Watch where you walk at Disney’s theme parks — because one day the entertainment giant may be tracking you.

The Walt Disney Co. has been awarded a patent by Uncle Sam for a new type of technology that can track visitors to its theme parks through their feet.

But don’t worry about Mickey Mouse becoming Big Brother — Disney said it has no plans to use the technology in US Patent No. 9,393,697.

The new technology allows Disney to gather information on its guests by photographing their shoes on entering the park and re-photographing them at various points throughout their visit.

The process, which Disney’s calls “acquiring and reacquiring guests” by using shoe-level cameras at strategic locations, promises to provide insights about the park’s most popular rides and the paths guests use to take them.

The patent is one of 80 or so filed annually by Disney’s Imagineers. The Mouse House also stressed the patent would not literally “track” guests, but deliver a photo trail of where their shoes go.

Disney already knows more or less where guests to its theme parks go via MagicBands, RFIS bracelets, FastPasses, hotel keys and credit cards, according to the Orlando Sentinel, which first reported on the patent.

University of Wyoming professor Robert Sprague, the co-author of “Intrusive Monitoring: Employee Privacy Expectations are Reasonable in Europe, Destroyed in the United States,” called Disney’s patent “pretty innocuous.”

“The technology is there to photograph every face that enters the park and monitor it throughout the guest’s entire visit,” he said. “So they could be doing a lot more.”