
There were plenty of families on the budget board a decade ago with relatively modest incomes and lifestyles who found Disney to be affordable. We went basically every year from 2008-2019. Income was above $50k starting in 2014, but our expenses also went up because we moved to a more expensive state.
The YES tickets were just one example (that we probably used 3 or 4 times, not every trip). That said, anyone who had a child between the ages of 5-17 had access to the YES program. In the past they offered Individual Enrollment which was open to anyone. Even if only one child did a class, every member of your family could purchase the discounted tickets. They no longer offer that. Which was my point. There used to be various discounts that you could find by doing just a little bit of research to be able to make the trip more affordable for an average family.
I understand that prices go up over time with inflation, but I think the reason people are bothered by Disney pricing specifically is because it has increased at a much more rapid rate than everything else. The price of our first trip today (same room and tickets based on the ages kids were back in 2008) is currently over 3 times the price we paid. (We bought a package from Disney for that trip, not YES tickets or anything) The cumulative price change from then to now should be about 35% not 300%.