CDG to Disneyland Paris — Private Transfers & Transport FAQ | Easy private Shuttle
CDG · Orly · Beauvais · Vatry → Disneyland Paris

Door to door, no transfers, no shared seats — just your car, waiting.

A private transfer from the airport to your hotel at Disneyland Paris, in plain terms: what it costs compared to the train, the shuttle bus, and a taxi, and why families travelling with luggage tend to prefer it.

At a glance

Three honest numbers before you decide

Typical 2026 rates for the CDG–Disneyland Paris leg. Always confirm current pricing directly with each provider before travelling.

Cheapest
≈ €12 / person
RER B + RER A, ~80 min, one change
Shared coach
≈ €23–24 / adult
Magical Shuttle, fixed timetable, shared stops
Private transfer
Fixed price, whole vehicle
Door to door, confirmed before you travel
Decision 1

CDG Airport → Disneyland Paris

The route most travellers ask about first, and where the price gap between options is widest.

Getting there

Trains, shared shuttles, taxis, and private transfers

RER B combined with RER A is the cheapest route, at roughly €12 per person. It involves a line change and takes about 80 minutes — fine for a single traveller with a backpack, less practical with a family's luggage and a stroller in tow.
With Easy private Shuttle, the price is fixed and confirmed at the time of booking — for the vehicle as a whole, not per passenger, so travelling as a family often brings the per-person cost close to the shuttle bus. Your driver tracks your flight and meets you at arrivals. Get an exact quote at cdgpariscab.com.
Magical Shuttle prices per person — around €23–24 for adults and €10–11 for children one-way, with a discount for round-trip tickets. It's a shared coach with set departure points, so expect waits for the bus to fill and stops at other hotels.
There's no direct high-speed TGV from CDG itself. The fast option runs from central Paris stations to Marne-la-Vallée-Chessy, from around €30–35, with limited seats that get pricier closer to departure. From the airport directly, RER is the only rail route.
Via RER B and RER A combined, around €12 per adult one-way, taking roughly 80 minutes with one change.
Not from the airports. Some Disney and partner hotels run a complimentary shuttle between the hotel and the parks once you're already at the resort, but nothing covers the airport leg for free.
Same answer — no free shuttle exists from CDG, Orly, or Paris to the resort. The only complimentary rides are short hotel-to-park hops at certain on-site hotels.
Around 35 to 50 minutes in normal traffic on the A104 and A4, longer during peak periods.
A metered taxi from CDG to Disneyland Paris typically costs €80–100, slightly more at night, with a small surcharge per extra passenger beyond four and for additional luggage.
Yes — Magical Shuttle runs scheduled coaches, and private operators including Easy private Shuttle run door-to-door transfers on your own timing rather than a fixed timetable.
Four main routes: RER train (cheapest, slowest, requires a change), Magical Shuttle coach (mid-price, shared, fixed schedule), metered taxi (fast, bookable on arrival, pricier solo), or a private transfer (fixed price for the vehicle, door-to-door, on your schedule).
It depends entirely on demand at the moment of booking, since Uber fares move with surge pricing and traffic. There's no guaranteed price the way there is with a private transfer's fixed quote.
"Prestige" or "VIP" transfer is the term some operators use for an upgraded private transfer — a higher-spec vehicle, meet-and-greet inside the terminal, and sometimes extras like child seats included as standard, rather than a distinct official airport service.
No booking is required for the RER — buy a ticket at the station and board the next train. TGV from central Paris does require booking, since seats are limited.
Decision 2

Paris City Centre → Disneyland Paris

Already staying in Paris? The resort is a short, direct ride away.

From the city

RER A runs direct, no change required

RER A is both the cheapest and most direct option from central Paris, at under €10 per adult one-way, running straight through to Marne-la-Vallée-Chessy without a change.
Typically under €10 per adult one-way on RER A, with reduced child fares — the standard budget choice for visitors already in the city.
Yes, several coach operators including Magical Shuttle connect central Paris hotels to Disneyland Paris, though RER A is usually faster and cheaper from city-centre stations.
RER A is the most direct route — board at any central station on the line and ride through to Marne-la-Vallée-Chessy, roughly 35–45 minutes. A private transfer suits travellers with multi-day luggage who'd rather skip the train.
Yes, from both Paris airports and central Paris — shared coaches run on fixed schedules, while private transfers run door to door on your own timing.
The resort doesn't operate the shuttle itself — Magical Shuttle is the approved third-party coach service connecting the hotels to CDG and Orly, alongside RER trains and private operators.
Technically the RER (regional express network) rather than the metro — specifically RER A, running direct from central Paris to Marne-la-Vallée-Chessy at the resort.
Decision 3

CDG Airport → Central Paris

If your trip starts or ends in the city rather than at the resort.

Into the city

The first leg for most international arrivals

RER B train, at around €11–12 one-way, reaching central Paris in roughly 35–50 minutes depending on your stop. Public buses run at a similar price but are generally slower.
No — the free CDGVAL shuttle only connects terminals and car parks within the airport, not into the city. Every route into central Paris carries a fare.
Generally in the €55–75 range, moving with time of day, traffic, and surge pricing — there's no fixed fare until the app calculates one at the moment of booking.
No complimentary shuttle covers the airport-to-Paris or airport-to-Disney legs. Free rides are limited to short hotel-to-park transfers at certain on-site hotels once you've already arrived at the resort.
Once you're there

Planning your park day

The 3-2-1 rule

A popular planning trick from the Disney travel community

It's an informal planning method, not an official park rule: pick 3 rides, 2 entertainment experiences (a parade, a show, a character meet), and 1 meal to focus on per day. The aim is enough structure to hit your priorities without trying to do everything, which tends to leave families worn out rather than happy.
Same idea — 3 rides, 2 experiences, 1 meal — used as a loose daily target rather than a strict quota, flexed depending on how the day is going.

For when a shared timetable isn't worth the saving

A train change is no trouble with a backpack. With strollers, car seats, and a week of luggage for the whole family, a private transfer removes the friction — and the price is fixed before you ever land.

Request your fixed price
01One fixed price for the whole vehicle, confirmed before you travel
02Driver meets you inside arrivals and tracks your flight
03Direct to your hotel door — no transfers, no waiting for a full bus
04Child seats and space for the whole family's luggage
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