- Joined
- Feb 11, 2007
- Messages
- 17,547
Currently the Disney website says that only 2 guests are allowed per rider switch pass. Not sure if that is a change or if it has always read that way. I know we have used rider swap in the past and 3 were let on with the second group.
It is incorrect, at least for now. The site has rarely been correct on this (and many other things
)It certainly isn't the intent, but it's been around a while...it's the original "double dipping". It doesn't work well in all instances, like I illustrated above. But it made things easier for parents and CMs. It leaves this loophole though.As for the original question, who knows? I don't think the intent of rider swap is to allow the essential doubling of FP+ reservations, but reading the posts here people were obviously doing it with FP. It seems like the way it should operate is that all the adults that want to ride the ride make FP+ reservations and then swap at the entrance. But that may be too hard for Disney to enforce.
Here's an old post I had made that explained what kind of advantage you could get over regular guests and why it may have been policy to require swapping a FP for a RS pass (I later learned that there was NO policy on this):
It all depends on what you think the intent of Rider Switch is. My opinion is that it is to help minimize how long a group with a small child have to wait for everyone to ride an attraction. Otherwise without using Fastpasses (because you can't realistically use Fastpass every time) you'd have to wait 2xStandby. With RS, you wait 1xStandby and 1xFastpass. This is STILL longer than you'd wait if you could all go on the ride together.
However, it is NOT meant to give eligible groups an ADVANTAGE over other guests either. Requiring everyone to have a FP if the first group is going to use a FP makes sense here. Otherwise FPs can be held for other attractions simultaneously and you would get through attractions significantly FASTER than another guest. But the only advantage you get in this case is that you don't have to ride alone.
Take this example: 2 Adults, 9 year old and 3 year old. Standby wait is 50 minutes, FP wait is 10 at both Splash Mountain and Big Thunder Mountain. Next Fastpass times are at least two hours away.
If the 3 year old is tall enough to ride both attractions, you could either ride both standby (total wait time: 100 minutes), or get FPs for one and ride standby on the other (total wait time: 60 minutes). So at best you can get through in 60 minutes. Everyone gets 1 ride on each attraction.
Now, if the 3 year old was not eligible to ride and there was no form of rider swap available, the wait time now goes up to 200 minutes for each adult to get through the standby lines! But the 9yo gets a couple extra rides.
Now, if the 3 year old is not eligible in either case and Rider Switch is used...
First case, Standby only: You approach and get RS pass. One adult and 9yo ride SplM standby, then other adult uses the RS pass and enters FP line with 9yo riding again: total wait time 60 minutes. Repeat at BTM, another 60 minutes - total wait time: 120 minutes. The group gets a 20 minute "munchkin penalty", but its still 80 minutes less than if there wasn't an option.
Now add FP...if the waiting adult is required to have a FP as well, then you need to get 3 FPs for one attraction - you can get a 4th for something else but its only one so its a minor perk. Trade one FP for the RS pass, and use the other two. When they return, use the RS pass. Wait time so far: 20 minutes. Then ride the other attraction via standby and RS. Wait time: 60 minutes, for a total of 80 minutes. 40 minutes saved, and the 9yo gets an extra ride.
Now, if the waiting adult is NOT required to get a FP...
Take two tickets and get two FPs for SplM, and take the other two and get two FPs for BTM. Assume they have roughly the same return time.
Do the FP/RS wait games on both attractions. Total wait time: 40 minutes!!!! That is a HECK of an advantage, using a single FP cycle when others would have to wait two cycles to collect them to get the same wait times.