Pushing a stroller through Main Street at Disneyland, POV View.

Last Updated on May 22, 2026

Strollers are allowed at Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure. The maximum size is 31 inches wide by 52 inches long. Stroller wagons (Wonderfold, Veer, Keenz) are completely banned. Disney rents single strollers for $18 per day and doubles for $36 per day, with the rental location just outside the main entrance between both parks. Disneyland also now sells its own branded stroller on-site for guests whose strollers fail the size check or who want to keep one. Third-party companies deliver higher-quality rental strollers to your hotel and are typically the best value for multi-day trips.

The full breakdown of the 2026 rules, the new enforcement reality at security checkpoints, all your rental and purchase options, and the best strollers to bring from home are below.

Disneyland’s stroller rules tightened meaningfully in 2026, and families are getting turned away at security for violations that would have been waved through a year ago. If you are bringing a stroller to the resort this year, the difference between a smooth entry and a chaotic morning is knowing the current rules, the actual measured size of your stroller, and your options if something goes wrong at the gate.

This guide covers everything: the 2026 size requirements, the wagon ban that catches families off guard, all your rental options including the brand-new strollers Disneyland is now selling on-site, the best strollers to bring from home, and the small operational details that experienced parents wish they had known on day one.

Disneyland Stroller Guidelines Cheat Sheet

Disneyland 2026 stroller cheat sheet infographic covering size requirements, the wagon ban, four stroller options including the new Disney-sold stroller, recommended models to bring from home, the complete list of stroller rules, insider parent tips, and the best option for multi-day trips.

The 2026 Stroller Enforcement Reality

The most important thing to understand before you pack: enforcement at security checkpoints has tightened significantly. Cast Members are no longer eyeballing stroller sizes. They are measuring, and they are doing it consistently. Strollers that exceed the size limit by even an inch are being stopped at the gate, and families are facing real choices: leave the stroller behind, store it in their car, scramble to rent one, or in some cases not enter the park at all that morning.

This is not a hypothetical. It is happening daily. Measure your stroller before you leave home. The two minutes it takes is the difference between starting your park day at 8 AM as planned or at 10 AM after a long detour to figure out a replacement.

Disneyland Stroller Size Requirements

The current rule, set by Disney and enforced at all entrances, is straightforward.

Maximum width: 31 inches (79 cm)

Maximum length: 52 inches (132 cm)

Disney measures the widest and longest points of the entire stroller setup, not just the frame. That clip-on cup holder, snack tray, parent organizer, or attached bag could push your stroller out of compliance even if the frame itself is well within the limit. If you have accessories attached, measure with them on.

Most standard single strollers fit comfortably within these dimensions. Double strollers are where families run into trouble. Some popular side-by-side double models exceed the 31-inch width by one to two inches, which is exactly what gets flagged at security. If you are bringing a double, double-check the manufacturer’s exact dimensions before you leave.

Stroller Wagons Are Banned, No Exceptions

Stroller wagons are not allowed at Disneyland under any circumstances. This includes Wonderfold, Veer, Keenz, and any other brand of wagon-style stroller, regardless of how the manufacturer markets it. Even if it has a push handle, even if it functions like a stroller, even if you call it a stroller in conversation, Disney classifies it as a wagon and it does not enter the park.

The general rule Disney enforces: anything you have to pull behind you rather than push in front of you is banned. This covers wagons, push-pull hybrids, and coolers on wheels.

If you own a stroller wagon and were planning to bring it, do not. Plan on a real stroller for your Disneyland trip and use the wagon for everything else. The number of families who arrive at security with a wagon and have to make a last-minute decision is one of the most common avoidable problems at the resort.

Disneyland Stroller Rental: What to Expect

If you are not bringing your own stroller, Disneyland rents strollers from a stand located outside the main entrance, near the locker area between the two parks.

Single stroller rental is $18 per day. Double stroller rental is $36 per day. The same rental is valid in both Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure on the same day, so you can park hop without a second rental.

The rental strollers themselves are red, hard plastic units with Mickey and Minnie graphics on the sides. They are designed for durability rather than comfort. They do not recline, which means they are not suited for infants who cannot sit up on their own and they are not great for kids who need a nap. They handle well on flat surfaces and do the job for a one-day visit with a toddler or preschooler who is mostly walking, but they are noticeably less comfortable than what most families have at home.

A few important rental rules. Disney rental strollers cannot leave the resort property, which means no taking them back to your hotel at night or to dinner at Downtown Disney after closing. They also cannot board the Disneyland Railroad because they do not fold. If you misplace your rental during the day, keep your receipt. You can get a free replacement at the rental stand by showing your receipt.

Rental strollers are recommended for kids who weigh 50 pounds or less.

