Crayons turn into art before your eyes. The Crayola Experience Orlando ticket gets you into a full-on, color-powered indoor day at the Florida Mall, with 26 activities you can pick and choose as you go. I love that you get in-and-out privileges all day, so you can play now and regroup later without feeling trapped in one long block.
I also really like the hands-on stuff: making your own crayon, creating drip-art, and watching staff explain the crayon-creation process during a live demo. My one watch-out is that it can get loud and busy, and a few add-on activities or steps may cost extra once you’re inside.
In This Review
- Quick take: what matters most
- Florida Mall location: easy access, lots to do nearby
- Ticket price and time value for a $32.21 day
- What you’re really buying: 26 attractions you can choose
- Live crayon-creation demo: the staff explanation that makes it click
- Making your own crayon: the custom name-and-label moment
- Melt-crayon shapes and drip-art: hands-on art you can take home
- Fashion runway moments: creativity with a show element
- Color Playground: climb, play, and burn energy indoors
- Café Crayola and breaks: plan food on your own
- Shopping and souvenirs: turn your art day into take-home memories
- Lines, noise, and the reality of a popular family spot
- Accessibility and family fit: who will enjoy this most?
- A simple way to plan your day at Crayola Experience Orlando
- Should you book the Crayola Experience Orlando ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is Crayola Experience in Orlando?
- How much is the Crayola Experience Orlando ticket?
- What are the opening hours?
- How long should I plan to spend inside?
- Is food included with the ticket?
- Can I leave and come back the same day?
- Are there ticket rules for children?
- Can I upgrade to an annual pass?
- Are the attractions ADA-compliant?
Quick take: what matters most
- All-day re-entry: your ticket is good until closing time, and you can get a wrist band or hand stamp to return.
- Pick 26 attractions at your pace: you’re not stuck doing everything in one rush.
- Custom keepsakes are the point: expect to name and wrap your own crayon and make take-home art.
- Lots for young kids: the Color Playground and playful stations are built for smaller kids to climb and explore.
- Plan for noise and lines: during peak times, expect waiting at popular stations and general chaos.
- Food is on you: Cafe Crayola is available, but refreshments are not included.
Florida Mall location: easy access, lots to do nearby

The Crayola Experience is inside the Florida Mall in Orlando, which is a big deal for planning. You’re not squeezed into a one-attraction area; you’ve got more than 250 stores and eateries around you before and after your visit. That means you can show up, spend your time coloring and creating, then grab a meal or do some shopping without hunting for something else.
One practical tip: treat this like a half-day “activity anchor” inside a mall. You can use the mall space to break up the day if the kids get tired of being in the same room. If you’re traveling with multiple ages, the location makes it easier to split your time between kid-focused fun and calmer stops.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
Ticket price and time value for a $32.21 day

At about $32.21 per person (taxes included), you’re paying for admission to a single indoor experience with lots of play stations. In kid-focused Orlando terms, that price can feel fair if you actually use the day like it’s meant to be used: pick several activities, take your time, and plan for more than just one quick project.
Duration is listed as 1 to 8 hours (approx.), but the “sweet spot” is usually closer to a few hours. If you rush, you’ll feel like you didn’t get your money’s worth. If you pace it—project, play, break, repeat—you’ll likely get a more satisfying day.
Also note the ticket is paper. That’s simple, but it does mean you should keep it somewhere easy to find so you’re not digging through a bag at the entrance while kids are bouncing.
What you’re really buying: 26 attractions you can choose
Once you’re inside, you get access to 26 activities and attractions at your leisure. That’s the heart of the value: you can match the experience to your kids’ interests and energy level instead of racing through a fixed program.
Here’s the mindset that works best. Don’t try to “complete” everything. Pick a few hands-on projects you care about, then let the kids roam through the play stations and climb zones. That way, if one area has a line or runs out of supplies, you still have options without losing the whole day.
And because the ticket is valid until closing time (with re-entry via wrist band/hand stamp), you can keep revisiting stations that you didn’t get to the first round.
Live crayon-creation demo: the staff explanation that makes it click

