The most divisive ride at Disney World. Kids love it. Some adults find the song unforgettable in the worst sense. Either way, it's a 60-year-old original โ a slow boat through hundreds of singing animatronic children of the world.
It's a Small World began as a Disney attraction at the 1964 New York World's Fair (commissioned by Pepsi for the UNICEF pavilion), then was permanently installed at Disneyland and later Magic Kingdom in 1971. It's a slow boat ride through a series of country-themed scenes featuring 300+ singing animatronic children dressed in regional costumes. The song โ composed by the Sherman Brothers โ is the same throughout, sung in different languages as you pass each region.
No height requirement โ any guest can ride. Children under 7 must be accompanied by someone 14 or older.
You board a flat-bottomed boat at a brightly lit dock and float through scenes representing Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, the Pacific Islands, and a finale in white where all the children's voices come together.
The pace is slow, the lighting is bright, the scenes are dense with animatronics and visual jokes. Kids reliably love it โ toddlers point at every figure, and elementary-age kids try to identify the countries. Adults' reactions vary: some find it charming and nostalgic, others find the song genuinely difficult to dislodge from their heads.
It's a Small World does not have Lightning Lane. There is no LL Multi Pass option and no Individual LL purchase. Standby is your only option.
The good news: capacity is enormous (~3,000 riders per hour) and the queue moves continuously. A 30-minute posted wait is typically 20 minutes of actual time.
Average standby wait by season (observed over 2024-2025 data):
| Season | Morning | Midday | Evening |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low season | 10 min | 20 min | 15 min |
| Moderate | 15 min | 30 min | 20 min |
| High season | 25 min | 45 min | 30 min |
| Holiday peaks | 35 min | 60 min | 35 min |
Almost any time except the immediate hour after Fantasyland opens (when families with little kids gravitate here). Midday is typically the best wait-to-experience trade โ you're cooling off, sitting down, and probably grateful for both.
Nighttime rides are pleasant โ the exterior of the building is lit with elaborate Mary Blair-designed facades that are easier to admire when the queue moves you past them after dark.
Slow, bright, no surprises. The platonic ideal of a 2-year-old ride.
10 minutes of air-conditioned sitting. Worth its weight in shade.
1964 World's Fair attraction, designed by Mary Blair, scored by the Shermans. A genuine piece of mid-century American craft.
You will hear it for the rest of the day. If that's a deal-breaker, skip it.
Sit in the front row. Best view of every scene without other riders' heads in the way.
Look up. The ceilings of each room are decorated as elaborately as the floors. Most riders only look forward.
Spot the cast member doll. In the finale room, there's a single doll (added in the 1990s) wearing a Mickey ears hat. Find them.
Yes, the song is hard to unhear. If you ride mid-day, plan for it to be in your head through dinner. Humming Bohemian Rhapsody helps.
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