Disney Retires FLIK, the Red Plastic Wait-Time Cards That Measured Queues at the Parks for 27 Years

Disney Retires FLIK, the Red Plastic Wait-Time Cards That Measured Queues at the Parks for 27 Years

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Published

A small, weird piece of Disney parks lore is officially gone. The little red plastic card you used to get handed in a queue, the one a cast member would scan in and a different cast member would take from you at the boarding point, had a name: FLIK, short for Fabulous Line Information Keeper. And after 27 years in service, Disney has quietly retired it.

A red plastic FLIK wait-time card on a lanyard from Disney, the Fabulous Line Information Keeper used since 1999 to measure queue times.
A FLIK card, the red plastic lanyard tag Disney used to measure wait times for 27 years. Photo: Jonathan Reuel via Laughing Place.

The headlines:

  • System name: FLIK, the Fabulous Line Information Keeper.
  • Debut: 1999, as an enhancement to Disney's OpSheet operations system.
  • Run length: 27 years (1999 to 2026).
  • Final conversion: Goofy's Sky School at Disney California Adventure, the last attraction using the cards.
  • Announced by: Jonathan Reuel, OpSheet Ecosystems Product Director at Walt Disney World, on LinkedIn, June 21, 2026.
  • What replaced it: A mix of MagicBand RFID and other in-park sensors, per Laughing Place. Disney has not published a single named replacement system.

How FLIK actually worked

If you've ever been handed a red card on a lanyard while walking into a Disney park queue, that was a FLIK. A cast member at the entry would log the card and hand it to a guest at a known point in the line. Sometime later, a different cast member at the boarding area would collect that same card, and the time difference between the two scans became one data point in the posted wait time on the sign out front. Disney would do this for a sample of guests in the queue and average the results.

The cards themselves carried a short instruction in case a guest pocketed one and walked off: "This card is used to help us provide you with the most accurate wait time. Please hand the card to a cast member at the end of the line. Thank you."

Why it stuck around so long

FLIK was simple, cheap, and didn't require any guest hardware. For two and a half decades it coexisted with progressively fancier tracking systems, from MagicBand RFID to the location pings that the My Disney Experience app generates. The phase-out has been gradual for years, with the cards holding on at a shrinking number of attractions before the last one converted away.

What Reuel said

Reuel, who oversees the OpSheet operations ecosystem at Walt Disney World, posted the goodbye on LinkedIn over the weekend: "We've just completed the conversion of the last FLIK location in a Disney Theme Park."

Why this matters

For most guests, this is invisible: the wait-time sign at the entrance of Big Thunder still says a number, and that number still came from somewhere. But for theme-park operations nerds, FLIK is a milestone. It's an early-RFID, pre-MagicBand piece of guest infrastructure that quietly survived from the late-90s through the era of Genie+, Lightning Lane Multi Pass, and Lightning Lane Single Pass. The retirement signals that Disney's mix of MagicBand RFID and in-park sensors is now considered sufficient for wait-time estimation system-wide.

Quick planner notes

  • You will not see a FLIK card on your next Disney park trip, even at the few attractions that held onto them longest. The conversion is system-wide.
  • Wait times posted at attraction entrances still come from a real estimate, not a guess. Per Laughing Place, Disney now uses a mix of MagicBand RFID and other in-park sensors.
  • If you have a red FLIK card from a previous trip, you're holding a small piece of Disney parks history.

Sources

Image credit: Photo by Jonathan Reuel via Laughing Place.

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