rach2674 said:I know I'm probably going to get bashed for saying this, but I've been wanting to get the dining plan myself sometime and wondering the same thing. What I was thinking of doing is tell them there is only an Adult and child in the room...instead of two adults and a child. Since we all have our passes and only live 2 hours from Orlando, I'm thinking I can just check in with my daughter and my husband can stay in the car and pretend he's not there. We would never eat that much food and share meals so often. I know it's probably "illegal" to do that, but that's the only solution I've been able to come up with. Of course that probably doesn't work for anyone who is flying in because you're buying a vacation package with everything.
Any opinions on that?? (Ducking so I don't get pelted)
Rachel
instead of wasting more food.I can surely understand and respect your preference in that regard, but I'm sure you'd agree that that's really something best left up to them to decide -- their restaurants, their profit, their rules.In my opinion I'd rather lower Disney's tiny profit margininstead of wasting more food.


Hi Tophee!tophee99 said:Ok, this might seem like a rather goofy question, but if we were to purchase the DDP for me, dh and 1 ds, could the other ds share? There is no way they would eat that much food between them, so I am hoping that they can share!!
thanks.
Tophee
to the DIS!If you check past threads in the forum, you'll find that that has been questioned a great deal. It isn't acceptable either.no one questions this?
texasthree said:I am not flaming but question........isnt buying childrens credits and using them towards adult meals also dishonest? People are jumping on the lady that just wants to buy 2 and share with her husband but the person who bought childrens credits and used them for adult meals, no one questions this? I read on a a trip report of 2 adults and 2 children that they paid for their childrens meals oop and used all the credits for adult meals.

bicker said:I think the key thing to keep in mind is that for all things there is a single price, the regular price, but for some things Disney offers a discount for young children. They don't have to offer the discount -- they do so because their research shows that by offering the discount for young children they get more adults to make the purchase. They draw the line where offering the discount is no longer is worth it in terms of how it affects overall revenue.
