Comcast Will Spin Off NBCUniversal, Including Universal Destinations & Experiences, Into a Standalone Public Company by Mid-2027
Comcast on Monday announced one of the biggest corporate restructurings in recent theme-park history: it is spinning off NBCUniversal, including Universal Destinations & Experiences (the theme parks division that owns Universal Orlando, Hollywood, Japan, Singapore, Beijing, Epic Universe, and the upcoming UK park), into a separate publicly traded company. The tax-free separation is targeted to close in roughly one year.

Comcast and NBCUniversal corporate announcement art. Image: Inside Universal.
The headlines:
- Announced: Monday, June 29, 2026, via SEC filing and Comcast press release.
- Structure: Tax-free spin-off into two independent publicly traded companies.
- Target close: Approximately one year (mid-2027), pending board approval, SEC registration, regulatory clearance, and financing.
- Comcast shareholders will receive shares in both companies.
- Comcast retains up to a 19.9% stake in new NBCUniversal for up to one year after the spinoff closes.
What goes into the new NBCUniversal
- Universal Destinations & Experiences (Universal Orlando Resort, Universal Studios Hollywood, Universal Studios Japan, Universal Studios Singapore, Universal Beijing Resort, Universal Epic Universe, Universal Kids Resort opening July 1, 2026, and the future UK park).
- Universal Pictures, DreamWorks Animation, Illumination.
- NBC, Telemundo, Bravo, NBC News.
- Peacock streaming.
- Sky (European media).
- Consumer products.
What stays with Comcast
- Xfinity, Xfinity Wireless, Comcast Business (broadband, wireless, and connectivity).
Leadership post-separation
- Mike Cavanagh (current Comcast co-CEO) becomes CEO of new NBCUniversal.
- Michael Angelakis (former Comcast CFO) becomes CEO of Comcast and joins now as Strategic Advisor.
- Brian L. Roberts remains actively involved with both companies during the transition.
What this means for Universal Orlando
The short answer: no immediate operational changes to the parks were announced. Per Comcast's investor materials, the new NBCUniversal is being positioned as "a premier global media and entertainment company, anchored by its growing theme parks division." That is a notable framing. Comcast lists theme parks first among the new company's anchor assets, alongside film, television, and streaming.
Practical takeaways for guests:
- No changes to announced projects. Epic Universe's expansion, the recently filed Dark Universe permit for a 71,500-square-foot building, the Jurassic Park River Adventure refurb (closed January 5, reopening November 20), the new Universal Celestial Goodnight nighttime show debuting July 7, and the UK park are all proceeding as previously announced.
- No changes to hotel bookings, ticket pricing, Annual Pass programs, or Express Pass programs were announced as part of the spinoff.
- Future quarterly reports from the new NBCUniversal may provide more transparency on theme-park attendance, per-cap spending, and segment performance than Comcast's consolidated reports have offered.
Why this matters
Theme park companies as standalone public entities are rare. Disney is the obvious comparison: theme parks are one segment of a much larger entertainment conglomerate. After the spin-off, the new NBCUniversal will look more like Disney (entertainment + parks bundled) than like a pure-play theme park operator. Comcast keeps the connectivity business, which has been the higher-margin segment in recent years; NBCUniversal takes the growth-investment side, with theme parks as the lead engine.
For Universal Orlando readers specifically, the bottom line is: the parks division now sits inside a company whose explicit strategic anchor is the parks division. That is the most parks-friendly corporate framing the segment has had in years.
Quick planner notes
- The deal needs about a year to close. Until then, Universal Orlando continues operating under the current Comcast/NBCUniversal structure.
- Watch for the new NBCUniversal's first quarterly report after the spin-off (likely Q3 2027) for the first public look at theme-park segment financials in standalone form.
Sources
- SEC Form 8-K Exhibit 99.1 (primary source)
- Comcast to Spin Off NBCUniversal Into Standalone Entertainment Company (Inside Universal, June 29, 2026)
- Comcast Spin-Off, NBCUniversal Theme Parks, New Ownership Structure (Attractions Magazine)
- Comcast to Spin Off NBCUniversal, Expected to Take One Year (WDW News Today)
- Comcast NBCUniversal Sky Spinoff (CBS News)
Image credit: Inside Universal.