The obvious disadvantage at the moment that I'm finding with my app (which was written in Java 7 to start with) is that most people don't have 7, and it takes a bit of effort to get it. The default Java download page at the time of writing still points to Java 6, not 7, and most of the current Linux distributions just seem to have 6 installed by default as well. Ubuntu 11.10 is the first to even have Java in its repository.
Also on the Ubuntu side of things, one thing I've noted is that even if Java 7 is installed, I haven't found a clean way to check if it's the default yet (and again, chances are it's not.) I'm just using a shell script that parses the output from update-alternatives --query java and launches it appropriately.
It was a conscious decision on my part to go with 7 because there were a number of new features in it that I could take advantage of, and by the time said app actually hits the point where I'd consider it out of alpha / beta I hope Java 7 will have gained more of a foothold then anyway!
The advantages pretty much all centre around using the added features - I've found the try with resources construct has made a lot of my code using IO stuff easier to read (no more nested try / finally's inside try / catches) and I'm using some of the extra APIs like the filewatcher API too. I also rather like the fact JComboBox and the underlying models are now generic which saves a fair bit of casting in Swing apps.
In short though, if you're not actually going to take advantage of any of the Java 7 features and you're just upgrading for the heck of it, there's little motivation to do so until Java 7 at least becomes a bit more established. It's made my code somewhat cleaner and been helpful with some of the additional libraries, but it's also caused a fair few headaches as well.