Atlantis budget tips...lol :-/

FairestOfThemAll37

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Feb 12, 2013
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Alright budget boarders do I have a challenge for you! ;)

I have just booked a trip to Atlantis and am looking for any tips to save while at this high priced wonderland.

I had planned to stay at the value tower (beach tower) but after reading too many reviews about it being very run down and a very long walk from water park, restaurants, etc. I decided to spend a substantial bit more to be in the royal tower which is newer (albeit still old) and much closer to the bulk of the action so looking for other areas to save. Also if anybody has experience with beach towers there is still a bit of time to change reservation.

Work your budgeting magic for me! :) please and thank you
 
Trip Advisor had some good advice, I wonder if that's where you were when you read the reveiws? Anyway, I see you're already LOL about trying to save any money there at all.

I think the best thing you can do is pack a suitcase full of dry goods to eat at least breakfast and snacks in your room. Organic Horizons makes a shelf stable (no refrigeration necessary until opened) milk in juice box size. Get a bunch of those and a couple boxes of cereal for breakfasts.

If you'll have a fridge, you can freeze cream cheese and put it in a small insulated lunch bag and it will be fine for the flight, then pack some bagels. Frozen go-gurts, same thing, freeze them, pack in the small lunch bag and then refrigerate when you arrive.

Make some cookies or brownies ahead and pack them. Also, maybe some super energy-packed muffins. Crackers and pretzels or other snacks. Granola bars too. Then you're just paying for lunch and dinner and drinks. If you're drinkers I would pack a box of wine (some boxed wines are pretty respectable, it will be fun research finding one you like!) or get a plastic bottle of rum and pack it in garbage bags to ensure no leakage. Some drinks in your room will make you not feel as bad for the $45 entrees and $15 drinks at the bar.

All I've read about the meal plan and my calculations make it not worth it to do, but YMMV. I prefer to pay OOP and to have no limitations.
 
We ordered snacks, water and some alcohol from foodstores2go.com. Excellent service. To be honest, I didn't think the Royal Towers were all that nice for the money. Read trip advisor reviews, know what you are getting into with either. I found them very helpful and lowered our expectations. Be mindful of the quick service, one might sell a hamburger for $9.00 then you turn the corner and another offers a family meal deal for $25.00. There is a set of shops across the street including some gift shops, a liquor store and some restaurants within walking. Have you looked into the Comfort Suites as on option? You get full access to Atlantis.
 
We went to Atlantis several years ago. I packed a suit case worth of food - breakfast items, snacks, alcohol, and non-perishables. (We stayed at the Haborside Timeshare, so we had a full kitchen.) DH thought I was crazy. When the airline charged us a $50 overweight fee, he glared at me. Bring as much food as you will think you will use; it is worth paying the overweight fee.

After our first meal out at Atlantis, DH was telling other people at the pool how smart I was for bringing so much food.
 

I read an ebook from Amazon once about cheap trips to Atlantis..sorry I don't remember any details, but I think one of the tips was to stay next door to the actual resort (holiday inn maybe?) and then pay a daily pool use fee,or something like that....maybe you can find it if you check their bookstore....it was short, but interesting.....
 
Thread from earlier this year discussing his subject.

I received a couple requests/PMs for this advice, so I decided to start a dedicated thread on ways to vacation at Atlantis-Paradise Island Bahamas, for less. My tips:

1. Harborside timeshares....renting directly from owners, you can get a week at Atlantis for less. On places like TUG or RedWeek, you can connect directly with an owner and get a deal...or book through an agent like Family Fun at Atlantis, and have the security of a professional broker/business. Harborside units have cooking facilities so you don't have to eat out.

Atlantis access is included in a Harborside rental, so you don't have another $1,000 for park tickets once you get there. The downside of renting Harborside is you can only book in week long increments.

2. Comfort Suites-Paradise Island...usually cheaper than the traditional Atlantis towers, but same access to facilities. Plus, includes breakfast and wifi, which can be a $100+ per day savings for families.

Since its part of the Comfort Suites chains, they sometimes run specials, and nightly rates can move around.

3. Eat cheap...Atlantis is known for having expensive food. Very true, but the problem isn't so much everything's is expensive as it is that there are only a few places that are inexpensive. At dinner time, the only counter-service type place is the pizzeria...or the Quiznos. Yeah, its not glamorous to eat here, but it's decent quality taste and keeps you full.

