... imagine if it was your retirement fund invested in DIS stock.You may think this is terrible, but ...
... imagine if it was your retirement fund invested in DIS stock.You may think this is terrible, but ...
POB14 said:Nine dollars? Heck, if the price difference between a Days Inn and onsite were nine dollars, I think even I would stay onsite!![]()
Random price check: October 15, 2006, two people, one night.
Days Inn 192: $40
Pop Century: $110
Robo said:Its not what you know that can bite you, its what you DON'T know.
I stayed 10 nights at All Star Sports in late Jan.- early Feb. this year for
$45 per night, Dbl-Oc. (plus tax, of course).
Why? I bought an AP last year.
How? I called and made a ressie.
)I thank you for helping me make my point; that everybody's situation is different, and people who stay offsite aren't just trying to save the nine bucks a day.
MichelleChell said:It is already unfair that we get kicked out for EMH. It is terrible IMHO.

Just wanted to point out that to get the AP discount, you do not need to have everyone in your group with AP. Only one. I think the rule is you can get three rooms at a time with one AP. So an AP may be worth it for one of you if the savings in other ways offsets the extra cost.POB14 said:And annual passes for my family would cost $1661.42. Now, if there were any way I could possibly justify spending that many days in Disney, that could end up being a deal. But a) my wife and I both have new jobs, and don't have that kind of vacation time; b) the kids would miss about two weeks of school; c) I don't think we could stand ten straight days at Disney World.![]()
I was replying to a post that said the price difference between the All-Stars and a Days Inn was nine dollars. I was trying to show that it isn't, necessarily. Maybe I came off snarky in the post; I didn't mean to.
I'm not ignorant of AP discounts, or that different sources quote different prices for different dates for the same room. (By the way, am I the only person in the world who really hates the term "ressie"?)I thank you for helping me make my point; that everybody's situation is different, and people who stay offsite aren't just trying to save the nine bucks a day.
DisneyFreq said:I know I'm going to get flamed for this but I'm so sick of hearing the words "punished" and "unfair." Since when is anything FAIR? This is a business and just because it is coined "the happiest place on earth" doesn't make it a real fairyland where everyone gets what they want (hence so many of us wouldn't leave with empty wallets!)
So many of you are forgetting that there was L.B.F.P (Life Before Fast Pass). Many of us had wonderful vacations before the invent of the FP and if Disney decides to charge for it or remove it all together...than many of us will continue to have wonderful vacations in spite of it. And since when is it a given that because Disney gives us something for free that they are obligated to ALWAYS give it to us for free?
When I found out US had started charging for their FP, I thought "oh well, was nice while it lasted." It never once occured to me to think "how dare they!" Yes, Disney is held to a higher standard, which is why we keep coming back. But would a change in the FP system really be enough to make you go elsewhere????? Admit it, you would be mad for about 10 min...you'd grit your teeth, then start looking into how you could best afford to stay onsite or how to plan your days without FPs.
Nearly unlimited fastpasses for some guests produces a much different and unfavorable environment for those without fastpasses compared with no fastpasses at all (LBFP).lillygator said:I too was wondering if people forgot that Disney started out without FP's!!
traviesojmt said:No flaming here. I am with you.![]()