Disney runs at least half a dozen apps. The new CEO wants to fold them all into one, with Disney+ at the center.
Top bosses at Walt Disney Co. are looking at a "super app" that would merge the firm's separate apps into Disney+, per a Bloomberg report. The talks are still early, and no public timeline or product map exists yet.
What The Super App Would Actually Do
Right now, a Disney fan might use Disney+ to stream a movie, the My Disney Experience app to book a park ticket, and the Navigator app for a cruise. They sign in with the same Disney account on each one, but each app does its own thing on its own setup.
The super app idea ties all of that into a single platform, where users could buy park tickets, shop merch, play Disney games, and watch movies in one place. Disney+ becomes the front door to the whole company.
That's a bigger shift than it sounds. Streaming firms have spent the last decade trying to be entertainment hubs, while Disney is now trying to make Disney+ the hub for an entertainment empire that also includes cruise ships, theme parks, and a roughly $5 billion-a-year merch business.
For investors, the upside is more direct sales from the same fans, since every order stays inside Disney's own platform instead of getting taxed by the App Store or routed through a third party.
Why This Idea Is Suddenly Moving
The super app isn't a new pitch. Former CEO Bob Iger floated versions of it for years, even a Prime-style member program, and nothing ever stuck.
What's different now is Josh D'Amaro, who took over as CEO in March 2026 and has built his early playbook around what he's calling "One Disney." That's an effort to tear down silos between parks, streaming, and merch.
D'Amaro told shareholders at Disney's yearly meeting that Disney+ would grow "beyond a traditional streaming service to become the digital centerpiece of our company." That's a real shift in how the firm pitches itself, since for most of its life Disney+ has been sold purely as a Netflix rival.
Wall Street has been pushing Disney to find new revenue from its current fans, and a single app is one of the cleanest ways to do that without buying anything.
What To Watch
The harder part is tech. Disney is still trying to fully merge Hulu into Disney+, a project that has dragged on because the two services run on different setups and carry different content rights.
A super app stitching together streaming, shopping, gaming, and park tickets is a much bigger lift, with each piece tied to different vendors and back-end systems. Investors will want to see the Hulu merge done before they trust any super app timeline.
The plan is clear. The build is the hard part.
