Art of Animation Review for UK Families

Alex Perry • 27 May 2026

If you are weighing up Disney resort options and keep coming back to Disney's Art of Animation Resort, there is usually a reason. It stands out immediately. The bold theming, larger-than-life characters and family-friendly room types make this one of the most eye-catching choices at Walt Disney World. In this art of animation review, I want to help you decide whether it is simply fun to look at or genuinely the right fit for your holiday.


For many UK families, this is one of the first Value Resorts that feels like it offers something more. It has the price point that attracts families watching the overall cost of a Florida trip, but it also has suites that solve a very real problem - how to stay on Disney property with more space without jumping straight to a Deluxe price tag.


Art of Animation review: who this hotel suits best

Art of Animation is best for families who want strong Disney theming and are happy for the resort itself to feel like part of the entertainment. If your children adore Finding Nemo, Cars, The Lion King or The Little Mermaid, that matters here more than at many other hotels. This is not a subtle resort. It is bright, characterful and unapologetically playful.


It is especially worth considering for families of five or six, or multigenerational groups who want to avoid booking two separate standard rooms. The family suites are the biggest selling point. They give you a proper bedroom, additional sleeping space in the lounge area and two bathrooms, which can make a surprising difference when everyone is trying to get ready for rope drop.


That said, this will not be the right hotel for everyone. If you want a calmer atmosphere, more refined design or easy walking access to a park, there are better options. If your priority is a romantic adults-only stay, I would usually point you elsewhere unless one of you is deeply attached to the theming.


The rooms: suites are the star

The key thing to understand in any art of animation review is that people are often talking about two quite different stays. The family suites and The Little Mermaid standard rooms are not interchangeable experiences.


Family Suites

The suites are where Art of Animation really earns its reputation. They sleep up to six and include a separate bedroom, living area, kitchenette and two bathrooms. For many UK families, that layout is the sweet spot between budget and comfort.


You get more room to spread out, proper storage, and enough flexibility for a week or two in Florida to feel manageable rather than cramped. If you are travelling with younger children who need naps, early nights or downtime, the separate sleeping areas can be a genuine sanity-saver. I also think the extra bathroom is one of the most underrated benefits on any Disney holiday.


The Finding Nemo suites are the most popular because they are closest to the main building, main pool and Skyliner station. Cars suites are brilliantly themed and often a huge hit with children. The Lion King suites are a little less in-your-face in style, but still immersive and usually appeal to families who want the suite layout without being directly in the busiest section.


Little Mermaid Rooms

The Little Mermaid rooms are standard Value Resort rooms, and this is where expectations need to be managed. They are fun, colourful and perfectly serviceable, but they are furthest from the main facilities and transport hub. After a long park day, that walk can feel longer than it looks on a map.


They are also smaller and less flexible than the suites. If you are comparing a Little Mermaid room with a standard room at Pop Century, the decision becomes much closer. Art of Animation wins on theming. Pop Century often wins on convenience and, depending on pricing, overall value.


Transport and location

One of the strongest practical advantages of Art of Animation is the Disney Skyliner. For many guests, this is the feature that tips the balance.


The Skyliner gives you easy access to EPCOT and Disney's Hollywood Studios, with a transfer at Caribbean Beach in most cases. It is quick, enjoyable and often far more pleasant than relying entirely on buses. For families with pushchairs, there is a clear convenience factor, especially if your child can stay seated while boarding certain gondolas.


For Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom and Disney Springs, you will still use buses. That is normal, but it does mean your experience here depends slightly on your park plans. If your trip is heavily focused on EPCOT and Hollywood Studios, Art of Animation becomes much more appealing. If you expect to spend most of your time at Magic Kingdom, the transport advantage is less dramatic.


Location-wise, it shares the Hourglass Lake area with Pop Century, and that can be very handy. It does not have the premium positioning of a monorail or Crescent Lake resort, but for a Value hotel it is well placed.


Dining, pools and resort atmosphere

Landscape of Flavours is, in my view, one of the better quick-service food courts in the Value category. The menu tends to feel a little more varied than some guests expect, which matters on longer stays when you do not want every breakfast or late-night meal to feel identical.


