nicolepdonnelly
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2008
- Messages
- 521
airfare, tickets, souvineers would be her responsibilty
I wouldn't make her pay for the room since you'd have to have one for your own dd anyway......I'd probably pay to feed her since she was your guest and if she was staying with you at home you'd feed her.
We have the room so no contribution to that. I was thinking Park tickets, Plane, and DDP, spending $ too. But we would pay for the incidentals like bottled water, extra things like DisneyQuest and the Sunrise safari we are planning to do. 
Any thoughts on formailties like copy of health ins. cards or the like?
If they are your guest, they are your guest. You pay. I don't invite people to come to my home and then expect them to fork over for food, drinks, the cost of the cleaning lady, etc.
Presumably, the parents, if they can afford it, will offer to pay a portion of the trip. You can either take them up on it or not.
However, if the child is your guest, you pay.
If they are your guest, they are your guest. You pay.
I disagree. Given the cost of a Disney vacation, I don't think the traditional rules apply. I would talk to the child's parents first before I mentioned anything to the child. I would say something along the lines of "My DD would really like to have your daughter join us on our family vacation at Walt Disney World. Would you be interested in have your daughter come along with us? I would be willing to cover the cost of the accomodations but would ask that you pay for your daughter's park ticket, airfare, and dining plan."
Of course before I asked I would be of the assumption that I thought this family could afford to underwrite the cost of their child's trip. I would not propose this to a family if I knew that money was tight for them.
I disagree with you.

I disagree with you.
A guest is a guest. Think of a wedding. A guest is a guest if it is a beer and chips in a pool hall reception or a deluxe sit down dinner at the Four Seasons. They are still guests. If it is too much for the host to afford, don't invite or go somewhere cheaper. The same with a wedding. If you can't afford to pay for everyone to drink Cristal and slurp caviar, then have a cheaper reception or invite fewer people. If you can't afford to pay for a guest to Disney, don't invite or go somewhere that you can afford. If they are your guest, you pay.
That analogy only works if you also pay thier way to the wedding, all their food while they are staying there, their lodging and paying for any entertainment they do during non wedding events.
I strongly advocate having the friend's family actually buy her airplane ticket.