The New Option: Buying a Disneyland Stroller On-Site

Disneyland baby strollers for sale at Disneyland Resort

Disneyland now sells its own branded stroller for guests who want to skip rental fees, want a stroller they keep, or arrive at the park without realizing their own does not meet the size requirements. The Disneyland-branded stroller is sold inside the resort and is built to Disney’s own park specifications, meaning it is guaranteed to meet the size limits and clear security.

Specs and features:

  • Sun canopy featuring 3D Mickey ears
  • Lightweight with a compact fold
  • Stows easily in small spaces
  • Storage basket underneath for must-haves
  • Secure 3-point harness
  • Footrest for your child’s comfort
  • Easy to pack for trips
  • Designed with parking brakes on the rear wheels
  • Holds a child up to 40 pounds
  • Meets Disney park size requirements out of the box

This is a useful option for a few specific situations. If you are visiting for multiple days and the math works out cheaper than renting daily ($36 across two days for a Disney rental, for example, can quickly approach the price of buying outright). If your own stroller failed security and you need a replacement on the spot. If you want a Disneyland souvenir that is also functional. Or if you are a local family planning multiple visits per year and want a dedicated park stroller you keep at the resort or in your car.

The honest trade-off: it is not a high-end stroller. The 40-pound weight limit and the 3-point harness mean it is intended for younger toddlers and preschoolers, not infants who need fuller recline support. It does not fold to the same compactness as a premium travel stroller, and the fabric and construction are utilitarian. For a serious daily-use stroller at home, you would want something else. As a Disney-specific option that always meets the size rules and comes with the Mickey ears overhead, it has a real place.

Third-Party Stroller Rentals: The Smart Multi-Day Option

For families staying multiple days, third-party rental companies are typically the best option. Prices range from approximately $11 to $35 per day depending on the model, which beats Disney’s $18 to $36 per day, and the strollers themselves are higher quality, often full-recline travel-system models that are more comfortable than the on-site rental and your child can actually nap in.

The bigger advantage: third-party rentals are delivered to your hotel for free, and you keep them in your room overnight. That means you have the stroller for the walk back from Downtown Disney at 10 PM, for breakfast at the hotel restaurant, for any side trips to the beach or other Anaheim attractions, and for the full duration of your stay rather than just inside the park gates.

Three established companies serve the Disneyland Resort area. Kingdom Strollers is the most well-known nationally and delivers Disney-approved strollers directly to your resort hotel. Traveling Baby Company offers similar service with a strong reputation. Buena Vista Rentals is an Anaheim-area option with competitive pricing. All three confirm their inventory meets Disney’s size requirements before delivery, which removes the security checkpoint risk entirely.

For any trip of two or more days, third-party rental is almost always the better value compared to renting from Disney directly.

Should You Bring Your Own Stroller?

For most families, bringing your own stroller from home is still the best option, provided it meets the size requirements. You save the rental fees entirely on a multi-day trip, your child is already comfortable in a familiar stroller, and you can use it for the entire vacation including hotel transit, restaurant visits, and Downtown Disney evenings.

The reasons to skip bringing your own and rent instead are specific. You are flying and the cost of checking the stroller plus the hassle of getting it through the airport outweighs the rental cost. You are visiting for a single day where rental is genuinely simpler. Your stroller does not meet Disney’s size requirements and would be turned away.

If you drive to Disneyland and your stroller is compliant, bringing your own is almost always the right call.

Best Strollers to Bring to Disneyland in 2026

These models are confirmed to meet Disney’s 31 by 52 inch size requirement and are popular with park-going families. Always verify your specific year and model before you leave, since manufacturers occasionally update dimensions across versions.

Save Time. Skip the Lines.

Park rules change fast. Join 2,000+ planners who get our "Real-Time" logistics updates. Don't go to the parks without the latest 2026 intel.

Invalid email address
You can unsubscribe at any time.

Best Overall: UPPAbaby Cruz V2. Lightweight, folds easily, sits well within size limits, comfortable for full park days, and durable enough to handle the long hours.

Best Lightweight: Baby Trend Rocket Lightweight Stroller. Compact, affordable, easy to fold for parking lot trams and Disney buses. A great pick for travelers who want a no-fuss park stroller.

Best Double: Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Double. One of the few side-by-side double strollers that fits within the 31-inch width limit. Smooth handling on uneven surfaces, well-built, and a strong reputation among Disney families.

Best Budget: Graco Breaze Click Connect. Affordable, folds with one hand, park-friendly, and meets the size requirements with no surprises.

Best for Infants: UPPAbaby Vista with the Mesa Car Seat. Full travel system that reclines properly for infant naps, accommodates older toddlers as they grow, and meets Disney’s size requirements with the bassinet or main seat configuration.

