It's all relative. For us, driving to FL, staying offsite, cooking many of our meals, and carrying food into the parks, Disney was still far and away the most expensive US vacation I've ever been on. It was a GREAT time, but given the cost, it was just a so-so value. Had we flown, stayed onsite, and eaten Disney meals, it would have been anything BUT a good value
You bring up a valid point: You can lower the cost of a Disney trip by making budget choices -- driving, staying off site, bringing your own food. But the ticket prices still make it an expensive trip, when compared to your other options.
I love Disney and I love going. Not sure if it is a good "value". I guess I don't care all that much about "value" on vacations. We love going and if we can make it work and afford it, then we will continue to go. It is one trip all 6 of us enjoy. It is certainly more than some vacations and less then others!
I agree that value for the dollar, bang for the buck, getting a good deal isn't my #1 consideration when I'm planning a vacation . . . but it IS the subject of this discussion.
Anything, no matter what the price, "is a good value" if the customer thinks the product/service is worth more then what they're paying. Disney certainly offers value to the OP, and many posters on DIS.
I don't know. I'm willing to pay for certain things, even though I acknowledge they are expensive choices.
Examples:
- When we went out West, we took a Buffalo Safari in Custer State Park. Our guide drove us around the park in a jeep, showing us the buffalo up close and telling us fascinating things about how they live and how the park manages them. That cost something like $400 for the four of us (plus a fat tip, which the guide well deserved), and it lasted perhaps an hour and a half, but it is something about which we still talk. It wasn't a particularly
good value; rather, it was a worthwhile splurge.
- Our daughter wanted to attend a university two hours away. She could've lived at home and commuted to a closer school, a school that -- honestly -- would've given her the same quality education. But she wanted the experience of going away to school, and she preferred the more distant choice. It's not a
good value for us, but she love it and is succeeding academically.
I think that the best value for my entertainment dollar is probably still a good book from the library, a bubble bath, and a glass of wine. The combination of Netflix,
Amazon Prime and RedBox is a darn good deal as well. For my get away vacation, the best value for my entertainment dollar is a friends vacation home - we do pay, but its not much and its beautiful. I personally love museums, which are almost always a bargain compared to Disney or a sporting event - and a week away in a different city in a moderate hotel visiting museums and eating in local spots is almost always cheaper than Disney. There are always cheap concerts and plays at the high schools and colleges around town. In fact, while we enjoy Disney, I can't think of entertainment and vacation options we've done that are less of a value - both emotionally and financially - it was a nice easy trip when the kids were little and had emotional and effort value there.
Yes, this captures the spirit of "good value". I think a lot of people are talking about "it's worth the cost to me" rather than "good value". I continue to think many people should be saying, "Disney is a carefully chosen, worthwhile splurge".
I avoid state or county fairs for the reasons you stated. I paid almost $10 for one funnel cake at a fair--outrageous! The rides are ordinary
We went to the State Fair a couple years ago, and that was a particularly BAD value! The entertainment value was rather low, and everything was expensive. I'm not sorry we went -- once -- but we probably won't return. We also won't ride rides at places like that -- not rides that're disassembled and thrown up in another location every couple weeks.