Toy Story 5 opened to $160 million domestically and $312 million worldwide last weekend — the biggest launch of 2026, the second-largest animated debut in domestic history, and the strongest opening the franchise has ever posted. The numbers landed in the 24th slot all-time for domestic opening weekends, positioned between two Dark Knight films. Only Pixar’s own Incredibles 2, which opened to $182.7 million in 2018, has done better for an animated film in North America.
The performance is being read by analysts as evidence of a persistent structural gap in Hollywood’s release calendar. Family films reliably generate three or four Top 10 domestic finishes each year, but the scale of Toy Story 5’s numbers — up 25% from Toy Story 4’s $120 million franchise record in 2019 — suggests studios are still dramatically underscheduling content for younger audiences.
“Pixar keeps finding the right audience at the right moment with the right story,” said Shawn Robbins, director of analytics at Fandango. “These movies are first and foremost for kids, and this movie would not work if it only resonated with their parents.”
Disney’s own audience data points to the film’s four-quadrant reach. Moviegoers under 25 made up 44% of the opening weekend crowd — down from 59% for Toy Story 4 in 2019 — while the 55-and-older bracket ticked up from 2% to 6%, a sign the franchise has aged into multigenerational territory.
Director Andrew Stanton has described the film as the second chapter in a Bonnie-era trilogy, structurally mirroring the original three films built around Andy. The story’s central conflict — Bonnie’s addiction to Lilypad, a kiddie smart tablet voiced by Greta Lee — gave the film thematic currency that played across generations rather than leaning on nostalgia alone.
The domestic box office year-to-date now sits at $4.4 billion, 14.2% ahead of the same point in 2025 and approaching the $4.5 billion posted at this stage in 2011. The summer is running less than 2% behind the same point in 2019 — a summer that also included Avengers: Endgame and The Lion King remake.
Toy Story 5’s first competitor arrives July 1 with Minions & Monsters, though analysts expect the franchise’s hold to remain strong. A $1 billion global run looks probable, which would make it only the second film to reach that mark in 2026 after The Super Mario Galaxy Movie.




















































