Pickles516
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2021
- Messages
- 286
I think it’s important to acknowledge that we aren’t “average income”. I may not make a lot for my area, but I make a significant amount more than national average.Another post by an average income person. Our income is average for the rather expensive shoreline area of CT where we live. The mean income in our town is over $149k, with the median being $129k. We have 2 kids, both of whom are in public elementary school. We did a trip in November 2020 for 8 nights (we were in the parks for 7 days), another in May 2021 for 9 nights (we were in the parks for 8 days), and we have one coming up from the end of December 2021 to early January 2022 (it will be 10 nights). We have DVC and Gold passes, though we likely won’t renew our passes again now that the older one will soon be at a point where she can’t miss school for vacations. We fly and check our bags. The last two trips we had to fly Southwest because of credits from our cancelled May 2020 flights. Previously, we usually flew either JetBlue or Southwest. The December trip, we are trying out our first ULCC with Avelo.
I’m still trying to wrap my head around an annual trip as you describe, even a single 10-day trip. Forget the$30,000 dvc purchase. I honestly don’t know how you swing it. The math doesn’t add up for my household in Long Island.
Don’t get me wrong, I’m happy you get to do these annual trips, it just isn’t average. As someone who makes above national average, I could never swing annual trips to Disney.
I don’t know what cost of living is like in coastal CT as compared to LI, but I don’t think it’s as drastic as if I were comparing to someplace like Ohio or whatever. Your circumstances are 100% private, but if there are any factors at play like having your home paid off, any sort of significant inheritance providing a cushion, no car payments, etc. etc., that places your situation even further from the average. Again, that’s awesome, but I think it’s easy for us to perceive our circumstances as average even when they aren’t.
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