situation, the FPs have already ran out!
The high priority FP rides are namely the following roughly in order:
In Tokyo Disneyland:
- Winnie The Pooh’s Hunny Hunt
- Splash Mountain
- Space Mountain
- Buzz Lightyear’s Astro Blaster
- Monsters Inc.
In Tokyo Disneysea:
- Toy Story Mania
- The Tower of Terror
- Journey to the Center of the Earth
- Raging Spirit
- Indiana Jones Adventure: Temple of the Crystal Skull
Low Priority FP Rides & No FP Rides
On the other hand, there are rides around the party that may or may not offer FP rides, but you’d definitely have no issues going in. Don’t waste your FP quota on these following rides (not in order) that you can likely queue and enter within 20 mins (and they might not provide FPs anyway):In Tokyo Disneyland:
- It’s a Small World (no one will fight you for this, I promise)
- Pirates of the Caribbean (there’s like no line-up for this, ever, despite being a decent ride)
- Mickey’s PhilharMagic (a popular show but likely the theater seats a LOT of people)
- Star Tours: The Adventures Continue (I guess Japanese kids still don’t know enough about Star Wars to care)
- All those transportation rides (huge vehicles for a lot of people)
In Tokyo Disneysea:
- Aquatopia (funny story: I went there the day it snowed hard in Tokyo, and there was only a bunch of empty rides spinning on water)
- Sindbad’s Storybook Voyage (I didn’t even know Sindbad was related to Disney and I guess neither do most people)
- 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (I don’t get this one. It’s a lovely and exciting ride in my opinion but the line is ALWAYS like 5-10 mins)
- Transit Steamer Line (a short way for a long ride, an excellent time-killer)
- Electric Railway (not really a ride, but a perfect transportation to travel between Discovery Port and American Waterfront)











