Guests have criticized what they claim is a growing trend at one Disney theme park resort.
Plenty of rules underpin the Disney park experience. For example, at Disney World, guests can’t bring certain items into the parks to ensure the safety and comfort of others, ranging from obvious picks (like firearms, knives, or any kind of weapon) to more niche items (including whistles, remote-control toys, glass containers, and flags).
Disney also enforces strict policies about guest behavior. Guests are expected to show respect towards both cast members and their fellow parkgoers. While that’s not always the case – just see the number of fights that have broken out at Magic Kingdom, Disneyland, and beyond for proof – the company has previously proven that it’s willing to trespass those who harass Disney employees or fellow guests from its property.
Guests have also pushed the limits of other Disney rules over the years. Drunken behavior at EPCOT is a particular problem in the eyes of many guests, with some of the most outrageous actions in recent memory, including the guests who attempted to scale the Mexico Pavilion and the guest who decided to take a plunge in World Showcase Lagoon on a bet.
Another commonly contradicted rule is Disney’s dress code. In some cases, guests don’t realize that they’re violating the set of guidelines enforced by The Walt Disney Company to maintain a family-friendly environment.
The exact restrictions can differ at Disney’s properties across the globe. At Walt Disney World Resort, the company maintains that guests must wear “proper attire” – including shoes and shirts – at all times. Anything that drags on the ground is banned, as are masks (unless for medical purposes) and “attire that we consider inappropriate or attire that could detract from the experience of other Guests.”
Those aged over 14 are also unable to wear a full costume inspired by their favorite Disney characters at the parks, with the exception of certain events, such as Mickey’s Not-So-Scary Halloween Party.
It’s this last factor that often trips up Disney guests. In the past, both Disneyland and Disney World have turned away would-be visitors for attire ranging from graphic or politically themed t-shirts to overly revealing dresses that reveal too much skin. Now, some guests argue that one resort isn’t enforcing its dress code strongly enough after a video of one visitor circulated on social media.
Disney Guests Demand Crackdown on Revealing Outfit Choices
After a female guest shared a video at Tokyo DisneySea — at a park often regarded as the best Disney theme park in the world — fans have debated what attire is suitable for the parks.
On the internet, there’s been a lot of debate about underwear Disney,
There’s criticism saying, “Disneyland and DisneySea aren’t just your personal space,”
Considering how the underwear Uni (people going to USJ in underwear) previously caused a huge backlash,
What do you all think: Yay
Nay
ネットでは議論を呼んでる下着ディズニー、
「ディズニーランドやシーはあなただけの場所じゃない」って批判があるけど、
以前も下着でUSJに行く下着ユニバが炎上したことを考えて
皆さん的にはアリ
ナシ
— 激バズ3rd (@gekibnews) August 27, 2025
The guest in question visited the park wearing a yellow Calvin Klein bra or bikini top and shorts. The same guest has previously shared other images of themselves wearing underwear at the park – which opened its newest land, Fantasy Springs, last year – including in a video before Tokyo DisneySea’s iconic Journey to the Center of the Earth volcano centerpiece.
Others have taken to X, formerly known as Twitter, to complain that this isn’t a limited issue and that a growing number of guests are breaking dress code policies by going shirtless at the theme park, with “Disney underwear” trending on the platform in Japanese. As one user wrote, “Underwear or swimsuit? I wonder what Disney people are normally thinking.”
Another wrote, “It’s like, not so much ‘Disney underwear,’ but more like an exhibitionist showed up at Disney. This person was doing it in other places too, right? I think doing that kind of thing in a place where lots of kids come and go is already in the realm of being a perpetrator.”
“Essentially an exhibitionist,” one X user wrote of those who continue to dress in such a way at the parks. “Doing it at Disney is just creepy. It shows a lack of decency and common sense…”
Guests have also commented on the similarity to a trend at Universal Studios Japan, which ultimately led to the Osaka theme park issuing a warning to guests about their attire.
As per the Tokyo Disney Resort website, guests must dress appropriately at its parks. They are prohibited from wearing anything “that may disturb or inconvenience other guests,” as well as “items that cover the face entirely or significantly,” “long items that come in contact with the ground,” “items which can be used as commercial purposes,” and dressing “in a way that can be mistaken as a Disney Character, the performer or a Cast Member.”
The Oriental Land Company – which owns and operates Tokyo DisneySea and Tokyo Disneyland – claimed in a statement to Bengo4.com (via Livedoor). It explained, “We will refuse entry to guests who are likely to cause inconvenience to other guests or who are dressed in clothing that violates public order and morals.” However, it also noted that it would not comment on individual incidents at the parks.
Do you think Disney is too lax with its dress code?
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