Throw in a night at Johnny Rockets and you can feed your family for much less than the $75+ a person places that are the fine dining venues. Throw in a nicer family style meal at Carmines or Vergil's, and you can stretch one dinner into two.

4. And don't do the meal plan. Its priced such that if you go light on a single meal on your trip, it offers no savings. Both the gourmet and value plans are not priced for value but for convenience. Pay as you go, have some pizza or burgers for dinner a few nights and save.

Now if the meal plan is thrown in for free for kids, it's worth evaluating, but you still have to consider how you plan to eat. For most people, the meal plan pre-locks you into paying for much more food than you'll actually eat. Meal plan could be a value with kids for free, but still consider whether you normally eat a full-Monty buffet every breakfast and dinner of a vacation.

5. Your room pays for all the fun you really need. Unlike Disney or other theme parks, once you pay for your room, you *can be* done at Atlantis. Yes, there are excursions and dolphin experiences that cost extra....you don't have to do these to have a good time. I haven't been on an excursion in 10 years, and we've only done a dolphin experience once! And we go back annually and have enough fun that we want to go back again and again.

Plus there are lots of free activities: movie theater, trivia games, live music, touring the aquariums, and just a nice walk on the beach. Now people who need a snorkeling trip one day, jet skis the next, and a dolphin visit the next aren't going to find any place to vacation cheaply!

6. My traditional advice for people is to book airfare separately from you hotel package. This is because Atlantis and the CS have a habit of putting out significant near-term discounts. If your airfare is included in a package, you can't rebook your hotel at lower rates, but a room-only package has pretty lenient cancellation policies. You then just re-book at the new rates.

I tell people to buy airfare when they find a good price, then book a room rate they are comfortable paying. Then keep an eye out for the discounts, sometime around three months before a trip. or if you live somewhere that has reasonable airfare to Nassau, do it on short notice.

7. Subscribe to Travel Zoo newsletter (free). Occasionally, Atlantis offers discounts through codes they exclusively advertise on Travel Zoo. Pus, Travel Zoo keeps pretty good track of Atlantis' current general public discounts.

8. You a rated gambler? Atlantis will advance you comped rooms if you have an elite card from certain casinos. Hit the required play and get your room for free.

9. Go in the fall...aka hurricane season. Ocean water is warm, and the weather is nice, there's just the risk of a big storm. And rates are cheapest in September. Wife and I were actually at Atlantis once when a tropical storm (later grew to be a hurricane) passed through. Around noon, they closed own the outdoor activities and an secured loose stuff outside. Storm passed through late afternoon into the midnight hours. By 11 AM the next day, most pools were open for business and the skies were clear.

I'm happy to answer with questions.

ETA: And for a great set of Atlantis pictures, from Ricky Brigante the Inside the Magic pod-caster, click here.
 
I think one of the tips was to stay next door to the actual resort (holiday inn maybe?) and then pay a daily pool use fee,or something like that
The Comfort Suites has access to Atlantis included, no place else except the super-luxury Ocean Club. Day passes are impractical as they are greater than $120 per day per person, and not always available, depending on Atlantis' occupancy and cruiser sales.
 
I had planned to stay at the value tower (beach tower) but after reading too many reviews about it being very run down and a very long walk from water park, restaurants, etc. I decided to spend a substantial bit more to be in the royal tower which is newer (albeit still old) and much closer to the bulk of the action so looking for other areas to save. Also if anybody has experience with beach towers there is still a bit of time to change reservation.
Please don't focus on just negative reviews...most of the reviews on TA are positive.

The complaints about Beach Tower being run-down are like people complaining about Disney hotels being run down: they're not at all run-down, some people just have unrealistic expectations. I've personally stayed in the Beach and Coral Tower, plus Harborside timeshares, and have had friends and family (I've been in the rooms) stay in Royal and Reef. The more you pay the more luxurious the room, but all the rooms are quite nice. Rooms in the Beach and Coral are slightly smaller than Royal, with a smaller bathroom. But all are generally well maintained and are regularly renovated.

There's no getting around lots of walking at Atlantis. If you are close to the water features, then you are far from the Marina Village, where most of the non-casino evening activity is. I actually like being over in the area between the Coral and Beach, where there is a regular lazy river and lots of outdoor sea-life lagoons. I often will spend part of the day there, and another part of the day over in the Aquventure area.
 












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