Custom Disney Park Planning for Neurodivergent Families

Give Your Child a Disney Vacation Designed Just for Them

Planning Disney with a neurodivergent child can feel overwhelming.

You may be wondering:

• Will my child handle the crowds and stimulation?
• How will we manage wait times?
• Will we actually get to experience the rides we’re excited about?

Most parents aren’t just planning a vacation.

They’re hoping their child will get to experience the magic of Disney — meeting their favorite characters, laughing on rides, eat a Mickey ice cream bar — without the day becoming overwhelming.

That’s where thoughtful park strategy can make all the difference.

I offer custom Disney park planning designed specifically for neurodivergent families.

Instead of rigid touring plans, we build realistic park strategies designed around pacing, regulation, and your child’s unique needs.


Where Are You in Your Disney Planning Journey?

Many families find Neurodivergent Ohana at different stages of planning.

Some are just starting to plan their Disney vacation, while others find my guides after their trip is already booked and they’re trying to figure out how to make the parks work for their child.

I offer help both ways.


Haven’t Booked Your Disney Trip Yet?

If you’re still in the planning stage, I can help you plan and book your Disney vacation package, including resort reservations and park tickets, at no additional cost.

My planning services are designed specifically for families traveling with neurodivergent kids.

When you book your Disney vacation package through me, I help you:

•choose the Disney resort that will be the best for your family and your child’s needs
• prepare for DAS and understand how it may work for your child
• create park strategies that balance your child’s needs with the attractions your family is excited about

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Already Booked Your Trip?

If your Disney trip is already booked but you’re feeling unsure how the parks will actually work for your child, this session is designed to help you put the pieces together.

Many families reach this stage of planning with the same questions:

How do we actually use DAS in the parks?
Will my child be able to handle the waiting between return times?
Do we need Lightning Lanes too?
How do we experience the rides we care about without overwhelming our child?

Even after reading guides and watching videos, it can still feel unclear how to structure your park days in a way that works for your child and your family.

That’s where my Disney Park Strategy Session comes in.

What We Cover During Your Session

During our 60–75 minute planning session, we’ll walk through your trip and build a realstic strategy for your park days.

We may cover things like:

• attraction priorities for each park
• how to structure your park days so they feel manageable
• how DAS fits into your day
• pacing strategies to help prevent overwhelm
• what to do between return times
• whether Lightning Lanes will actually help your family
• ways to minimize unnecessary walking and transitions

The goal isn’t to create a rigid itinerary.

It’s to build a park strategy that balances your child’s needs with the experiences your family is most excited about.

What You Receive After the Session

After our call, you’ll receive a written summary of your park strategy so you can head into the parks feeling confident about your plan.

This typically includes:

• attraction priorities
• suggested park day flow
• DAS strategy ideas
• pacing and break recommendations

Many parents tell me they feel much more confident about their trip after talking through their park strategy with someone who understands Disney from the perspective of traveling with neurodivergent kids.

Investment

This session is designed to help you walk into the parks feeling confident about your plan — instead of wondering how the day will unfold.

Founding family pricing of $127 is available through July 1st. After July 1st, this session will be offered at $197.

If this feels like the kind of support you’ve been looking for, you can tell me a little about your trip below and I’ll follow up with next steps.

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The Moments Parents Dream About

When parents imagine taking their child to Disney, they’re usually picturing something very specific.

The look of awe when they come face to face with their favorite Disney character.

Laughing as they soar on Dumbo.

Dancing when the parade music starts and bubbles float through the air on Main Street.

Clutching an autograph book with pride.

Feeling that light, magical wonder that makes Disney feel like a completely different world.

For many neurodivergent families, those moments can feel uncertain.

Not because their child can’t experience that magic — but because Disney is a big, stimulating place, and it’s hard to know how the day will unfold.

When the day is structured around your child’s needs, those moments become much easier to experience.

And instead of worrying about what might unravel, you get to focus on watching your child enjoy the magic.


Why Families Work with Me

Planning Disney with a neurodivergent child can feel like you’re figuring everything out on your own.

Much of the Disney advice online is written with typical park experiences in mind.

Families often read strategies about rope drop, long attraction lists, and packed park days and wonder how any of that could realistically work for their child.

It can start to feel like everyone else has a roadmap for Disney — but you’re still trying to figure out what will actually work for your family.

My goal is to help you create Disney plans that feel manageable, flexible, and enjoyable, while offering guidance from someone who understands both Disney and the challenges neurodivergent families often face.

Instead of rigid itineraries, I focus on helping you build structured but flexible park days so you can prioritize the experiences that matter most while still allowing space for breaks, adjustments, and the moments your child needs most.


About Me

I’m a mom of four, and like a lot of the families I work with, Disney planning for our family has never looked quite like the standard advice suggested it should.

My kids have been diagnosed with a mix of ADHD and autism.

Our trips have included meltdowns, mid-day retreats, days where everything clicked, and days where we left the park earlier than planned.

With a background in social work, I spent years working professionally in the autism field — which means I come to Disney planning with both a parent’s instinct for what actually works and a professional background in understanding how neurodivergent kids (and adults) experience the world.

That combination is what I bring to every family I work with.

I’m not going to hand you a generic touring plan.

I’m going to help you build something that actually accounts for your child — the way they experience crowds, transitions, waiting, and overstimulation — so you can spend less time managing the day and more time enjoying it.


Let’s Plan a Disney Trip That Works for Your Family

If you’re planning a Disney vacation and feeling unsure how the parks will work for your child, you’re not alone.

Many parents I work with have the same questions — about crowds, wait times, sensory overwhelm, and how to structure their days so the experience is actually enjoyable.

If you’d like help creating a Disney plan designed around your child’s needs, I’d be happy to help you think through your trip and what might work best for your family.

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(for families who haven’t booked yet)

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(for families with an upcoming trip who want help structuring their park days)