Florida Theme Parks, Attractions, Tips & More

Use of Cookies

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By James
Last updated May 9, 2026

This website may use cookies and similar technologies to keep the site working, understand how it is used, and support advertising or affiliate activity that helps fund the site.

We have rewritten this page to match current cookie-consent expectations more closely: non-essential cookies should be optional, and visitors should be told clearly what they are for.

What is a cookie?

A cookie is a small text file stored on your device when you visit a website. Some cookies last only while your browser session is open, while others remain for longer so that settings, preferences or measurement tools can continue to work on later visits.

The main cookie types visitors are likely to see

  • Essential cookies: these help core site functions work, such as security, basic navigation or remembering a consent choice.
  • Analytics cookies: these help measure visits, page performance and broad usage patterns so the site can be improved.
  • Advertising or affiliate cookies: these may be used by advertising, booking or affiliate partners to measure referrals, relevance or campaign performance.

How cookies may be used on Florida Review

Florida Review is a content site, so the most likely uses are straightforward: helping the website function properly, understanding which pages readers find useful, and supporting third-party services such as analytics, ads or booking-link measurement. The exact mix can change over time as site tools change.

That means this page is intentionally written at the policy level rather than pretending a frozen list of every single cookie name will stay accurate forever.

Consent and visitor choice

Current regulator guidance distinguishes between cookies that are strictly necessary for a requested service and cookies that are non-essential. In practice, that means analytics, advertising and similar optional technologies should only run where the visitor has a real choice.

If a consent banner or settings tool is shown, you can use it to accept, reject or manage optional cookies. You can also control cookies through your browser settings, although blocking some cookies may affect how parts of the site behave.

Third-party cookies

Some cookies may be set by third-party services rather than directly by Florida Review. This is common with analytics providers, embedded content, advertising technology and affiliate-tracking systems. Those providers operate under their own privacy and cookie terms as well as ours.

How to manage cookies

  • Use any cookie banner or settings panel shown on the site.
  • Review your browser privacy and cookie controls.
  • Clear stored cookies if you want to reset previous choices.
  • Check the privacy or cookie notices of major third-party services you use alongside this site.

For related site policies, see our privacy policy and terms and conditions.

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