OK, this isn't an issue for us - we've celebrated a few birthdays at the world, my wife's 32nd, my daughter's 6th, and in October, my 35th - but friends of ours will be in this situation.
I believe it's been established that if a child turns 10 during a trip, that they can continue to use the children's admission for the remainder of the trip without paying to upgrade to an adult pass. (Do the passes need to be upgraded in any way? What about leftover days for future trips?)
But what about a 2 year old turning 3? It seems pretty clear to me that you'd have to buy admission for the day the child turned 3 and beyond. Is this correct?
I'm not interested in fibbing, the ethics of the situation, rationalizations, or comparisons to the paying-child to paying-adult transition. I'm purely interested in actual Disney policy.
Thanks!
Brett
Edited to BOLD and Underline that paragraph above. I don't care about "getting away with it" or whether it's ethical, morally justifiable, etc. I'm not interested in any judgements what-so-ever, either of parents or the company. Just Disney policy.
I believe it's been established that if a child turns 10 during a trip, that they can continue to use the children's admission for the remainder of the trip without paying to upgrade to an adult pass. (Do the passes need to be upgraded in any way? What about leftover days for future trips?)
But what about a 2 year old turning 3? It seems pretty clear to me that you'd have to buy admission for the day the child turned 3 and beyond. Is this correct?
I'm not interested in fibbing, the ethics of the situation, rationalizations, or comparisons to the paying-child to paying-adult transition. I'm purely interested in actual Disney policy.
Thanks!
Brett
Edited to BOLD and Underline that paragraph above. I don't care about "getting away with it" or whether it's ethical, morally justifiable, etc. I'm not interested in any judgements what-so-ever, either of parents or the company. Just Disney policy.
