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- Jan 3, 2001
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Disney is screwing American families (NY Post article)
http://nypost.com/2016/03/01/disney-is-screwing-american-families/
http://nypost.com/2016/03/01/disney-is-screwing-american-families/
They raised the 7-day base ticket by $37. For a family of 5 that is less than $200. If you are already spending $5,000+ for your vacation are you really going to let $200 ruin your experience? I know some people complain becasue they can, but $200 is not that big of a deal at the end of the day.
Who is your family of 5? Adults only/children 10 and up...children 9 and under? Are your figures including taxes?They raised the 7-day base ticket by $37. For a family of 5 that is less than $200. If you are already spending $5,000+ for your vacation are you really going to let $200 ruin your experience? I know some people complain becasue they can, but $200 is not that big of a deal at the end of the day.
however the reason people are nervous about it is there is a general concensus that the tiered will get to the multi-day tickets eventually
Oh I didn't say it wouldn't be difficult but if you look around the boards and see the responses epecially from those very knowledgable they all say it is extremely likely that it will get to multi-day tickets..that wasn't me saying it will that was me looking at all the responses.I'm not sure exactly how they are going to do this with multi-day tix. For example, in March, if you bought a 10 day ticket and started using on the 3rd, you'd be using it on value, regular, and peak season days. Having you pay the difference (or refunding you the difference) would be a nightmare logistically. I also don't see them requiring you to know exactly when you are going to use your tickets months in advance. Again, too many people's plans will change slightly creating all sorts of logistical headaches. I think they will just keep raising the prices of the multi-day tix. If someone can think of a workable way they could go to tired multi-day tix, I'd love to hear it.
I don't mean to be long-winded here (and don't take me putting in the figures from my local amusement park the wrong way they were just there to provide an example) but my point is basically tons and tons of places (including just about all other amusement/theme/water parks that I can honestly think of) are priced in that a 1-day ticket is quite a premium because you are only going there for 1-day. The more you stay the more you play..in general.
Yes, agreed. Plus for a lot of places they give you a discounted price for picking a date ahead of time instead of buying an anytime ticket. Not to mention the 15-20 for parking. But I guess my point is, if you're thinking "Today is nice, let's go to [Local Amusement Park]!" With a family of four, you'll pay out the wazoo for parking, tickets at the booth, lots of meals, snacks, and drinks before all is said and done. Not only that, you're there with tons of other people who had the same idea and may or may not be passholders who come once or twice a month, as we do with the local park. The lack of research or knowledge of the price vs value is going to hurt once you're already there looking at those prices. I can only imagine the folks who happen to be in town or a couple hours away and think it would be a fun idea to take an impromptu visit to Disney.
I agree on that part there is little flexibility to those who want a random trip to WDW without spending some $$ but I guess my point it that you'll run into that just about everywhere and WDW is no different.
They raised the 7-day base ticket by $37. For a family of 5 that is less than $200. If you are already spending $5,000+ for your vacation are you really going to let $200 ruin your experience? I know some people complain becasue they can, but $200 is not that big of a deal at the end of the day.
They raised the 7-day base ticket by $37. For a family of 5 that is less than $200. If you are already spending $5,000+ for your vacation are you really going to let $200 ruin your experience? I know some people complain becasue they can, but $200 is not that big of a deal at the end of the day.
Bob Iger feels pretty good about the price increase
http://www.latimes.com/entertainmen...isney-shareholder-meeting-20160303-story.html
For example, a 7-day base MYW ticket increased by 10.5%, 2% more than the price of a one-day Magic Kingdom ticket after taking into account the ratio of Value, Regular, and Peak days.Yes, I believe I saw the 7-day pass increase was quite high.