A discount card can change your Orlando math fast. This Eat and Play digital pass aims to cut costs across restaurants and attractions around International Drive and nearby areas, with savings that can add up quickly. You’ll see options from dinner shows to theme-adjacent stops, plus handy tools like maps and a near-me search to help you use it without fuss.
Two things I like right away: it’s digital (iOS/Android) with a unique PIN to activate, and it covers a wide range of places—from casual chains like Denny’s and TGI Friday’s to Orlando staples such as WonderWorks and Crayola Experience. One watch-out: the card only helps if you can actually use it at the venues you choose, so you’ll want to confirm participation and be mindful of opening hours before you build your day around a specific stop.
In This Review
- What This Orlando Eat and Play Card Really Is
- Validity: 6 Months on the Calendar, 30 Days of Use
- Price and Value: When $25 Makes Sense
- A quick reality check
- Your “Save It All Week” Game Plan (So You Don’t Waste the Card)
- What I’d plan for
- Key Details That Make This Card Easy (or Annoying)
- Highlights at a Glance: What You Get Most From
- Stop-by-Stop: How the Card Plays at Each Major Venue
- The Outta Control Magic Dinner Show (15% off)
- Wild Florida Adventure Park (20% off)
- Daytona International Speedway Tour (28% off)
- Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition (25% off)
- Pirate’s Cove Adventure Golf (15% off)
- WonderWorks (15% off)
- I-Drive NASCAR Indoor Kart Racing (20% off)
- Celebration Golf Club (20% off)
- Crayola Experience (15% off)
- Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament (20% off)
- Gray Line Orlando Tours (15% off)
- Hawaiian Rumble Adventure Golf (30% off)
- World of Chocolate Museum and Café (25% off)
- Restaurant Savings: The Part Most Likely to Feel Like a Win
- The biggest restaurant risk: card acceptance
- Where to Use It: Best Areas for Timing and Convenience
- How I’d Maximize Your Chance of Getting Your Money Back
- Use your first successful scan as your reset button
- Aim for a mix: one show, one attraction, one meal block
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How much does the Orlando Eat and Play card cost?
- How long is the card valid once I activate it?
- How many people can use one card?
- Is the card digital or do I get a physical ticket?
- Can I use it at restaurants and attractions, or only one type?
- Are there any limits on what the discount can apply to at restaurants?
- Do I need to meet a guide at a specific location?
- What devices and app version do I need?
- Is this card available in English?
- Should You Book the Eat and Play Card?
What This Orlando Eat and Play Card Really Is

This isn’t a guided tour where you’re bundled into a schedule. Instead, it’s a mobile discount card you activate and then use on your own at participating locations around Orlando. Think of it like a preset coupon organizer that’s meant to lower prices across eating out and paid attractions.
The card is designed for families and small groups. One card is valid for up to four people at participating venues, and you can use it at 150+ locations in the Orlando area. That single point matters, because it affects whether $25 feels like a deal or like dead weight.
Validity: 6 Months on the Calendar, 30 Days of Use
The card is valid for six months from activation, but the fine print also states it’s good for a full 30 days from the first use. In plain terms: you can activate it when you’re ready, but your best window for savings is the month after your first successful scan.
If you’re staying a week, you might still come out ahead—but only if you plan ahead and hit enough card-eligible stops early.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
Price and Value: When $25 Makes Sense

At $25 per group (up to eight on the listing), the real question is simple: can you use it enough times to beat paying full price?
Here’s what makes the card potentially strong value:
- Many participating venues offer 10% to 50% off regular prices.
- The lineup includes both attractions and restaurants, so you can save on the two biggest Orlando budget drains.
- There are high-discount anchors mixed into the lineup, like Daytona International Speedway (28%) and Hawaiian Rumble Adventure Golf (30%).
A quick reality check
If you only use it once or twice, you may not recover the cost—especially since you need to activate it and get your PIN working on your phone first. If you’re staying longer, or you’re the type who eats out and does at least a handful of paid activities, the value usually gets easier to justify.
Your “Save It All Week” Game Plan (So You Don’t Waste the Card)
I recommend you treat this card like a mini itinerary you build around. Pick a couple of restaurants you’d genuinely eat at anyway, then add 2–4 attractions with discounts that match your vacation rhythm.
What I’d plan for
- At least two restaurant stops (sit-down meals beat quick snack discounts for perceived value).
- At least two paid attractions during your first week of activation.
- One “big savings” stop if your schedule allows, such as World of Chocolate Museum and Café (25%) or Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition (25%).
The “near me” feature can help you spot nearby eligible options once you’re in a neighborhood like International Drive. It’s most useful when you’re flexible and don’t lock yourself into one rigid plan.
Key Details That Make This Card Easy (or Annoying)

