BriarRosie
<font color=blue>Creator of Tag Fairy Haiku:<br>Cl
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2002
- Messages
- 11,164
I'm willing to pay to park, although that doesn't seem particularly reasonable since we're coming to eat/spend. We will already have paid for parking at one of the Disney World parks that day, so paying a second time seems odd. I assume if we change our ADR to Narcoossee's, we can dine there without paying for parking or having a very long walk? Or do you have to pay to park any time you eat at a Disney restaurant if you are staying off-site?
Assuming we'll have to pay, I am just trying to figure out the closest *legal* parking lot to Bistro. I'm not an experienced Disney-goer, but I assume that the parks are eager to allow diners to park somewhere nearby their restaurants - or maybe not? I would think that's only reasonable...
If there really is no good way to get there from offsite, we'll definitely cancel. Not the end of the world - Manhattan has pretty good French food, after all.It's just food.
You don't have to pay to park at Disney-owned resorts if you're dining at that resort's restaurants and leaving within the 3 hour parking limit. Because Bistro de Paris is inside Epcot, the closest "legal" spot is a theme park lot. If you want to park legally, and closer than the Epcot lot, you can park at Disney's Hollywood Studios (showing the parking receipt you had from paying the first time that day) and take the boat to Epcot's International Gateway. However, that route is REALLY SLOW. I know it can probably take a half hour after the boat arrives.
And forget about Narcoossee's if you don't want to pay to park or walk. The self-parking lot for the Grand Floridian is a long walk across a street to the main hotel entrance. You'd be better off parking at Epcot!
Thanks, all. We're cancelling the ADR there, now that we know that it's "not set up to be a convenient place to dine." We didn't realize that the restaurants inside the parks are primarily intended for on-site guests. That's not at all the impression you get when you read the guidebooks, but it's really good to know. Thanks to all who posted!
I guess that explains why ADRs at Bistro were wide open every night of next week! I should have known there was a reason.![]()
No, that's not the case at all. All the restaurants at WDW are open to all guests, whether they are staying onsite, offsite, or day visitors. Bistro de Paris doesn't accept the Disney Dining Plan, which is why I think you have luck booking it. They don't have a kids' menu, either. They've been allowing kids to order from the Chefs de France kids' menu.