I have to agree that the prices are getting extreme for camping, even with some of the upgrades they are doing. However, it does have some off sets which keeps me coming back regardless. I'm going in June for 17 nights in a partial. With
AAA discount for 4 adults and 3 children (well actually 2 of those children are Diseny Adults so that's an extra $30 a night tacked on which is extreme in my view), I'm paying 1003.24 for those 17 nights. That figures up to about $60 a night (at least I hope they already added in the extra adult fee). Now we tent camp so that's 7 people out of a possible 10 for $60 a night at Disney which isn't bad.
The real problem is that, the smaller the group the less of a value it gets to be. If it was just me and my son, then it would actually be more cost effective to fly down and stay in a value.
Still, I don't think I could consider anywhere else even a fraction of a vacation value that the Fort is. I would die of boredom at a regular campground anywhere else after being spoiled at FW. Even figuring in PAP's (which I stretch out and only buy every 3rd year), the PAP's average out to about $18 per day. So for camping, it runs ~$100 a day with tickets for me and him for a WDW vacation. Plus food and souvenirs of course.
I don't count my parents, sister, niece, and nephew in the equation because they just come along for the ride although I do usually buy their tickets as well. I would be there regardless so I just count the two of us for estimating cost of vacation.
I've considered things like renting/buying a ski/fishing boat and doing weekends at a local lake/camp ground but it's not actually any cheaper when you figure everything in and not as much to do in the long run. Even going someplace like the Smoky Mountains and camping for that length of time doesn't average out that much cheaper. A good camp site there in the summer will be at least $40-50 a night or over twice that for a decent motel; add in the fact that all there is to really do is shop, visit over priced arcades/racing carts, DollyWood (a few decent rides which get boring after a couple days), or hiking (which I love but even it gets old) and you end up spending just as much, if not more money.
Really the only price point justification I've been able to come up with is the gas cost to drive round trip to Orlando and even that's off set by the fact that when you get there, you park your car/truck and don't spend a dime on gas for the next two weeks.
So for now, I can't justify going anywhere else for the money I spend. If I'm going to take a vacation at all (and not just stay at home) then it might as well be to the Happiest Place On Earth