The good news is the card is built for convenience. The less-good news is that digital passes live or die on compatibility and merchant readiness.
Digital activation matters
After purchase, you get a separate email with mobile app instructions and a unique PIN required to activate your digital card. That means your first challenge is not Orlando itself—it’s getting the PIN into the app quickly and correctly.
Maps + near-me can reduce decision fatigue
Interactive maps with turn-by-turn directions, plus a near-me search, are helpful if you’re trying to squeeze savings into a day already packed with walking, parking, and lines.
Alcohol and take-away may be limited
Like most discount cards, it doesn’t automatically cover everything. The rules say alcohol and take-away are at merchant discretion, so don’t plan on using the card to solve every single purchase you might want.
Highlights at a Glance: What You Get Most From

- 150+ participating venues across Orlando, with discounts often ranging from 10% to 50%
- Digital card for iOS/Android with maps, turn-by-turn directions, and near-me search
- Up to four people per card, so one pass can cover a small family or group
- 30 days from the first use, meaning you’ll want to choose your activation timing
- Strong anchor attractions like WonderWorks, Crayola Experience, and Daytona Speedways
- Best fit for International Drive and nearby areas, including Kissimmee and Lake Buena Vista
Stop-by-Stop: How the Card Plays at Each Major Venue

Since this is a card, you’ll be using it independently at each place, not meeting a guide at every stop. Still, it helps to know what each discounted option is like, and what to watch for when you plan your day.
The Outta Control Magic Dinner Show (15% off)
If you want one “event” night instead of another casual meal, this is the kind of stop that can feel worth it even when you’re not shopping for bargain prices. A dinner show also tends to reduce decision-making—one ticket, one evening plan, fewer logistics.
Potential drawback: shows can run on their own schedule, so you’ll want to match your dinner timing to your day rather than treating it as an afterthought.
Wild Florida Adventure Park (20% off)
Adventure parks are a good match for discount cards because they’re typically ticket-based, which makes the savings straightforward. With the card offering 20% off, this can be an easy add-on when you want something more active than just museum time.
Practical tip: since attractions can change hours by season, build in buffer time so you’re not rushing across Orlando.
Daytona International Speedway Tour (28% off)
If you’re even slightly into cars or racing, this one stands out because it’s a higher discount than many of the rest. A speedway tour can also be a nice change from Orlando’s more traditional indoor attractions.
Potential consideration: 28% is attractive, but it still depends on you being able to make the tour times work with your whole day.
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition (25% off)
This kind of museum-style attraction is ideal for a discount card because you’re paying admission, not just buying snacks. A 25% discount can make a museum stop feel less like a splurge.
From what I’ve learned about real-world use of discount cards, the biggest risk here isn’t the discount—it’s timing. If a venue is closed earlier than expected or has limited availability, the savings won’t matter. I’d treat opening hours as a must-check.
Pirate’s Cove Adventure Golf (15% off)
Adventure golf is often a good family-friendly “filler” when you need something fun that doesn’t take the whole day. With a 15% discount, it’s not the biggest savings, but it’s easier to fit into most travel schedules.
Watch for: if you’re going during peak hours, you may lose more time to lines than you save in dollars.
WonderWorks (15% off)
WonderWorks is popular for a reason: it’s interactive, indoor-friendly, and works well on a day when weather could change your plans. A 15% discount won’t feel like a miracle, but it can soften the cost of a ticketed experience.
Good strategy: pair it with a meal at a card-eligible restaurant nearby so you get both sides of the deal.
I-Drive NASCAR Indoor Kart Racing (20% off)
If your group wants something more “hands-on” than shows or museums, indoor kart racing is a natural fit. The card’s 20% discount can make the difference between doing it and skipping it.
Practical note: kart racing usually means set ride times. Plan for a smooth arrival so you aren’t stressed at the check-in moment.
Celebration Golf Club (20% off)
A longer activity like golf can make the card feel more valuable because you’re paying for time, not just an entry fee. With 20% off and a longer duration indicated, this is a stop that fits travelers who want a half-day block they control.
Watch-out: golf plans depend heavily on your own pacing and whether you’re comfortable with the commitment level.
Crayola Experience (15% off)
If you’re traveling with kids—or you just like hands-on activities—Crayola Experience is one of those “you’ll be glad you did it” stops. The 15% discount helps, but the real payoff is the structured fun that keeps everyone busy.
If your group is split (adults wanting quiet, kids wanting action), this can help balance the day.
Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament (20% off)
Another dinner-and-show style choice, with 20% off. This is where discount cards often work best: you’re bundling entertainment with a meal, and the discount feels like it affects the overall cost of the evening.
Potential drawback: it’s popular, so plan early and don’t schedule it as a last-minute backup.
Gray Line Orlando Tours (15% off)
Discounting tours can be tricky, because you still have to match your travel style to the schedule. But if you’re already the type to use an organized tour for certain day trips, 15% off can be a useful bonus.
Practical tip: confirm which specific tours are included with the card, since “Gray Line Orlando Tours” can cover different products.
Hawaiian Rumble Adventure Golf (30% off)
Here’s one of the standout savings: 30%. If you can make room for another mini-golf outing, this is the kind of discount that can tip the math in your favor.
This is also a good “plan B” activity when you want something short that doesn’t require a full day.
World of Chocolate Museum and Café (25% off)
This is the kind of stop that feels like vacation, not chores. With a 25% discount, it’s easier to justify spending time on a ticketed attraction plus a café stop.
Consideration: if you’re not a museum/café person, you might want to choose a different attraction on the list so you’re not forcing time you won’t enjoy.
Restaurant Savings: The Part Most Likely to Feel Like a Win

