Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Orlando, United States

    Cinderella's Royal Table

    100pts

    Castle-Height Character Dining

    Cinderella's Royal Table, Restaurant in Orlando

    About Cinderella's Royal Table

    Cinderella's Royal Table is a character dining experience inside Cinderella Castle at Magic Kingdom — not a restaurant competing on food quality. Book it for families and special occasions where the theatrical setting and princess meet-and-greet format are the point. Lunch is the better slot. If you want serious Orlando dining, look elsewhere.

    Verdict: Book It for the Experience, Not the Food

    The most common mistake people make about Cinderella's Royal Table is treating it like a restaurant first. It isn't. It's a ticketed character dining experience set inside Cinderella Castle at Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom — and once you reframe it that way, the value proposition becomes much clearer. If you're visiting Orlando with children who care about Disney characters, this is one of the harder reservations to land and one of the more memorable ways to spend a morning or afternoon inside the park. If you're looking for a meal that competes with Orlando's serious dining scene — places like Sorekara or Capa , book elsewhere.

    What You're Actually Paying For

    The dining room sits on the upper floors of Cinderella Castle, which means the setting itself is the draw: vaulted ceilings, stained-glass windows, and the kind of theatrical interior that lands differently when you're eight years old than when you're thirty-eight. For families celebrating a birthday, an anniversary trip, or a first visit to the park, the visual impact of the room is real and the character meet-and-greet format , princesses rotating through the tables , gives the occasion structure that a standard park day doesn't. That's the case for booking. The food is theme-park dining, priced at a premium because the experience commands it, not because the kitchen is competing with Camille or Kadence.

    Lunch vs. Dinner: Which Is Worth It

    Lunch is the better booking for most families. The light coming through the castle windows during daytime hours makes the room feel more alive than an evening sitting, and the midday slot breaks up a park day without pulling you out of peak evening hours when crowds thin and the park gets easier to move through. Dinner sittings can run later into the night, which works for adults or older children but is a harder sell if you have young kids flagging after a full day in the park. If the character experience is the priority, go for the first available lunch slot , it's the same princesses, the same room, and you keep your evening free for the park itself.

    Timing and Booking

    Reservations open 60 days in advance through Disney's dining system, and this books fast , particularly for weekend dates and school holiday periods. Easy by Orlando's broader dining standards, but don't confuse that with walk-in friendly: without a reservation, you will not get a table. Book as soon as your window opens if dates are fixed. Weekday lunch slots in non-peak periods are your leading shot at short notice. For context on how Disney dining compares to destination-level experiences elsewhere, see our guides to Le Bernardin in New York City, The French Laundry in Napa, or Lazy Bear in San Francisco , very different benchmarks, but useful for calibrating what premium dining looks like outside a theme park context.

    Who Should Book

    Book if: you're visiting Magic Kingdom with children who know the Disney princess characters and a sit-down meal with structured character interactions is the kind of memory you're trying to create. The setting delivers on the promise. Don't book if: you're looking for a serious meal, a romantic dinner without children in the room, or value-for-money dining in Orlando. For those priorities, Natsu or Camille will serve you better. For everything happening in Orlando beyond this reservation, see our full Orlando restaurants guide, our Orlando hotels guide, our Orlando bars guide, our Orlando wineries guide, and our Orlando experiences guide.

    Practical Details

    DetailCinderella's Royal TableVictoria & Albert'sCapa
    SettingInside Magic Kingdom castleGrand Floridian hotelFour Seasons rooftop
    Primary drawCharacter dining experienceFine dining tasting menuSteakhouse with city views
    Booking difficultyEasy (60-day window)Hard (very limited seats)Moderate
    Leading forFamilies, kids' celebrationsAdult special occasionsDate night, business meals
    Park ticket requiredYes (Magic Kingdom)NoNo

    Compare Cinderella's Royal Table

    Value Check: Cinderella's Royal Table and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Cinderella's Royal TableEasy
    Sorekara$$$$Unknown
    Camille$$$$Unknown
    Papa Llama$$$$Unknown
    Victoria & Albert's$$$$Unknown
    Capa$$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Cinderella's Royal Table on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.