Box office Inside Out 2 grossed $653 million in the United States and Canada, and $1.046 billion in other territories, for a worldwide total of $1.699 billion. On a budget of $200 million,
Inside Out 2 was initially projected to gross $80–90 million in its domestic opening weekend. The sub-$100 million industry projections were partially due to the notion that general audiences remained hesitant to return to theaters, given the direct-to-streaming releases of the Pixar films
Soul (2020),
Luca (2021), and
Turning Red (2022) on
Disney+, the underperformance of Pixar's
Lightyear at the box office in 2022, and the lackluster box office results of several films in 2024. After making $63.6 million on its first day, including an estimated $13 million from Thursday night previews, projections were raised to $140–150 million for the weekend. It ended up grossing $154.2 million in the United States and Canada from 4,440 theaters and an estimated $140 million from 38 international markets, for a worldwide debut of $294.2 million, the highest in Pixar history. In the United States and Canada, the $154.2 million opening weekend was the best of 2024, surpassing
Dune: Part Two ($82.5 million) and
Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire ($80 million) to become the first film of the year to open above $100 million, and the third-best for an animated film behind Pixar's own
Incredibles 2 (2018; $182.7 million) and Disney's
The Lion King (2019; $191.7 million). It was also the fourth-best opening for a
PG film after
The Lion King,
Incredibles 2, and
Beauty and the Beast ($174 million). With an average ticket price of $12.53 overall and $10.36 for children, twelve million moviegoers saw the film in its first weekend, nearing the thirteen million admissions for
Barbie (2023) in its first three days. It played strongly throughout the day (22% of viewers attended before 1pm, 35% between 1pm and 5pm, 26% between 5pm and 8pm, and 17% after 8pm), benefiting from substantial walk-up business credited to its multi-cultural pull (of the opening weekend audience, 36% identified as Hispanic and Latino). IMAX and Premium Large Formats (PLFs) accounted for 43% of the earnings, while 14% came from 3D showings. The film found momentum during the weekday, bringing its seven-day total to $255.2 million and reaching multiple box-office milestones, including the second-highest-grossing first Monday for a Pixar film (at $22.4 million), the highest-grossing first Tuesday for an animated film (at $28.8 million), the third highest non-opening Wednesday after
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015; $38 million) and
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019; $32.2 million) that doubled as a record for the
Juneteenth federal holiday since it began in 2021 (at $30.1 million), and the highest-grossing first Thursday for a Pixar film (at $19.6 million). The film made $101.2 million in its second weekend, a mere 34.4% drop to become the most profitable second weekend for an animated film, topping the $92.3 million earned by
The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023), and the seventh-best second weekend overall.
Deadline Hollywoods Anthony D'Alessandro attributed the feat to
heat waves and rainstorms prompting people to visit air-conditioned theaters. During its third weekend, it beat newcomer
A Quiet Place: Day One to remain at the top of the box office with $57.5 million. On the
Fourth of July, it crossed $500 million domestically, and during its fourth weekend, the film made $30.3 million, finishing in second behind
Despicable Me 4. Worldwide, the film surpassed the gross of its predecessor ($858.8 million) on June 27, 2024, after sixteen days of release. On June 30, 2024, it crossed the $1 billion threshold, becoming the first Disney animated film to do so since
Frozen II in 2019. With this,
Inside Out 2 equalled the record of
The Lion King as the fastest animated film to cross $1 billion, doing so in 19 days. On July 10, 2024, the film surpassed the global box office of
Incredibles 2 ($1.242 billion) to become the highest-grossing Pixar film. The film broke various international box office records in Latin America, becoming the highest-grossing film in Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Uruguay. On July 28, 2024, it surpassed
Incredibles 2 as the highest domestic grossing animated film of all time. On August 25, 2024, it became the second animated film to gross $1 billion internationally. On September 1, 2024, it surpassed
The Lion King to become the highest-grossing animated film of all time and the highest-grossing film released under the Walt Disney Pictures label. The film remained as the highest grossing animated film until
Ne Zha 2, a Chinese animated film, overtook that position in February 2025. The film remained as the highest-grossing American-produced and Disney's highest-grossing animated film of all time, until January 2026, when
Zootopia 2 (2025) overtook this position.
Critical response The film received positive reviews. According to
Animation Magazine, most critics praised its color palette, storyline, and the introduction of new emotions, but some expressed dissatisfaction with the predictability of the external plot related to Riley's acceptance by her new hockey team. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale (the same as the first film), while those surveyed by
PostTrak gave the film an average of 4.5 out of 5 stars, with 71% saying they would definitely recommend it. Robbie Collin of
The Daily Telegraph gave the film four stars out of five, praising the animation, metaphors, and wit while saying "the cast-iron ontological brilliance of Docter's original premise bears expansion well".
Owen Gleiberman of
Variety praised Hawke's performance as Anxiety and the film's emotional impact, calling it "the most poignantly perceptive tale of the conundrums of early adolescence since
Eighth Grade".
Manhola Dargis, in
The New York Times, praised "Pixar's skill for turning ideas into images, some of which actually manage to slip past the safety of its nice worldview with shocks of the sublime." Other positive reviews include
The Observer and
Empire, while reviews from the
BBC and
Los Angeles Times were more mixed. Among the mixed reviews, Siddhant Adlakha, writing for
IGN, found the film was "surprising and disappointing in equal measure".
David Ehrlich of
IndieWire gave the film a 'C–' rating, writing that the film "so perfectly ticks Pixar's boxes in a way that forces the sincerity of its storytelling into a losing battle with the cynicism of its existence". unfavorably compared the film to its predecessor and the new characters received a diverse appraisal. Anxiety was the new emotion attracting most attention, for example from Alison Willmore in
Vulture or Jordan Hoffman for
Entertainment Weekly, while
Peter Bradshaw in
The Guardian and Odie Henderson in the
Boston Globe particularly praised the character of Ennui, voiced by Adèle Exarchopoulos. In his review for
NPR, Justin Chang analysed the nostalgia at work in the film but, precisely, criticised the
retro sequence based on
cartoon images. Robert Daniels, in his review on
RogerEbert.com, felt that the film effectively used Anxiety to transform Riley into a blank character, while Joy and other emotions navigate her mind. For Daniels, this structure allowed the film to blend visually stunning scenes with a whimsical style that is both gentle and entertaining, addressing the pressures faced by teenage girls. Daniels noted that the new emotions introduced were not as memorable as the main emotions. Writing for
Deadline, Damon Wise, however, was rather negative about the film and concluded, "Battle-weary parents of surly teens will have some fun here and there, especially when Ennui's blasé influence opens up a 'sar-
chasm in Riley's brain that makes everything sound, well, sarcastic. But, when all's said and done, the stakes are so minor, it's hard to imagine anyone will leave this desperate to see an
Inside Out 3."
Accolades At the
97th Academy Awards,
Inside Out 2 received nominations for
Best Animated Feature. The film is also nominated for
BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film,
Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Animated Feature, and
Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film. At the
52nd Annie Awards, the movie received seven nominations, including
Best Animated Feature. == Possible sequel ==