You are still at a Value Resort, so this is not a destination for table-service dining or a particularly elevated food scene. But for the category, it does the job well. Families who want convenient refillable drinks, easy breakfasts and straightforward meals between park plans will find it practical.


The Big Blue Pool is a major draw. It is the largest hotel pool at Walt Disney World, and the Finding Nemo area around it is one of the most visually impressive resort spaces in this price bracket. Children usually love it. The trade-off is that it can feel busy and noisy, particularly at peak times.


That general atmosphere runs through the whole resort. Art of Animation feels energetic. For some families, that is part of the magic. For others, especially those who value a quieter return after the parks, it may feel a little relentless.


Is Art of Animation good value?

This depends entirely on which room type you are pricing and who is travelling.


If you are booking a family suite instead of two separate rooms elsewhere, the maths can make a lot of sense. You gain shared space, a kitchenette, two bathrooms and a distinctly Disney setting. For larger families, it can be one of the smartest on-site options.


If you are looking at The Little Mermaid rooms, value becomes more debatable. They can still work well if the price is right and the theming matters to you, but they are not automatically the best-value choice just because the resort is popular. Pop Century often deserves to be compared closely, and in some cases a Moderate Resort offer may narrow the gap more than expected.


This is why I always tell families not to judge Disney resorts in isolation. The best hotel is the one that fits your group size, park plans, budget and tolerance for walking, not simply the one with the cutest photos.


Art of Animation review: the honest verdict

Art of Animation is one of the best-themed family resorts at Walt Disney World, and for the right guest it is a brilliant choice. The suites are the real success story. They give families a practical amount of space in an environment that still feels unmistakably Disney, and the Skyliner adds a transport advantage that genuinely improves a holiday.


The compromises are worth being honest about. The resort is busy, bold and not especially restful. The Little Mermaid rooms are a weaker proposition than the suites. And while this is a very good Value Resort, it is still a Value Resort, which means you should not expect the dining, atmosphere or convenience of Disney's higher-tier hotels.


For UK families travelling with children, especially those wanting strong theming without stepping into Deluxe pricing, I think Art of Animation deserves serious consideration. It is not universally the best Disney resort, but it is often the best answer to a very specific question: how do we keep the Disney magic high, the budget sensible and the room setup practical?


If you would like expert help choosing between Art of Animation, Pop Century, Caribbean Beach or another Walt Disney World hotel, I can help you compare the options properly and build a holiday around the way your family actually travels. Enquire here: https://form.jotform.com/Alex_Perry/start-planning-your-2027-disney-hol



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If you arrive around 20 December and stay until early January, you should expect very heavy attendance across all four theme parks, busy Disney Resort hotels, longer waits for transport and a real need for early starts and careful planning. This is the classic school holiday window for both US and international families, so demand surges. Magic Kingdom is usually the biggest pressure point because it is the park many guests most want to experience at Christmas. On peak dates, it can feel full from quite early in the day, and the atmosphere is exciting but undeniably intense. EPCOT also becomes extremely busy over the festive period, especially with its holiday entertainment and seasonal food offerings. Hollywood Studios can feel compact when crowds build, and Animal Kingdom often feels slightly easier to navigate, though it still gets busy around headline attractions. If you are set on travelling over Christmas itself, that does not mean you should avoid it altogether. It simply means going in with the right expectations. This is not the time for a relaxed, slow-paced approach where you decide each morning what to do. It rewards structure, realistic park goals and a hotel choice that gives you some breathing space. The best festive weeks for lower Christmas crowds For many UK guests, the sweet spot is late November to mid-December. You still get the Christmas décor, festive entertainment and seasonal atmosphere, but without the absolute peak of the Christmas and New Year rush. The first couple of weeks in December are often especially appealing. Crowds are not low in the traditional sense - this is Walt Disney World at Christmas, after all - but they are often far more manageable than the final two weeks of the month. Queue times are usually better, mobile food ordering is less of a battle, and park evenings feel festive rather than overwhelming. Late November can also work very well, although you do need to watch the American Thanksgiving period. 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