The Disneyland Monorail Front Seat Rides - How do I do it?

RMichael21

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Hey guys, I'll be at the Disneyland Resort from July 6th through July 13th and I was wondering how to sit in the front cabin of the monorail, if my family of 4 is allowed in the front and any tips to getting the front seat. Thanks in advance! :)
 

stevehousse

Well-Known Member
How many people r allowed up front in the monorail captain cabin? We r going to DL in May 2015, and always remebered doing this at wdw when I was a kid. It will be 6 of us( 2 adults and 4 kids) will we all be able to fit or will we have to split up?
 

Marc Gil

Well-Known Member
How many people r allowed up front in the monorail captain cabin? We r going to DL in May 2015, and always remebered doing this at wdw when I was a kid. It will be 6 of us( 2 adults and 4 kids) will we all be able to fit or will we have to split up?
I think 4 persons is the max capacity.

I rode in the front cabin with my family last summer we're (family of four), and we fit comfortably. There was definitely some room to fit more, though.
 

RMichael21

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
How many people r allowed up front in the monorail captain cabin? We r going to DL in May 2015, and always remebered doing this at wdw when I was a kid. It will be 6 of us( 2 adults and 4 kids) will we all be able to fit or will we have to split up?
4 is the max capacity. You could always have the kids (depending on the ages) sit in the front and the adults could sit in the back. I saw a family of 7 at DL last week and they weren't allowed in the front so they had to split up.
 

JediMasterMatt

Well-Known Member
-

I really do love the glorious simplicity of visiting Disneyland.

:)

What? You mean you don't enjoy waking up at midnight 6 months in advance to try to get dinning reservations and then repeat the process months later hoping to reserve a time on your favorite attraction and pray that it doesn't conflict with what you've already scheduled?

Then you get all the fun and excitement of watching the clock on that magical day to make sure you get from point A>B on time so your months of planning aren't for naught.

That's what WDW has become. A little bit of Alice's White Rabbit in your rush to not be late with the dread and fear of Hook's Croc looming over you, just waiting to catch up and ruin your vacation.

It's no wonder why just showing up in Anaheim and seeing how the day unfolds is such a welcome relief.
 
Last edited:

Figments Friend

Well-Known Member
What? You mean you don't enjoy waking up at midnight 6 months in advance to try to get dinning reservations and then repeat the process months later hoping to reserve a time on your favorite attraction and pray that it doesn't conflict with what you've already scheduled?

Then you get all the fun and excitement of watching the clock on that magical day to make sure you get from point A>B on time so your months of planning aren't for naught.

That's what WDW has become. A little bit of Alice's White Rabbit in your rush to not be late with the dread and fear of Hook's Croc looming over you, just waiting to catch up and ruin your vacation.

It's no wonder why just showing up in Anaheim and seeing how the day unfolds is such a welcome relief.

Peach, brother!

:cool:
 

teacherlady19

Active Member
When we decided to make our first (and only, so far) trip to WDW, two summers ago, we were in shock. Dining reservations??? For something besides the Blue Bayou??? Then to get there and see that there weren't nearly as many walk-up fast-food places at MK as there were at our DL, was another shocker. We managed, though, just as we managed without a "dining plan".


Donna
 

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