A standout part is the live demonstration by a resident “crayonologist.” This is where the crayons stop being just objects and start being a process. You’ll learn how crayons are created and what happens behind the scenes when colors get turned into shapes and forms.
Even if your kids glaze over during talks, this demo is useful for two reasons. First, it builds excitement right before hands-on activities. Second, it gives you language to connect the craft to the real-world process: color choice, shaping, and finishing.
If you’re aiming for maximum kid buy-in, time your schedule so you catch this demo earlier in your visit. When kids understand what they’re about to make, the rest of the stations feel more meaningful.
Making your own crayon: the custom name-and-label moment

One of the most memorable activities is making your own crayon. You pick a color, name it, and wrap it—so the final product looks personal, not mass-produced. For kids, that small step of creating a label is huge. They’re not just coloring; they’re branding a color they invented.
Based on the format of the experience, you can also expect some stations to involve waiting, especially when families are lining up for popular projects. If your group has kids who lose patience fast, build in a “waiting buffer” rather than expecting everything to be instant.
One more detail to keep in mind: the process can be more about customizing than about watching every manufacturing step. If your expectations are that you’ll see every part of the process up close, you might want to treat the demo as your main “how it’s made” moment during the day.
Melt-crayon shapes and drip-art: hands-on art you can take home

This is the “I can’t believe we made that” category. You’ll have chances to turn crayons into fun shapes—like sharks and seahorses—and create art by melting crayon wax onto a canvas for drip-art style pieces. These are the activities where kids feel like they’re doing something special, not just playing with a toy.
Why it’s valuable: melted-crayon art is visual and fast to “understand.” Even younger kids can grasp what’s happening because they see color transform right in front of them. That matters in a place with a lot of moving parts and distractions.
Practical note: these craft stations are also the places where time can feel stretched. Set aside enough time to complete the project comfortably, and don’t schedule a tight meal plan right after. If your goal is take-home art, give it time to finish the way it’s meant to.
Fashion runway moments: creativity with a show element

Channel your inner fashion designer is part of the experience concept, including a runway-style creation moment. This adds performance energy to the day. For some kids, it’s the best kind of fun: creative work paired with a moment to “show it off.”
If your kids like being the center of attention, this is a good activity to prioritize. If your kids prefer quieter play, you can still enjoy the runway elements as spectators while focusing your hands-on time elsewhere.
Color Playground: climb, play, and burn energy indoors

The 2-story Color Playground is built for kids to climb and move around. This is where the energy meter often spikes, because children can run, climb, and explore in a bigger physical space than the tables-and-crafts areas.
If you’re visiting with toddlers or young kids, this is usually a key reason to buy the ticket. In many families, the playground becomes the “safety blanket” activity when other stations are too busy or when kids need a reset.
One thing to plan for: this is also where the environment can feel chaotic. Multiple families, lots of movement, and lots of noise. If you’re responsible for a smaller child, keep your eyes on them and be ready for jostling in crowded moments.
Café Crayola and breaks: plan food on your own

