Restaurant in Anaheim, United States
Club 33 - Disneyland
250ptsMembers-only access: novel, not essential.

About Club 33 - Disneyland
Club 33 is a private membership club inside Disneyland's New Orleans Square — not a bookable restaurant. Access requires membership or a member invitation, making it effectively off-limits to most visitors. Worth experiencing for the atmospheric space and historic novelty if you have access; otherwise, redirect to Anaheim White House or The Ranch for accessible fine dining nearby.
Club 33 at Disneyland: What You Actually Need to Know Before You Try to Book
The most common misconception about Club 33 is that it operates like a restaurant you can simply walk up to or reserve online. It does not. Club 33 is a private membership club embedded inside Disneyland's New Orleans Square, and access requires either a personal membership or an invitation from a member. If you are reading this hoping to book a table for next weekend, the honest answer is: you almost certainly cannot, unless you already know a member or your company holds a corporate membership.
That framing matters, because Club 33 is often grouped with Anaheim's upscale dining options as though it were simply a premium restaurant. It is not. It is closer in concept to a private dining society that happens to sit inside one of the world's most-visited theme parks. The address at 1313 S Harbor Blvd, Anaheim, places it squarely within the Disneyland Resort property, and access is controlled by Disney's membership team, not by a standard reservation system. For context on what Anaheim's broader dining scene looks like outside the park, the full Anaheim restaurants guide covers the range from casual to formal.
The Space and the Experience
Club 33's physical setting is the strongest argument for going through the effort of securing access. The club occupies a meticulously maintained Victorian-era building within New Orleans Square, a corner of the park that already skews toward atmospheric detail. Inside, the dining rooms are intimate by theme-park standards — dark wood, antique fixtures, and a design sensibility that reads as genuinely considered rather than theme-park-manufactured. The spatial contrast with the park outside is deliberate and noticeable. You move from a crowd of tens of thousands into a quiet, table-service room where the noise level drops considerably. For guests who spend time at properties like Le Bernardin in New York City or The French Laundry in Napa, the food program will not match those benchmarks, but the spatial experience is genuinely distinct and difficult to replicate elsewhere.
On the Food and Whether It Travels
Club 33 is not a takeout or delivery venue — full stop. The editorial angle of off-premise dining is worth addressing here precisely because it does not apply: this is a destination defined entirely by its location and exclusivity. The food has no value outside those walls. If you are thinking about Club 33 as a meal to eat, the experience is inseparable from the setting. Removing it from that context , imagining the dishes as delivery items , strips away the only reason the premium exists. Venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Smyth in Chicago are also destination-driven, but their food programs hold up independently on culinary merit. Club 33's case rests almost entirely on access and atmosphere.
Specific menu items, pricing, and current hours are not confirmed in our verified data. Do not rely on third-party reports for current details , membership pricing and dining menus at Club 33 have changed multiple times over the club's history, which now spans more than five decades since its founding in 1967. Contact Disney's membership office directly for current rates and availability.
Who Should Try to Get In
If you already have member access, Club 33 is worth experiencing at least once for the spatial novelty and the backstory. It is a legitimate piece of Disneyland's history, and the private-club atmosphere inside the park is an experience you cannot approximate elsewhere , not at 21 Royal at Disneyland, not at Anaheim's standalone fine dining options, and not at any park-adjacent hotel restaurant. For food enthusiasts who track experiences at venues like Atomix in New York City or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Club 33 belongs on the list for its cultural weight rather than its kitchen output.
If you do not have member access and are visiting Anaheim specifically to eat well, redirect that energy. The Ranch delivers a polished steakhouse experience with direct reservations. Anaheim White House covers formal dining in the city proper. For a more relaxed evening, Strong Water is worth your time. None of these require knowing the right person.
Know Before You Go
- Access: Private membership or member invitation required , not open to the public
- Location: Inside Disneyland's New Orleans Square, 1313 S Harbor Blvd, Anaheim, CA 92802
- Booking difficulty: Easy if you have access; effectively impossible without it
- Price range: Not confirmed in verified data , contact Disney's membership office directly
- Hours: Not confirmed in verified data
- Dress code: Not confirmed in verified data , smart casual is a reasonable assumption for a private club setting
- Park admission: Required in addition to club access
- Takeout/delivery: Not available , dining is in-venue only
- Recognition: Pearl Recommended (2025)
Broader Anaheim Context
Anaheim has more depth as a dining destination than the Disneyland resort complex suggests. If you are planning time in the area, the Anaheim bars guide and the Anaheim hotels guide are worth checking alongside the restaurant options. The Anaheim experiences guide and wineries guide round out the picture if you are spending more than a day in the area. For comparison, the kind of farm-to-table ambition you find at Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler in Brunico or the neighbourhood restaurant excellence of Emeril's in New Orleans simply does not have a local equivalent inside the park. Club 33 is its own category, and you should evaluate it as such. Also see: Burritos Los De Juárez for a completely different but highly regarded Anaheim eating experience.
