We’re just a few days away from Apple’s jam-packed WWDC 2026 keynote, and while Siri AI has taken center stage, each of the platforms — iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, tvOS, and visionOS — has a treasure trove of updates that we’re all starting to learn about.
And beyond the headline AI push, Apple is quietly continuing to turn Wallet into something much bigger than a place to store tickets and cards. It’s increasingly becoming a dynamic, real-time layer for travel, events, and now theme park experiences—and that shift is becoming much more visible.
Just as Disney World adopted Live Activities on iPhone in 2025, later this fall it will adopt one of the most meaningful new Wallet features Apple is shipping with iOS 27. It’s support for Apple Wallet’s improved key feature, which turns passes into dynamic, updatable credentials instead of static tickets.
Wallet gets a ton of updates with iOS 27, many of which you can try out right now in developer beta, but it will ship in full this fall (think September). You’ll be able to use Visual Intelligence to easily split a bill just by showing a receipt to the camera — or pull one up in Photos — and then automatically send requests through Apple Cash, create your own cards, and use a much easier-to-use Apple Pay sheet when you check out.
Apple Wallet’s enhanced key feature, however, is what Disney is adopting as an update to the current MagicMobile experience.
In its current form, MagicMobile has been a way to add your park ticket — either a single-day, multi-day or annual pass — to Apple Wallet. It made it pretty seamless to get into any of the Disney World parks — Magic Kingdom, Animal Kingdom, EPCOT, or Hollywood Studios — by simply tapping your iPhone or Apple Watch at the gate.
Now, however, Wallet is set to go a step further than just being a digital ticket holder for Disney World. You’ll be able to see more of your itinerary right in the Wallet app when you tap your Disney MagicMobile Pass. That includes park reservations for the day (and future visits), Lightning Lane redemptions you’ve reserved, special ticket events (like after-hours), dining reservations, and even upcoming tours — all showing up right in Wallet.
Because this is built on Apple’s improved key system, the pass itself becomes dynamic. Instead of just being a ticket, it can update itself in real time as your plans change.
Even better, thanks to continuity features across iOS and watchOS, Wallet will automatically suggest your pass when you approach a Disney World park, making it even easier to badge right in without digging through apps or screens.
You’ll still initially add the pass to your Apple Wallet through the MyDisneyExperience app, which is also where you make park reservations, Lightning Lane selections, dining reservations, and purchase tickets to special events.
But once it’s set up, if someone in your group manages reservations in the MyDisneyExperience app and you’re linked to their plans, those updates will automatically sync with your MagicMobile Pass on your iPhone. It’s a strong example of how Apple and Disney are using enhanced keys to make the access cards responsive.
Since its launch, MagicMobile has been a handy tool for Disney guests. If you haven’t invested in a MagicBand or MagicBand+—Disney’s wearables for park entry, ride access, PhotoPass taps, and enabling some epic immersive experiences—your iPhone or Apple Watch can do the same job. And if you’re staying at an on-property Disney hotel and have a debit card linked, you can also pay for merchandise and food at all parks and resorts by tapping MagicMobile.
The ability to display a more detailed itinerary inside Wallet takes this experience one step further. That makes the app a real-time travel companion, and it’s a strong early example of how Apple’s enhanced keys can expand beyond hotels and into full-scale hospitality and resort ecosystems.
Disney World won’t be the only place to adopt this either. Resorts World Las Vegas is also expected to support it at launch when iOS 27 formally ships later in 2026, hinting at a broader push to make Wallet a core part of travel and gaming going forward.
Disney World is also in the process of updating its MyDisney Experience app for iOS in a quest to make it simpler – search will get an improved experience with parts of it powered by AI and a more intuitive layout that should make it much easier to book different reservations and add-ons to trips you have.
We expect to see them launch over the coming weeks and months, so they’ll likely arrive alongside this improved MagicMobile experience – it’s all about simplicity, and it’s something to get behind. If you’re interested in other features coming with iOS 27, check out our roundup of 21 additions here.
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