Best Strollers for Disneyland: Comparison Table

Every stroller below has been verified to meet Disney’s 31 by 52 inch size requirement. Always double-check the exact dimensions of your specific year and model before you travel, since manufacturers occasionally update sizing across versions.

StrollerTypeDimensions (W x L)WeightFoldReclineWeight LimitBest For
UPPAbaby Cruz V2Single22.8″ x 36″21.5 lbsStandingFull50 lbsBest overall
UPPAbaby Vista V3Single (convertible)25.7″ x 36″27.3 lbsStandingFull50 lbs (35 lbs per seat in double config)Infants and growing families
Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 DoubleSide-by-side double30″ x 38″33 lbsQuick one-handFull100 lbs total (50 per seat)Best double
Baby Trend Rocket LightweightSingle lightweight18″ x 33″11.7 lbsOne-hand compactPartial50 lbsTravelers, fliers
Graco Gomax Travel StrollerSingle lightweight20″ x 33″15 lbsOne-handMulti-position50 lbsBest budget
Joolz Aer+Travel stroller17.7″ x 32″13.2 lbsCarry-on compactFull50 lbsCompact luxury
Bugaboo ButterflyTravel stroller17.7″ x 30″16.3 lbsOne-second one-handFull50 lbsPremium compact
Stokke YOYO3Single (convertible to double)21″ x 33″13 lbsOne-handMulti-position45 lbsFlexible families
Britax GroveSingle22.5″ x 36″20.5 lbsOne-handFull55 lbsStorage and souvenirs
Graco Modes Nest2GrowConvertible (single or double)23.5″ x 41″28 lbsStandingMulti-position50 lbs per seatGrowing families

Dimensions are based on current manufacturer specs. Verify your specific model year before traveling.

Stroller Recommendations by Family Type

If you are flying: The Baby Trend Rocket, Joolz Aer+, or Bugaboo Butterfly are the strongest picks. All three fold compact enough to fit in airline overhead bins or under the seat, and they meet Disney’s size requirements on the park side.

If you are driving and have one young child: The UPPAbaby Cruz V2 is the most consistent recommendation across Disneyland parent communities. Smooth ride, durable, full recline for naps, generous storage basket, and well within the size limits.

If you have an infant under 6 months: The UPPAbaby Vista V2 with the Mesa car seat or the bassinet attachment is the right answer. The Vista properly accommodates an infant who cannot sit up on their own, which Disney rental strollers and most lightweight options cannot.

If you have two kids under 5: The Baby Jogger City Mini GT2 Double is one of the only side-by-side doubles that comfortably fits within the 31-inch width limit. If you need a tandem instead, the UPPAbaby Vista V2 in double configuration also works.

If you are on a budget: The Graco Breaze Click Connect or the Baby Trend Rocket are both well under $200 new and meet every Disney requirement. The Breaze is the better all-day comfort option and the Rocket is the better travel and fold option.

If you are a local with multiple visits per year: The Disneyland-branded stroller sold inside the park is worth considering as a dedicated park stroller, since it is guaranteed to clear security every visit and stays at the resort or in your car between trips.

Stroller Rules at Disneyland

The full set of stroller rules to know before you go.

Stroller dimensions must not exceed 31 inches by 52 inches. You must fold your stroller when boarding the parking lot tram or Disney buses. Children must be removed from the stroller before boarding any tram or bus. Strollers must be parked in designated stroller parking areas outside ride entrances, not left in walkways.

Strollers cannot be brought onto escalators. Use elevators or ramps instead. Disney rental strollers cannot leave the resort and cannot board the Disneyland Railroad. Stroller wagons of any kind are prohibited regardless of brand or marketing.

Stroller Parking at Disneyland

Every major attraction at both parks has a designated stroller parking area near the entrance. Cast Members will direct you to the right spot, and they regularly tidy the parked strollers to keep walkways clear.

A few practical things to know. Cast Members may move your stroller while you are on a ride if it is blocking foot traffic or in a problem spot, so do not panic if it is not exactly where you left it when you return. Look for the cluster of strollers nearby and yours will be in it.

Mark your stroller so you can identify it quickly. Tie a colorful ribbon to the handle, attach a luggage tag, or clip something distinctive to the canopy. Hundreds of nearly identical strollers park in the same areas every day, and after eight hours in the park, sleepy parents have a habit of grabbing the wrong one.

Never leave valuables in your stroller. Take your phone, wallet, park tickets, and any expensive items with you on every ride. Stroller parking areas are not actively monitored and items left behind do go missing. Bag essentials into a daypack you wear on the ride and leave only sweatshirts, snacks, and water in the stroller.

Smart Stroller Tips for Disneyland 2026

A few small things that experienced park parents wish they had known on day one.

