Skip to content

DinoLand USA closes at Disney World to make way for Tropical Americas

Indiana Jones and Encanto attractions are planned for the new land

dinoland usa, animal kingdom

Walt Disney World's DinoLand USA at Animal Kingdom has closed after 28 years to make way for the new Tropical Americas experience, due to open in 2027.

DinoLand USA, which has been part of Animal Kingdom since the park opened in 1998, is being replaced with the 11-acre Tropical Americas land.


"With Tropical Americas, we’re bringing huge projects to life for generations of fans," said Josh D’Amaro, chairman of Disney’s theme parks and experiences division, at D23 in 2024.

animal kingdom new land disney

"This is the type of signature storytelling that our Disney Imagineers have been creating for 70 years."

The new land will house an Indiana Jones attraction, which takes place inside a mysterious Maya temple. The ride will be "unlike any Indy experience you’ve ever seen before", Disney said last year.

In addition, Tropical Americas will boast the first ride-through Encanto attraction at a Disney park.

Tropical Americas to open in 2027

As for DinoLand USA, the final attraction to close was the Dinosaur ride. Its last day of operation was yesterday (1 February).

Other attractions such as TriceraTop Spin, the Fossil Fun Games, Chester & Hester’s Dinosaur Treasures, and the Boneyard playground had already closed.

On DinoLand USA's closure, Walt Disney Imagineering veteran Joe Rohde said he will "miss its sly and droll sense of humor, and the way in which it attempted to take a complicated subject like paleontology and turn it into a series of entertainment experiences".

Rohde acknowledged the land's "conceptual weaknesses born of the struggle to just get a park open with what was at the time, a relatively low cost per square foot".

He added, "But I want to make that clear I have, from afar, been watching the development of the new land, Pueblo Esperanza, and I can assure you that that team is doing an excellent job with the challenge at hand."

Over at Disneyland in California, the resort has filed permits with the city of Anaheim for a new parking structure as part of its $1.9 billion DisneylandForward project.

Images courtesy of Disney