The Tokyo Disneyland Premier Access Rides I would buy first are Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast, then The Happy Ride with Baymax, then Splash Mountain. If you only buy one, make it Beauty and the Beast because it has the strongest mix of long waits, popularity, and first-time visitor payoff. Baymax is fun but short, while Splash Mountain is more situational.
Tokyo Disneyland is a park where a smart plan can save you a lot of money. I do not think every paid skip-the-line option is automatically worth buying, especially if you arrive early or visit on a lower-crowd weekday. But on a busy day, Premier Access can protect your schedule and keep one long line from eating up a huge chunk of your park day.
For overall planning, I would pair this with my full Tokyo Disneyland guide and my ranking of the best Tokyo Disneyland rides, because Premier Access only makes sense when you know which rides actually matter most to your group.
Tokyo Disneyland Premier Access Rides I Would Buy First
Here is my practical buy order for a one-day visit:
| Priority | Ride | My take |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast | Best first buy for most visitors |
| 2 | The Happy Ride with Baymax | Worth it if the wait is high |
| 3 | Splash Mountain | Worth it selectively |
The key is not to buy Premier Access just because it is available. I would buy it when the ride is important enough that a long standby wait would make the rest of the day feel rushed.
1. Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast
This is the Tokyo Disneyland Premier Access ride I would buy first almost every time.
Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast is the park’s biggest paid-access priority because it feels like a true headliner. The ride is detailed, beautiful, and very different from a quick Fantasyland dark ride. It has that polished Tokyo Disney feeling where the staging, music, and scale all come together.
It is also the ride where a long standby wait hurts the most. Tokyo Disneyland has a lot of charming attractions, and losing a huge block of your day to one queue can make the rest of the park feel tight.
When I would buy it
I would buy Premier Access for Beauty and the Beast if it is your first visit, you only have one day, the standby wait is already climbing, or you are visiting on a weekend or holiday. If you are traveling from overseas and may not be back soon, this is the ride I would be most comfortable paying for.
When I might skip it
I might skip buying it if I had Happy Entry, arrived very early, and planned to go straight there at rope drop. Even then, I would watch the app closely. If the wait jumps fast, I would rather buy it than let one line control the day.
If you want to see how it compares with the rest of the park, my list of all the rides at Tokyo Disneyland is useful before you decide what is worth paying for.
2. The Happy Ride with Baymax
The Happy Ride with Baymax is the one that can surprise people. On paper, it looks like a cute spinning ride. In person, the energy around it is much bigger. The music, Cast Members, dancing guests, and nighttime lights make the whole area feel like a party.
I would not put it above Beauty and the Beast, but I understand why the line gets long. It has a local-favorite feel and a fun atmosphere that is very specific to Tokyo Disneyland.
When I would buy it
I would buy Premier Access for Baymax if the standby wait is high and you really want to experience the ride without using prime park time. It is also a good second purchase if you already secured Beauty and the Beast.
Baymax is a better buy for families with kids or anyone who loves upbeat, repeatable rides. The catch is that the ride itself is short, so the value depends heavily on the wait time.
When I would skip it
I would skip paying if the wait is reasonable or if your group cares more about dark rides, thrill rides, or longer attractions. If your group is mostly looking for faster rides, my guide to Tokyo Disneyland thrill rides will be more helpful than building the day around Baymax.
3. Splash Mountain
Splash Mountain is the Premier Access ride I would treat as situational.
It can be worth buying, especially on warm days when the line gets long. It is a full-length classic with a real payoff, so I do not think paying for it is a bad choice in the right circumstances. But compared with Beauty and the Beast, I am less likely to make it my first purchase.
When I would buy it
I would buy Premier Access for Splash Mountain if it is hot, the standby line is long, and your group specifically wants to ride it. It can also make sense if you already bought Beauty and the Beast and want to avoid crisscrossing the park later.
When I would skip it
I would skip paying if the weather is cool, the wait is manageable, or your group does not like getting wet. I would also check early, late, or during a parade window before paying.
If you are comparing it with the park’s other faster attractions, my breakdown of Tokyo Disneyland roller coasters can help.
My Best One-Day Premier Access Strategy
For one full day at Tokyo Disneyland, I would keep the strategy simple:
- Buy Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast first if the return time works.
- Use free Priority Pass options where available.
- Watch Baymax and Splash Mountain wait times before buying a second ride.
- Save some budget for food, snacks, or entertainment if those matter more to your group.
That last point is important. Tokyo Disneyland is not just a ride checklist park. I like leaving room for snacks, parades, wandering World Bazaar, and the little atmosphere moments that make the park feel different from the U.S. parks.
If you are still building your day, my guide on whether you can do Tokyo Disneyland in one day can help you decide how much paid access you really need.
When Premier Access Is Most Worth It
Premier Access is most worth it when the park is crowded, your visit is short, and missing the ride would bother you.
I would be more likely to buy it on weekends, Japanese holidays, school breaks, peak travel seasons, or a first-time visit with only one park day. I would be less likely to buy multiple paid rides on a quieter weekday with a strong rope-drop plan.
Crowd timing changes the whole decision. If your dates are flexible, check the best time to visit Tokyo Disneyland and when Tokyo Disneyland is least crowded before assuming you need to pay for everything.
Food timing matters too. A long meal can affect your day almost as much as a long ride line, so the list of all the restaurants at Tokyo Disneyland is worth checking before you stack too many timed plans.
The Premier Access Ride I Would Not Miss
If I only bought one Premier Access ride at Tokyo Disneyland, I would buy Enchanted Tale of Beauty and the Beast. It gives the clearest value, especially for a first visit.
After that, Baymax is a fun second choice if the wait is high, and Splash Mountain is a weather-and-wait-time decision. I would not buy all three automatically. Tokyo Disneyland is more enjoyable when Premier Access helps your day instead of becoming another thing to manage.
Before your trip, check current attraction availability, park hours, and operating details on the official Tokyo Disneyland site, since Premier Access offerings and conditions can change.




