The safest way to save on Disneyland Paris tickets: buy online, in advance, for a fixed date. Dated tickets start well below the gate price, and the gap between low and high season can exceed €40 per person. Here is how the ticket options compare.
Ticket types
| Ticket | Best for | Good to know |
|---|---|---|
| Dated 1-day / 1-park | First one-day visit | Cheapest option, fixed date |
| Dated 1-day / 2-parks | Seeing Walt Disney Studios too | Small supplement over 1-park |
| 2, 3 or 4-day tickets | Short breaks | Price per day decreases |
| Flexible ticket | Uncertain dates | Valid any day, noticeably pricier |
| Ticket + hotel package | Full stays | Often great value outside school holidays, includes early park access |
Where to buy
- Official Disneyland Paris website: the reference for dated tickets, packages and current official promotions.
- Authorised resellers (GetYourGuide, travel agencies): the same e-tickets, sometimes with free cancellation — handy for comparing.
- Avoid: peer-to-peer resale (tickets are named) and non-authorised websites.
How to pay less
- Aim for the low season (January to March, November outside holidays): cheaper tickets and shorter queues — see our high vs low season comparison.
- Book several weeks ahead: dated ticket prices rise as the date approaches.
- Children under 3 enter free — find all family discounts in our kids ticket deals and offers and promotions.
- Visiting several times a year? Compare with the Disney annual passes, worthwhile from 2-3 visits.
Frequently asked questions
Where can I buy Disneyland Paris tickets at the best price?
Online and in advance: the official Disneyland Paris website sells dated tickets that are usually much cheaper than gate prices, and authorised resellers regularly run promotions. Avoid peer-to-peer resale sites — tickets are named and can be refused at the entrance.
What is the difference between a dated and a flexible ticket?
A dated ticket is only valid on the chosen day and is the cheapest option. A flexible ticket lets you visit on any day without booking, but costs significantly more. If your dates are fixed, the dated ticket is almost always the best deal.
Should I buy a 1-park or 2-park ticket?
For a first one-day visit, the 1-park ticket (Disneyland Park) is plenty. The 2-park option becomes worthwhile from 2 days of visiting, or if you really want to see the Marvel, Frozen and Pixar attractions at Walt Disney Studios.
Are tickets cheaper at the gate?
No — the opposite. Gate prices are the highest. Buying online in advance can save you up to 30% and lets you skip the ticket booth queue.
