Do you think Disneyland will lower it's prices in 2026 now that Early Entry will be eliminated in January?

Will we see lower prices for Disneyland Tickets in 2026 due to the elimination of Early Entry?

  • Yes

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No

    Votes: 111 96.5%
  • Maybe

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I don't think so

    Votes: 4 3.5%

  • Total voters
    115
  • This poll will close: .
How often do you normally visit Disneyland Resort?
Not often cos i live a long way away. But when I do it would be a big trip of 4-6 nights staying on site. We treat it as a vacation holiday not an all day park holiday. Which means early entry is a key to our vacation enabling us to spend only a morning at the park and then the afternoon at the resort or off on a half day trip. We dont think theme park rides are worth queing for more then 15 mins thus early entry and lightening lanes is key to our holiday. Without both we wont enjoy the parks.

There is also no value in staying at expensive disney resorts now that early entry is gone. And staying at the cheap anaheim hotels doesnt appeal either. Thus it kind of kills the holiday for me.
 
Will people staying on site who plan to stay for 4 nights book 4 single hotel stays in a row so that can get 4 free lightening lanes per stay rather than 1? And will the hotels enable you to stay in the same room if you do so knowing that your trying to game the system?
 
Will people staying on site who plan to stay for 4 nights book 4 single hotel stays in a row so that can get 4 free lightening lanes per stay rather than 1? And will the hotels enable you to stay in the same room if you do so knowing that your trying to game the system?

They should, otherwise I hope they have fun paying housekeeping to clean a room 4 times for people staying 4 nights 🤣
Every morning, check in your bag, go to the park, come back every night to a fresh room, get your bag delivered again. 4x the bell services used and 4x the housekeeping for a 4 day stay 🤣

They really should have made it one per day. One per trip is asking for people to game the system, which will raise DL's costs.
 
They should, otherwise I hope they have fun paying housekeeping to clean a room 4 times for people staying 4 nights 🤣
Every morning, check in your bag, go to the park, come back every night to a fresh room, get your bag delivered again. 4x the bell services used and 4x the housekeeping for a 4 day stay 🤣

They really should have made it one per day. One per trip is asking for people to game the system, which will raise DL's costs.
Lol I forgot in america that hotels have stopped daily cleaning services. I guess they will prefer to keep you in the same room then.

Going to be very weird to book 5 single days in a row and then talk with reception with a straight face like you arent completely crazy.
 

Given how expensive the onsite hotels are, I don't see folks gaming this much to get a single lightening lane w a value of maybe $10 per person. I'd think whoever is shelling out $500-$1000/night for a hotel is likely going to buy LLMP anyway so the single LLMP (if per stay or per day) seems ridiculous to me.

Agree getting rid of EE is a bad idea. Better if they had gone back to a 60 min EE that is also open to some ticket holders. I recall long ago 3 day hoppers would include 1 EE day and EE was an hour long. That was a great benefit.
 
Going to be very weird to book 5 single days in a row and then talk with reception with a straight face like you arent completely crazy.
I think the hotel CMs will know exactly what's going on, and will just shrug and do their job.

It will be interesting to hear reports from anyone who actually does book multiple single-night stays. How the CMs react, whether the guests have to keep changing rooms, etc.
 
Disneyland will probably set a restriction 1 LL per guest per stay. Offer available per check-in and not available for another 30/60 days..
Eliminates the all the single night booking.
 
Seems to me that they’re simply trying to, over time, price out most middle class families. Early Entry and free Fastpasses were two ways in which you could, as “normal” family, use sweat equity (or, in case of EE, get up insanely early “equity”) to create an experience for your (penny pinching) family that is otherwise only accessible to VIPs with plenty of disposable income. The below linked article is from 2016, and it seems to me that things have gotten progressively worse from there.

I believe that turning the parks into a playground for the rich and the bored comes at a great loss. Part of the charm of the parks, I feel, is that they are a meeting place for people from all walks of life, those who had to save up for the trip of a lifetime, those who just whip out their credit card and pay any price, and everyone in between these two extremes.

I’m also wondering if Disney isn’t shooting themselves in the foot with their insatiable greed. Just think back of the obscene-level luxury Star Wars “experience” hotel that they tried to market in Florida, which folded, because they had simply overestimated what pricing they can get away with and how much demand there actual is for what they have to offer.

https://www.csmonitor.com/layout/se...s-theme-parks-become-playgrounds-for-the-rich
 
Seems to me that they’re simply trying to, over time, price out most middle class families.
Thanks for the link to the Monitor article. That's a good newspaper that I often forget about.

The NY Times recently ran an opinion piece on the same topic. The author used Disney as a hook, but noted that focusing on higher-net-worth customers is happening at many companies. Here are some excerpts:
For most of the park’s history, Disney was priced to welcome people across the income spectrum, embracing the motto “Everyone is a V.I.P.” In doing so, it created a shared American culture by providing the same experience to every guest...

That middle class has so eroded in size and in purchasing power — and the wealth of our top earners has so exploded — that America’s most important market today is its affluent. As more companies tailor their offerings to the top, the experiences we once shared are increasingly differentiated by how much we have.

Data is part of what’s driving this shift. The rise of the internet, the algorithm, the smartphone and now artificial intelligence are giving corporations the tools to target the fast-growing masses of high-net-worth Americans with increasing ease. As a management consultant, I’ve worked with dozens of companies making this very transition. Many of our biggest private institutions are now focused on selling the privileged a markedly better experience, leaving everyone else to either give up — or fight to keep up.

Disney’s ethos began to change in the 1990s as it increased its luxury offerings, but only after the economic shock of the pandemic did the company seem to more fully abandon any pretense of being a middle-class institution. A Disney vacation today is “for the top 20 percent of American households — really, if I’m honest, maybe the top 10 percent or 5 percent,” said Len Testa, a computer scientist whose “Unofficial Guide” books and website Touring Plans offer advice on how to manage crowds and minimize waiting in line. “Disney positions itself as the all-American vacation. The irony is that most Americans can’t afford it.”
 
No way! According to what they said, they eliminated it because no one was using it. That means that all that money they spent on paying the Cast Members to show up 1/2 hour earlier, extra electricity costs, why-those poor Disney folks were losing money! And now they're giving you a whole LL to use on one ride during your stay. Sounds like they deserve to raise prices a little at least. [Tongue firmly in cheek]
 
I’m also wondering if Disney isn’t shooting themselves in the foot with their insatiable greed. Just think back of the obscene-level luxury Star Wars “experience” hotel that they tried to market in Florida, which folded, because they had simply overestimated what pricing they can get away with and how much demand there actual is for what they have to offer.
The closure of the Starcruiser was a sad day for SW fans. Unless you've been on the voyage, you would never  ever understand the level of experience that was offered. I did not go (because I only saw 1.5 of all the SW movies and didn't want to look dumb on the ship. A mistake that I regret), but both of my kids along with numerous family members & friends went. No one ever said it was not worth the price. I'm happy for the people who had the opportunity to experience it. I wish people wouldn't celebrate the demise of something they don't understand.
 












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