Think Twice Before Trying To Exploit This Popular Disney 'Travel Hack'
It sounds like common sense — or maybe just common decency — but don't fake a disability in the hopes of skipping the line during your next Disney vacation. There was a time when that might have worked, but doing so now could get you banned for life from Disney resorts on both coasts — the result of people abusing the system for years.
Growing up in Florida, one of my earliest Disney memories is boarding a special ride vehicle with a family member who was in a wheelchair. As a kid, I felt like we were getting the VIP treatment as we bypassed the usual standby line and they ushered us into the boarding area for mobility devices. Unfortunately, some adults have brought the same mentality to their vacation planning, treating disability access as a line-skipping "travel hack," as one Redditor put it. This goes beyond renting a wheelchair and pretending you need one at the theme park all day. In the annals of weird Disney park facts, people have gone to much more elaborate lengths than that.
Back in 2013, Today went undercover to expose what one social researcher, quoting parents, referred to as "'black market' handicapped Disney guides." Families could enlist these guides (who advertised their services on Craigslist) to smuggle them through side doors and back exits, onto popular Disneyland rides like Star Tours and Splash Mountain. All the guide had to do was flash their Guest Assistance Card, and it would get them and their group (the family they were charging $50 an hour) to the front of the line. The same month, CNN and The New York Post reported on a similar phenomenon, where wealthy parents were paying a guide on a motorized scooter to pose as one of their family members.
Taking advantage of disability access is harder under DAS
Much has changed since the days of those black-market tour guides at Disneyland and Disney World. Guests with mobility issues will now find that Orlando, Florida, is one of the most wheelchair accessible U.S. cities, and that extends to most Disney World queues. With the exception of a few old, non-accessible queues for rides like Spaceship Earth (where you might have to wait around back), people in wheelchairs generally wait in the same line as everyone else.
A few months after Today's undercover report, Disney replaced the Guest Assistance Card system with the DAS (Disability Access Service) program to "help control abuse that was, unfortunately, widespread and growing at an alarming rate" (via Disney). The current DAS page on the Disney World website explains that it specifically caters to "Guests who, due to a developmental disability like autism or similar, are unable to wait in a conventional queue for an extended period of time." To qualify for DAS, the first step is registering on Zoom via a live video chat with a Disney Cast Member, who will make the final determination about whether you or your loved one is eligible.
Parents of children with autism should be aware that their child must be present for the interview, where the Cast Member will ask questions about their condition. Some who have been through this process liken it to an interrogation, as if an officer of the First Order were trying to catch you in a lie while role-playing at Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge. Disney even notes on its DAS page, "If it is determined that any of the statements a Guest made in the process of obtaining DAS are not true, the Guest will be permanently barred from entering Walt Disney World Resort and the Disneyland Resort."
Guests with disabilities now receive a return time for rides
Assuming you do qualify for DAS, that doesn't push you to the front of the line ahead of other guests at all your favorite Disney attractions. All it means is that you'll be able to kill time somewhere outside the line until your turn comes. As Disney explains on its DAS page, "DAS doesn't provide immediate access to experiences, but rather allows Guests to request a return time for a specific experience that is comparable to the current standby wait."
Rather than hitting the fast track for free Lightning Lane entry, some guests end up waiting slightly longer in the DAS queue after their return time. Despite this and Disney's overall crackdown on scammers, you can still find YouTube videos with titles framing DAS as a line-skipping privilege for families with legitimate disabilities among them. According to USA Today, DAS has become Disneyland and Disney World's most requested service, with demand for it outpacing the expected numbers. Per Disney Tourist Blog, the number of DAS issuances tripled from 2019 to 2024.
A broken bone, real or feigned, could put anyone in a rented wheelchair, lest they try to get around a theme park on crutches. At issue for some guests now, however, are the cases where people with permanent disabilities seem to have been unfairly denied DAS due to Disney's stricter criteria. In 2024, a Disneyland guest with Guillain-Barré syndrome went viral when she shared her story of being denied the service on TikTok. In 2025, a California woman also filed a class-action lawsuit against Disney for allegedly discriminating against physical disabilities in favor of developmental ones. A more detailed breakdown of all the alternative services on offer at the Florida resort can be found in our Disney World guide for guests with disabilities.