Refreshments at Cafe Crayola are available, but food and drinks are not included in the ticket price. That’s normal for Orlando ticketed attractions, but it’s worth planning so your day doesn’t get derailed by unexpected meal decisions.
I recommend treating food like a scheduled break rather than a last-minute scramble. The experience runs for hours, and kids often get cranky when they’re hungry but still stuck in a fun moment. If you can step out to eat and return, the all-day re-entry is your friend.
Shopping and souvenirs: turn your art day into take-home memories
Don’t skip browsing the Crayola store. It’s part of the “bring it home” logic of the day: you’ll create your own crayon and art, then likely want a few extra items to continue the fun later.
The store can be a budget surprise, though. The price of souvenirs adds up once you’re standing in a color-filled shop with a kid who’s emotionally attached to everything. If you want control, set a small souvenir plan before you enter the store so it doesn’t become decision-time chaos.
Lines, noise, and the reality of a popular family spot
This is a family attraction, and it can get loud. Some people love the energy; others just want a smoother flow. Either way, you should expect crowds at peak times.
Here’s what I’d do to manage it:
- Start with one or two “must-do” craft stations early, before the rush builds.
- Use the playground and quieter play areas as a buffer if lines get long.
- If you notice a station is crowded, don’t force it. Skip ahead to another attraction and come back later using your all-day access.
Also, some people report that certain activities can cost extra even after paying admission. The most honest way to handle this is to be ready with a little flexibility in your budget and ask staff what’s included at each station before you commit.
Accessibility and family fit: who will enjoy this most?
All of the attractions are ADA-compliant, and that’s a big plus if you need an attraction that’s built for accessibility. Service animals are allowed as well.
Age-wise, the family design is clear. Children 15 and under must be escorted by an adult at all times. Tickets are required for ages 3 and older, while ages 2 and younger are free. Since child ticket price matches adult ticket price, the “best value” usually comes when you’re traveling with multiple kids and you can keep everyone engaged for long enough.
This tends to fit best for:
- Families with young kids who love hands-on crafts, climbing, and bright environments
- Parents who don’t mind noise and can help manage lines
- Anyone who values take-home projects (crayon, drip-art, customized items)
If your group includes older kids who want something more hands-on in a different way, you might find the experience more like an extended playdate than a full-day thrill ride. The good news is you can adjust your pacing and choose what keeps everyone interested.
A simple way to plan your day at Crayola Experience Orlando
You’ll get the best experience if you treat it like a rotating schedule, not a checklist. Here’s an easy plan that works with how these attractions feel in real life:
- Arrive, get oriented, then hit your top craft first.
- Use the playground as your “energy reset.”
- Do drip-art and the other melt/wax style project when the crowd pressure feels manageable.
- Save runway-style fun and extra stations for later in the day so you’re not rushing.
Remember: you can exit and re-enter until closing time with a wrist band or hand stamp. That gives you breathing room if you need a bathroom break, a snack, or a moment to cool down.
Should you book the Crayola Experience Orlando ticket?
Book it if you want a kid-first, creative indoor day where your child can make take-home art and feel proud of something they created. At around $32.21 with taxes included, the value improves a lot when you plan for more than a quick stop—aim for a few hours, not a drive-by.
Skip or think twice if your kids get overwhelmed by noise, crowded lines, or multiple stations running at peak pace. Also consider whether you’re comfortable with the possibility of add-on costs at certain activities. If your group has limited time and you only want one quick craft, you may feel like you paid for a space where the real fun comes from doing several things.
If you’re going with the right expectations—hands-on fun, take-home crafts, and a lively indoor play environment—this is a solid family outing.
FAQ
Where is Crayola Experience in Orlando?
Crayola Experience is located at the Florida Mall in Orlando, USA.
How much is the Crayola Experience Orlando ticket?
The price is listed as $32.21 per person, and taxes are included.
What are the opening hours?
For 2025 and 2026, the opening hours listed are Monday to Friday: 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM.
How long should I plan to spend inside?
The duration is listed as 1 to 8 hours (approx.). In practice, many people plan for a few hours so they can do multiple activities.
Is food included with the ticket?
No. Food and drinks are not included, and you can purchase refreshments at Cafe Crayola if you want.
Can I leave and come back the same day?
Yes. Your ticket is good until closing time on the day of your visit, and you can get a wrist band/hand stamp to exit and re-enter.
Are there ticket rules for children?
Yes. Children 15 and under must be escorted by an adult at all times. Ages 3 and older require a general admission ticket, while ages 2 and younger are free. Child ticket price is the same as adult ticket.
Can I upgrade to an annual pass?
Yes. General admission tickets may be upgraded to an Annual Pass on the day of visit, with $23.59 of this ticket credited toward the upgrade.
Are the attractions ADA-compliant?
Yes. The information provided states that all of the attractions are ADA-compliant.



