Use your stroller as a storage cart. A stroller is much more useful as a portable storage system than most parents realize. Sweatshirts that get peeled off in the afternoon, refilled water bottles, snacks for the kids, diapers, sunscreen, and souvenirs can all live in the basket and side pockets. A heavy backpack at hour 10 of a park day is a backache. Letting the stroller carry the weight is a meaningful quality-of-life upgrade.

Bring a clip-on stroller fan in summer. Anaheim afternoon temperatures regularly hit 90 degrees Fahrenheit and the radiant heat off the pavement makes it feel hotter. A small clip-on fan on the canopy keeps your child cool and significantly reduces the chance of an afternoon meltdown that ends your day early. Battery-powered options are widely available for $20 to $30 on Amazon.

Consider a stroller for older kids. Even kids who would normally never use a stroller benefit from one at Disneyland. A 12-hour park day is 25,000 to 35,000 steps for an adult, and children burn out faster. A stroller that lets a 6-year-old rest and ride for 30 minutes between attractions can be the difference between a great evening and an exhausted family heading back to the hotel at 6 PM.

The free air pump. This is a genuinely useful insider detail. To the right of the stroller rental shop at Disneyland Park, against the bushes behind an iron railing, there is a green metal box about two to three feet high. It contains a free air pump for stroller tires. If your tires are low or you discover a soft tire mid-trip, you can inflate them right there at no cost. Almost no one knows this exists.

Practice your fold before the trip. If your stroller has a complicated fold mechanism, practice at home before you go. The first time you have to fold a stroller is at the parking lot tram with a tired toddler, a heavy bag, and 50 people behind you waiting to board. Knowing the fold cold makes that moment effortless instead of stressful.

Quick Reference: Your Stroller Options Compared

 Disney RentalDisneyland Sold StrollerThird-Party RentalBring Your Own
Cost$18-36/dayOne-time purchase$11-35/dayFree
Size compliantYesYesYesMust verify
ReclinesNoNoUsuallyUsually
Hotel useNoYesYesYes
Delivery to hotelNoNoYesN/A
Best forSingle-day visitsLocals, multi-visit families, replacement at the gateMulti-day staysFamilies who drive

Plan the Rest of Your Trip

For the full strategy on navigating Disneyland with young children, including rope drop tactics, ride-by-ride parent recommendations, and the best dining for families with strollers, the Enchanted Insider Disneyland Itinerary Guide covers everything you need. For the best rates on hotel and ticket packages near Disneyland, Get Away Today is the travel partner we use and recommend for Disneyland Resort vacations.

FAQ

What are the Disneyland stroller size requirements in 2026?

Strollers at Disneyland must not exceed 31 inches in width or 52 inches in length. Disney measures the widest and longest points of the entire setup, including any attached cup holders, snack trays, or accessories. Cast Members at security checkpoints are actively measuring strollers in 2026 and turning away strollers that exceed these dimensions, even by an inch.

Can you bring a stroller wagon to Disneyland?

No. Stroller wagons are completely banned at Disneyland regardless of brand or how they are marketed. This includes Wonderfold, Veer, Keenz, and any similar wagon-style product, even ones with push handles. Disney’s general rule is that anything pulled behind you rather than pushed in front of you is prohibited, which covers wagons, push-pull hybrids, and wheeled coolers.

How much does it cost to rent a stroller at Disneyland?

Disneyland rents single strollers for $18 per day and double strollers for $36 per day. The rental is valid in both Disneyland Park and Disney California Adventure on the same day. Disney rental strollers cannot leave the resort property or board the Disneyland Railroad, and they do not recline, which makes them less suitable for infants and naps.

Does Disneyland sell strollers?

Yes. Disneyland now sells its own branded stroller on-site. The Disneyland-branded stroller features a sun canopy with 3D Mickey ears, a lightweight compact fold, a storage basket, a 3-point harness, a footrest, and parking brakes on the rear wheels. It holds children up to 40 pounds and meets Disney park size requirements. It is a useful option for guests whose own stroller does not meet the size limits, multi-visit local families, or anyone who wants to keep the stroller after their trip rather than rent.

Should I bring my own stroller to Disneyland or rent one?

For most multi-day trips, bringing your own stroller is the best option if it meets the 31 by 52 inch size requirement. You save the rental fees, your child is comfortable in a familiar stroller, and you can use it throughout your entire vacation including hotel transit and Downtown Disney evenings. Rental makes more sense for single-day visits, families flying in who do not want to check a stroller, or anyone whose home stroller exceeds Disney’s size limits. Third-party rental companies like Kingdom Strollers typically offer better value than Disney’s on-site rental for multi-day stays.

By Mark T.

Mark is a veteran editor who focuses on Disney news. With over ten years of experience, he covers everything from theme parks to movies, attracting a dedicated audience of Disney fans globally.