Is it possible Disney will stop bridging tickets?

Amanda999

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Apr 25, 2013
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Anyone think there's a risk of Disney no longer bridging tickets (e.g., bought from UT) at the then-current ticket price? (I plan to buy 10 day hop UT tickets, use them day 1 of trip in June 2016, then upgrade to an AP.)

I would save an extra $20 per person ($60 total) if I buy from UT (vs. the package from Disney I now have - with old ticket prices).

If there is a risk of this - especially if there's a chance they won't permit me to upgrade to an AP from UT tix - then its not worth (potentially) saving $60 to me. (UT does take returns, for non- e-tix - but there's a 5% fee.) I wouldn't be interested in holding onto 10 day tix for a future year's trip.

TIA
 
Unlikely to stop price-bridging.

It would render their authorized ticket resellers to selling "second-class tickets."
Disney benefits from having the ticket resellers.

That said, Disney has been making a lot of strange decisions of late.
 
I don't think so but they have made the first step to expiring unused tickets with this 1 day price change. I would assume as long as you can use the ticket to get into the park then it would be price bridged and I don't see that changing for upgrades to other types of tickets. The new 1 year expiration and then paying the difference to upgrade an expired ticket to current price is where this really gets interesting. I wonder what will happen with a resold ticket that expires, do you pay the wholesale to new price difference or will that get bridged to the previous non-expired retail price.
 
Thanks, Robo. (as always; I often appreciate your responses in many threads here - I 'like' you alot!) Always some risk I guess of policy changes. $60 is real coin, but not worth risking buying $1,200+ of tickets that I have to save for a year or two to use.
 

I would be okay if Disney eventually stopped price bridging, but I will be ticked if they suddenly announce that all older unused tickets expire within a year.
 
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I would be okay if Disney eventually stopped price bridging, but I will be ticked if they suddenly announce that all older unused tickets expire within a year of purchase.

There is a big difference between what some would call "expire" and what I would call "going dormant."

If a new ticket ceases to allow entry after a year or so, but Disney will let you use what you paid for that "dormant" ticket towards a new, working ticket, that is not a tragedy.

Some places simply won't accept an out-of-date ticket.
THAT would be a tragedy.
 
There is a big difference between what some would call "expire" and what I would call "going dormant."

If a new ticket ceases to allow entry after a year or so, but Disney will let you use what you paid for that "dormant" ticket towards a new, working ticket, that is not a tragedy
.

Some places simply won't accept an out-of-date ticket.
THAT would be a tragedy.

That's what I'm saying.
 
That's what I'm saying.

I'm actually surprised that Disney has not always done this, anyway…
But, it is still unlikely in my mind that they would start doing this.
 
I'm actually surprised that Disney has not always done this, anyway…
But, it is still unlikely in my mind that they would start doing this.
I do hope price bridging does continue. But I really, really hope my older unused tickets don't start expiring.
 


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