FAQs
- Is Club 33 good for solo dining? Access is the barrier, not the format. If you have member access, solo dining is logistically possible , the intimate room size and table-service setup suit individual guests. But most solo diners visiting Anaheim without a connection will have better luck at Strong Water or the bar at The Ranch.
- What should I order at Club 33? Specific menu items are not in our verified data and change periodically. Do not book Club 33 for a signature dish , book it for the experience. If menu-driven dining is your priority, Anaheim White House offers a more curated and publicly accessible food program.
- How far ahead should I book? Booking in the traditional sense does not apply here. If you have member access, reservation lead times are manageable , Pearl rates this as easy once access is established. Without member access, no amount of advance planning will secure a table.
- Is it good for a special occasion? Yes, with the access caveat. The private setting, Disney history, and formal table service make it a strong choice for milestone events , anniversaries, milestone birthdays , if your group has membership. The physical space is well-suited to private celebrations. For a special occasion without the access hurdle, 21 Royal at Disneyland is the closest comparable option and operates on a more accessible booking model.
- What are alternatives in Anaheim? For fine dining: Anaheim White House. For a polished steakhouse: The Ranch. For cocktail-led evening dining: Strong Water. For an informal but celebrated local meal: Burritos Los De Juárez. All of these are openly bookable.
- Can I eat at the bar? Club 33 has historically included bar service as part of its membership offering, but current bar access details are not in our verified data. Contact the membership office directly for current configuration.
- Can Club 33 accommodate groups? Private dining and group reservations are available to members, and the club has historically hosted corporate and private events. Capacity details are not confirmed in our data. If you are planning a group event at Disneyland without member connections, 21 Royal is the more accessible alternative for larger parties inside the resort.
Compare Club 33 - Disneyland
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Club 33 - Disneyland | Easy | — | |
| The Ranch | $$$ | Unknown | — |
| Strong Water | Unknown | — | |
| 21 Royal - Disneyland | Unknown | — | |
| Burritos Los De Juárez | Unknown | — | |
| Anaheim White House | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Club 33 - Disneyland and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Club 33 - Disneyland good for solo dining?
Solo dining here is more about the setting than the meal. If you have member access and want to sit with the history of the space, a solo visit works — the club's Victorian-era room is interesting enough to occupy you. That said, the logistical effort of securing access is harder to justify alone than it is as part of a group occasion.
What should I order at Club 33 - Disneyland?
Specific menu details are not publicly documented, and the offering changes. Because Club 33 is primarily a membership venue rather than a destination dining room, the menu is secondary to the access itself. Treat the food as a complement to the spatial experience, not the reason to go.
How far ahead should I book Club 33 - Disneyland?
You cannot book Club 33 through standard reservation channels — access requires a member invitation or membership, and the waitlist for membership has historically run years long. If you have a connection to a current member, coordinate well in advance of any Anaheim trip, not days out.
Is Club 33 - Disneyland good for a special occasion?
Yes, but only if access is already arranged. The setting — a preserved Victorian club inside Disneyland — provides genuine novelty that makes milestones feel distinct. For a special occasion where access is not guaranteed, Anaheim White House or 21 Royal are more reliably bookable alternatives with comparable occasion-dining intent.
What are alternatives to Club 33 - Disneyland in Anaheim?
For occasion dining in Anaheim without the membership barrier, Anaheim White House and 21 Royal at Disneyland are the closest comparisons in terms of format and intent. Strong Water works well for a serious bar-led evening. For value-driven eating, Burritos Los De Juárez and The Ranch serve very different needs but are both worth knowing.
Can I eat at the bar at Club 33 - Disneyland?
Bar access at Club 33 falls under the same member-or-guest restriction as the dining room — there is no public bar entry. If a bar-forward evening in Anaheim is the goal without membership logistics, Strong Water is a practical and well-regarded alternative at 270 S Anaheim Blvd.
Can Club 33 - Disneyland accommodate groups?
Groups can be accommodated, but each person in the party still requires member-sponsored access. For a private group occasion inside Disneyland with fewer access barriers, 21 Royal is designed specifically for private event dining and is a more practical starting point for groups planning ahead.
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