The Disney Conversation Every Couple Should Have Before Booking (But Nobody Does)

Most couples spend hours researching Disney World before their trip. They read ride rankings. They screenshot dining menus. They bookmark every Lightning Lane explainer they can find.

And then they arrive — and by Day 2, they’re ready to go home.

Not because they didn’t plan enough. Because they planned around each other instead of with each other.

I’ve worked at Disney World. I’ve been to the parks more times than I can count. I handle all the research and booking in our family — the reservations, the Lightning Lane strategy, the park order. And even with all of that, the trips that feel effortless aren’t the ones with the best logistics. They’re the ones where we took 30 minutes before booking to have a conversation most couples skip entirely.

Here’s that conversation.


Question 1: What Are You Actually Here to Find?

Art of Disney in EPCOT (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

Budget isn’t really about money. It’s about what you’re each hoping to bring home — and I don’t mean that metaphorically.

We started doing something a few trips ago that sounds a little ridiculous but genuinely changed how we travel together: we give each other coupons before the trip. A Loungefly bag. A shirt. Candy. A snack. A caffeine. A puzzle. Something from Art of Disney.

And — this one’s important — a “15-minute stroll alone, no questions asked.”

That one isn’t really alone time. It’s how we buy each other something without the other person watching. Because you’re always with each other on a Disney trip, and there’s no other way to pull it off.

The coupon system works because it separates “what we’re spending on the trip” from “what each of us actually gets to find.” One person might want a specific piece of art they’ve had their eye on for two years. The other wants to try every new snack they can locate. Both are valid. Both are budgeted for. Neither person is silently watching the other spend money on something they don’t understand.

The question to ask before you book: What’s the thing you actually want to find on this trip? Not the rides. Not the restaurants. The thing you’d carry home and still feel good about six months later. Get that on the table early, and the budget conversation stops being a negotiation and starts being a plan.


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Question 2: What Do You Actually Need to Happen — And Are You Willing to Say It Out Loud?

Rope Drop at Haunted Mansion (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

There should be no secrets in a Disney plan. None.

If your partner wants to do Haunted Mansion at rope drop and again at night, you can make that happen. It takes five minutes to build into a day. But if they never say it because they don’t want to seem demanding, you’ll spend two days walking past the stretch room queue while they quietly wish you’d stop.

The trap most couples fall into is framing this as “I don’t want to be a burden.” So they soften their real priorities into vague preferences, and then feel quietly disappointed when the trip doesn’t reflect what they actually wanted.

The reframe that works: stop saying no, and start saying yes, and or yes, if.

“You want to do Haunted Mansion twice? Yes — if we do it at rope drop so the line’s short, and then again after fireworks when it’s a different feeling entirely.” That’s not a compromise. That’s a better plan than either person would have made alone. Couples who communicate this way don’t just avoid conflict. They actually build a trip that’s better than what either of them imagined.

Say what you actually want. Your partner can work with specifics. They can’t work with “I don’t mind, whatever you want.”

Haunted Mansion at Night (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

Question 3: What Does Your Body Need to Survive This?

Here’s the thing nobody tells you about Disney World as you get older: things start to break.

Not dramatically. Just — your feet hurt earlier than they used to. The Orlando heat hits differently at 2pm than it did when you were 20. You need air conditioning in a way that feels slightly embarrassing to admit but is completely real.

This isn’t a sprint. It’s a marathon. You have to be caffeinated, hydrated, and tolerable — and those three things require actual planning, not optimism.

The conversations worth having before the trip: Do you need a midday change of clothes? (In July heat, the answer is almost always yes, and acknowledging it in advance means you actually pack for it.) What’s your caffeine situation — and when does missing it make you a person nobody wants to be around? Do you need to sit down in actual air conditioning at some point in the afternoon, or can you push through?

A good indoor queue line, by the way, is genuinely underrated as a relationship-saving tool. Forty-five minutes in the Haunted Mansion queue beats forty-five minutes standing in direct sun waiting for a parade. Know which experiences give you that and plan accordingly. The goal is to still like each other by 4pm.