The merchant list includes plenty of recognizable names, which is exactly why restaurant discounts often make the card worthwhile. Places mentioned include Denny’s, TGI Friday’s, World of Beer, Rodizio Grill, Friendly’s, Earls Kitchen, Planet Hollywood, Carrabba’s Italian Kitchen, BJ’s Brewhouse, Red Robin, UNO Chicago Grill, Pizza Hut, Texas Roadhouse, Hash House a Go Go, and more.
I like this mix because it lets you eat based on hunger and mood, not based on discount strategy. In Orlando, where meals add up fast, being able to save at mainstream spots can keep your budget from spiraling.
The biggest restaurant risk: card acceptance
Some discount cards work smoothly. Others run into hiccups at specific locations. A few comments from past users point to the card being refused or not honored in certain places, including one case involving a quick check at a spot that was supposed to accept the deal.
What I do: when I’m planning the day, I don’t bet everything on one single restaurant. I build a first choice and a backup. If the card doesn’t scan, you still have a meal plan that doesn’t ruin your day.
Where to Use It: Best Areas for Timing and Convenience

The card is especially framed around International Drive, Kissimmee, Lake Buena Vista, and similar high-visitor zones. That focus is practical because Orlando is spread out. If your hotel is near these areas, you’ll spend less time driving just to use the card.
It’s also why the map and near-me tools are so helpful. You don’t want to waste your vacation time searching for where the deal works.
How I’d Maximize Your Chance of Getting Your Money Back

Most people lose value on discount cards in one of two ways: they wait too long to use it, or they don’t hit enough places. Here’s a simple plan to avoid both.
Use your first successful scan as your reset button
Because you have 30 days from first use, I’d activate the card only when you’re ready to start using it. Then, cluster your savings so you’re not hunting for deals on random days.
Aim for a mix: one show, one attraction, one meal block
You don’t need to do everything. A smart pattern could be:
- one ticketed attraction (like WonderWorks or Crayola Experience),
- one higher-discount stop (like Speedway or the chocolate museum),
- and a couple of restaurant meals where you’d already be spending money.
This mix makes the card feel less like work.
FAQ
FAQ
How much does the Orlando Eat and Play card cost?
It costs $25.00 per group (up to 8 on the listing).
How long is the card valid once I activate it?
The card is valid for six months from activation, and it’s good for a full 30 days from the first time you use it.
How many people can use one card?
One card is valid for up to four people at participating locations.
Is the card digital or do I get a physical ticket?
It’s a digital card you use on iOS or Android, with a mobile app and a unique PIN to activate.
Can I use it at restaurants and attractions, or only one type?
It includes savings at both restaurants and activities/attractions, with discounts listed for many popular venues.
Are there any limits on what the discount can apply to at restaurants?
The info provided notes that alcohol and take-away are at the merchant’s discretion.
Do I need to meet a guide at a specific location?
The activity start and end are listed around International Drive, but the card itself is meant for you to use independently at participating venues.
What devices and app version do I need?
It’s available for iOS (11.0 or later) and Android (5.0 or later).
Is this card available in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
Should You Book the Eat and Play Card?
If your trip includes eating out and doing a handful of paid attractions near International Drive, Kissimmee, or Lake Buena Vista, I think this card is worth a serious look. The discounts on big-name venues like Daytona International Speedway, World of Chocolate Museum, and interactive places like WonderWorks can make the math work—especially if you’re staying long enough to use it during your first 30 days.
If you’re only in Orlando for a week or you’re set on a very specific list of places, pause first. Some card value comes down to smooth acceptance at each venue, and you don’t want to build your schedule around a stop that may not honor the discount when you show up.
Bottom line: I’d book it when you plan to use it several times and you’re comfortable checking what’s eligible near where you’re staying. If you want certainty with minimal effort, you might prefer paying full price for the exact experiences you already have in mind.

























