Every year we sit down and run the numbers vs benefits to determine what our family should do in regards to renewing our Six Flags (formerly Cedar Fair) season passes.

If you would like to go back and read how we determined previous years, the links are below.

Where to buy 2025 Six Flags (Cedar Fair) Season Passes?
Evaluating Gold vs Prestige 2024 Season Passes
Evaluating 2023 Platinum vs Prestige+ Season Passes

Renewing season passes used to be such a simple process back during the Platinum pass era. Our family had been Platinum passholders since 2015 for the one simple benefit that it got us into all the legacy Cedar Fair parks. Each August our biggest decision was which park to renew since some may have given an extra benefit over the others.

It was not until 2023 when they introduced the Prestige pass that we downgraded to Gold with the All-Park Passport to get us into the other parks.

The Platinum pass era used to be the easiest system to understand from a consumer perspective. In addition the price was always the same regardless which park a guest purchased from, including Canada’s Wonderland. To this day we still question why they decided to change a perfect system and make every park vary in price structure.

So now here we are up to deciding where to renew 2026 Six Flags season passes?

On the surface and from the latest marketing campaign, the enticement of getting a Gold pass and it includes the All-Park Passport seems like it would make for an easy decision. For the average consumer, and those who never had a season pass, buying from your local park absolutely makes sense.

However, since our family is renewing, it pays to consider shopping around.

When AlpenFury at Canada’s Wonderland opened in mid-July, guests got their first glimpse into what the 2026 season pass structure would look like. The rest of the parks would soon offer their season passes for sale in the coming weeks.

Subject to terms and conditions

With all the uncertainty right now in the Six Flags organization, from a guest perspective we wanted to hold off renewing and wait for the dust to settle. In previous years we were quick to renew to lock in price savings. However, as the parks keep cutting back on more and more, we seem to be getting a little more pessimistic on what the experience is going to look like in 2026.

Will all the live entertainment be cut? Will they only run single train operation on roller coasters? Does the dining plan only offer chicken tenders?

These are all real consumer concerns. Cedar Fair spent the better part of a decade revamping the experience and the dining plans to be a major selling point, and only in the last year or so has that experience started to degrade. With a company in financial distress, could an even more drastic change be coming to the experience?

As a consumer who has already locked in their payments towards season passes, that should be concerning to everyone that they can always change and not always to the guests benefits. “Subject to terms and conditions” is always what the consumer should be cautioned by before buying.

Again the big push for pass sales this year is selling guests on the benefit of getting access to all of the Six Flags parks. This is a major selling point, and again the main reason we went Platinum from the beginning.

However, when we started to deep dive into the terms and conditions of what guests were buying, we paused. Lets also point out the official terms and conditions were updated at least 3 times in July, and still made us scratch our heads.

The first official term that made us pause was this line under Gold passes. “Admission to all other Six Flags parks or waterparks is not included.” This seemed quite odd given the whole marketing promotion is buy a Gold pass and get access to all the other Six Flags parks. Scrolling down this same verbiage is echoed under the Prestige terms.

The next official term that through us for a loop was “Gold Pass entitles the Passholder to complimentary parking ONLY at the park from which it was issued.” Again odd given “free general parking” is a bullet point on the pass page of all the park websites.

However, further scrolling down the official terms and conditions, there is an All-Park Passport section. This was definitely odd given it is not even an option to buy this add-on in 2026.

In this section, it does specifically state that an All-Park Passport is still an official add-on and included at no cost for 2026 Gold and Prestige passes.

Our thinking is that when the initial sales burst ends in September, possibly the All-Park Passport does become and available option for guests to buy.

We reached out to Six Flags for comment and to clarify why the terms and conditions were structured in this manner and received no response.

A numbers game

So now where do we sit on our decision.

It boils down to do we stick with Gold passes or upgrade to Prestige.

On the surface, this seems like a no-brainer.

Some interesting numbers for our family:
2023 Platinum passes + dining + drink plans= $2,119.95
2024 Gold passes + dining + drink plans= $1949.94
2025 Gold passes + dining + drink plans= $1,922.95
2026 Gold passes + dining + drink plans= $1,710.80

Before currency exchange. For the past several years, our family has renewed our season passes via Canada’s Wonderland because after the currency conversion, we save an additional 20-25% from CAD to US dollars.

From a consumer perspective, this is great news. Passes and add-ons are cheaper than they have ever been, especially since guests get a free All-Park Passport benefit.

From a company viewpoint, this is concerning seeing a company lowering costs to try and get more people into the parks. It is definitely the opposite trend we expected post merger.

However, things get more complicated for 2026.

For starters, once again all the parks are NOT offering the same pricing given the same exact product.

Take a look at Cedar Point or Canada’s Wonderland, and the price of a Gold pass is $99. Prestige is $199. However, you jump over to a park like Six Flags Over Georgia, and the same exact Gold pass with All-Park Passport benefits is only $55. Prestige is only $145.

Six Flags has a disclaimer that the pass must first be activated at the home park before using at other parks. For someone who might be traveling, this could be a very enticing insider tip to renew elsewhere. There are other issues with this activation requirement that we question, but not even going to bother getting into the logic.

For our family, while the cost savings could be significant, renewing from another park just makes the whole process even more difficult and not something we want to attempt.

So now back to our passes. We are technically Canada’s Wonderland passholders.

Renewing 2026 Gold with dining and drink plans for the 5 of us would be $1,710.80. However, there is one other benefit of great use to us, early entry.

For that we have to look at Cedar Point, which the park we live by and visit most often. Looking into those terms, the Cedar Point website specifically states, “***Early Entry benefit available for all 2025 & 2026 Gold Passes with All Park Passport through Nov. 2, 2025. Early Entry only available to Cedar Point Prestige Passholders and Cedar Point Resorts guests in 2026.”

So while a Gold pass makes the most apples-to-apples sense, this one little benefit is going to get us to upgrade to Prestige for 2026.

Total cost for 5 Prestige passes with dining and drink options brings our total up to $2,275.55. While this is a considerable price jump, Prestige obviously comes with some other benefits like VIP lounges, preferred parking, daily single use Fast Lane, some additional savings on merchandise and food, and some other benefits.

One has to keep in mind this cost is also in CAD dollars, so take off another 20-25% for the currency conversion.

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