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Question 4: What’s Your Line Limit — And Does It Change Throughout the Day?

Empty Dole Whip at the Magic Kingdom (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

Waiting is the defining experience of a Disney World trip that nobody prepares for emotionally. The question isn’t whether you’ll wait. It’s how much you’re willing to wait — and that number is different at 9am than it is at 2pm.

Here’s how we think about it: I’d rather spend 30 minutes in a line at midday than 90 minutes in one late in the afternoon when we’re already worn down. If pushing something to the morning saves stress later, we push it. If waiting until after dinner means the line drops from 75 minutes to 20, we eat first.

That calculus only works if both people have agreed on their thresholds before the day starts — not in the moment when someone’s already frustrated and one person wants to join the line and the other very much does not.

Have the actual conversation: What’s your walk-away number at the start of the day? What is it by 3pm? Is there a specific ride you’d wait any amount of time for — and one you’d never wait more than 20 minutes for regardless of what it is?

Get those numbers out before you arrive. The negotiation in front of a wait-time board while the park is at peak capacity is never the right time to figure out that you had completely different assumptions.


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Question 5: Who Leads — And How Do You Make It Fair?

Honest answer: in our family, I do the research and booking. I’ve worked at Disney World. I’ve been to these parks more times than most people have been to any theme park in their life. So when it comes to strategy and sequencing, I take the lead — and my partner lets me.

But here’s what that actually means: when she has an opinion, I listen. We’re not on the trip for one person. The whole reason we travel together is because we want to be there together. Leading the logistics doesn’t mean overriding the person next to you.

Vetoes work. So does something we’ve landed on that’s more fun: a bribe system. Every five times my partner stops to read every single plaque and historical marker in Liberty Square — which she will do — I get a caffeine. Every five stores I pull her into to look at merchandise she has no interest in, she gets a caffeine.

Caffeine is life.

It sounds like a joke. It’s not. Happy couples know how to reward each other, or at the very minimum, how to bribe. It turns the thing that would otherwise create low-level friction into a game you’re both playing. Nobody’s keeping real score. You’re just acknowledging that you each have your thing, and you’re willing to show up for each other’s thing.


Question 6: What Would Make Today Feel Like a Win?

Tree of Life at Night (Image: Dustin Fuhs)

This one is the most important question, and it’s also the easiest one to answer well if you just ask it.

Every day at Disney World needs a highlight. Sometimes it’s a specific ride. Sometimes it’s a number — steps walked, things crossed off a list, experiences completed. Sometimes it’s a checklist, and the satisfaction comes from working through it together. Sometimes it’s something smaller: a photo that turned out perfectly, a snack you’d never had before, a moment that made both of you laugh.

The goal isn’t to have a perfect day. The goal is to end the day with something to celebrate. That’s different. A perfect day implies nothing went wrong. A celebrated day just means something went right — and you noticed it.

Before you leave the hotel each morning, ask each other: what would make today feel like a win? One thing each. It takes two minutes. And it means that at the end of the day, when you’re back at the resort and your feet are done, you have a shared answer to “was that a good day” — instead of two people privately measuring the day against completely different standards.

Celebrate each day as its own full experience. Don’t let a long line at 11am color how you remember the whole thing by 10pm.


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The Thing Worth Saying Out Loud

None of these questions are really about Disney World. They’re about showing up as someone who actually thought about what your partner needs — not just what you want the trip to look like.

The couples who have this conversation before they book don’t have perfect trips. But they have trips that feel like they were planned for the two of them specifically, by two people who were paying attention.

That’s the actual goal. And it starts with 30 minutes and a willingness to say what you actually want before you arrive.

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Dustin Fuhshttp://www.stepstomagic.com
I’m Dustin Fuhs, a theme park fanatic that has created this platform to showcase my passion, tools and opinions to create a fun and interactive experience for everyone who visits. My goal is to help you and your family have the most magical experience at Walt Disney World. In reading my articles and ideas, I hope that you can find some fantastic ways to bring your dreams into reality!

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