Yes, by taking people who would otherwise stay off site.Free dining is meant to increase occupancy at WDW resorts.
If it doesn't increase crowds then I wonder what the benefit to Disney would be?
If it doesn't increase crowds then I wonder what the benefit to Disney would be?
It doesn't increase park crowds at all. It does make ADRs harder to get.
If the offer is as suggested, you may be okay. They are suggesting that free TS dining will only be available for deluxe resort reservations. That means that a lot of folks will have to accept the QS dining plan as many cannot afford to upgrade to the regular DDP. This might result in a whole lot of ADRs being cancelled. It may also result in empty moderate resorts.This is my fear. My heart sank when I saw they were offering it during our dates. I only want 3 ADRs, but I am worried I won't even get those.
If the offer is as suggested, you may be okay. They are suggesting that free TS dining will only be available for deluxe resort reservations. That means that a lot of folks will have to accept the QS dining plan as many cannot afford to upgrade to the regular DDP. This might result in a whole lot of ADRs being cancelled. It may also result in empty moderate resorts.
I assume the "payment" is less than retail though. We've had 4 Disney adults in one room at POR under free dining (regular DDP) and the retail value of the DDP was significantly more than the room's rack rate.The accounting is the key. The "payment" for free dining comes from resort GM budgets. This is also why resort GMs are the ones who determine what inventory becomes eligible for what dates, as the cost of free dining comes off THEIR P&L. The restaurants are still paid by DDP.
I kind of hope it's not offered during our week -Dec16. That week is probably packed enough!
The restaurants receive their contracted payment, period. While that is likely less than the cost of DDP reatil, it still comes out of resort P&L and is non-zero.I assume the "payment" is less than retail though. We've had 4 Disney adults in one room at POR under free dining (regular DDP) and the retail value of the DDP was significantly more than the room's rack rate.