New credit card guarantees. Restaurant list, policy & common questions in 1st post

A few days ago I needed to modify a reservation I had made at Citrico's since Delta changed our flight times and I didn't think we could make it in time.

I was asked to give a CC hold for this reservation. Since we are coming in December I was concerned about weather being a factor with flight delays or flights canceling so I asked the CM "what if I can't give the 24 hour notice"? She said to call as soon as we would know of any delay and the reservation would be held for us. She never would say that my CC wouldn't be charged if circumstances beyond my control kept us from keeping the ressie.

This may have already been addressed in the previous pages that I haven't read but surely Disney will make exemptions for sickness and flight delays. What do you guys think?
 
An alarm clock is your friend. ;)

You're words were actually, "So, now, If I find out I have no appetite shortly before my ADR (which happens), I have to either order and pay for food that will go in the trash (thus taking up server, host(ess), chef time and materials), or pay $10 pp? Since I didn't realize that I wouldn't be hungry enough for a meal until just a few hours before it (if that, but I'd be happy if the timeframe were just a couple hours), and this certainly wouldn't qualify for "Extreme Circumstances", there's no way I could get out of paying this."
Waking up for it is even more of a friend ;). (I slept through it).

But yeah, like I thought, it was a what-if. And the truth of the matter is, I wasn't hungry enough for a meal for my last 3 days of my recent trip. That's abnormal. I did go to the ADRs and picked at the meals, but more so because my mind wanted the food I'd been waiting for, not because I needed it.

Do you really think you should be able to get out of an ADR last minute, because you've decided to eat more than you can hold? What about the person that wanted the ADR you no longer want, but couldn't get in? Their vacation has been negatively affected, so you could book more meals than you could actually eat. How can people not see why stuff like this is a problem?
Waking up for it is even more of a friend ;). (I slept through it).

But yeah, like I thought, it was a what-if.

In my specific case, it wasn't so much of an eating more than I can hold. It's probably closer to not feeling well, as it happens several times a year where I simply won't be hungry for 2, 3, or 4 days. I'll usually try to get something so I don't end up sick, but certainly not a full meal. This is what happened last trip. I went 4 days without feeling hungry and not really eating a full meal. While I did show up at ADRs, I mostly picked at my food and ate very little of it, all without snacking. So, just because someone says "I'm not hungry" doesn't necessarily mean it's something they could have controlled by not eating so much before that.

I could also say "Do you really think you should be able to make an ADR because you waited until the last minute", but I won't ;).

I don't just think my family has to show up for every ADR I make. I think I have to show up for everything I book in life & obligate myself to. To me, the right people to punish are those who will book things, then not feel completely obligated to follow through, regardless of how many commitments they've signed up for.
I feel the same, but to a point. That point is on the wrong side of Disney dining apparently. Doctors, dentists, work, personal obligations, etc, are all one thing. A meal at Disney is something different, especially since Disney goes on record to state that ADRs are NOT reservations. If they did treat them as such, I may have a slightly different outlook (though, the "full day" policy is still asinine). Looks like Disney Dining just isn't for me anymore. I'll now just do 10 days without going to the TS restaurants but a couple times. I'll save money, take more pictures, see more stuff, and have more money when I come home. Works for me. Of course, I'm now taking up the same space (in the whole of the Disney resort) while putting forth less money. So I matter even less in Disney's eyes now.


I don't see that at all. The info received states there will be an exemption for serious illness & travel delays. These are the two things beyond the guests control. If it were nothing but an additional source of revenue, they wouldn't be making exceptions. The fact is, with effort, most others things can be controlled.
Travel delays and "serious illness/injury" are likely to be outliers. They don't happen enough to really matter, thus the cost of waiving those is likely very low. It's tossing you crumbs and calling them cookies. If they were really concerned about guest experience, they'd realize what guests actually experience.

I agree the website needs to be much more clear on the policy requirements. Unfortunately, people have always found ways around them catching double bookings. If people really want to cheat, it's pretty much impossible to stop them from doing so.
The hammer approach never works either. We're now all about stopping families from either dining at these locations, or from having any unexpected things coming up. We're not addressing the problem. There are methods that could be put in place that would maintain guest satisfaction without punishing those who intend to use the system the "correct" way. I outlined several already. Some of these would have been easy to implement (the 4-6 hour window, yeah, that's likely a value in a database somewhere). Some of the others may have been trickier (especially the multiple account one), but there are still ways to combat that without making it too difficult on those using the system in the proper ways. These should have been tried first, before they decided to bring the hammer down on the families that are not the root of the problem.

In Jan/Feb there could be more last minute opportunities to get into another restaurant that's closer to where a guest wants to be, which results in them not showing at the restaurant they originally booked. In the busier months, they're not as much availability at other restaurants. I don't know that for sure though. It's purely speculation on my part.
That's my point. Just saying that the range was 10% to 33% says nothing. It's useless numbers trying to prove a point to people who can't see past them. Those are potential factors, as is weather, as are the bugs that go around, as are the types of people that visit during those months.

Basically, everything that's been posted is speculation. The only people who know the truth are WDW employees, & we see what they've chosen to do to address the problem. To say we have a better solution, when we don't even know what the true problem is, proves we don't know what we're talking about.
Except logic and rational thinking tell us they jumped from "we may have a potential issue" to the current policy without any intermediate steps. They tried to cut back with that crappy window thing. That didn't work, so the next step logically should be... not this. Expand the window, attempt other website improvements to combat the real issues. Not just flat out charge a penalty, especially with a crazy cancellation window.

We're taught these simple problem solving steps in grade school. You start out with the minimal possible change needed, and then move up from there incrementally. In other words, you don't smash an ant with a sledgehammer.

This would be great, if it helped all guests. Unfortunately, it doesn't. It doesn't address early morning, same day ADRs at all. I realize this has been said before, but some of us think a shorter window won't address all issues. It will only really help those who want to cancel last minute.
It doesn't have to solve all of the issues to be a better solution, it simply has to solve the current ones better. While the shorter window may not perfectly address the breakfast situation, it addresses the other meals (which are many more in number and popularity) much better that the current (and now former) policy does. But, since Disney wants us to either have ESP and know when we'll get sick (but less than a "major illness") or just show up when we're sick (but again, less than a "major illness"), then it's not surprising the direction they went in. After all, this takes far less thought and effort and puts all the responsibility on the guests' shoulders. After all, they can be 30, 45, 60 minutes late in seating us, but god forbid that we're more than 15 minutes late in checking in, we're charged and deemed an abuser and looked down upon! "Maybe we can seat you, you'll have to wait a bit".
 
Did I miss the percentage of tables that were left open? I saw the 10-33% no show rate, but didn't see how many empty tables that translated to. What percentage had Disney Overbooked that restaurant when reporting the no-shows?
 
Did I miss the percentage of tables that were left open? I saw the 10-33% no show rate, but didn't see how many empty tables that translated to. What percentage had Disney Overbooked that restaurant when reporting the no-shows?

I'm sure it depends on the restaurant, but when we asked at Le Cellier a couple of years ago we were told that they overbook the restaurant by 30% just to cover no-shows and cancellations.
 

Wow, go away for a few days again and look at the pages added. I'm not going to take the time to quote all of the posts, but here are my random musings...

Tarheel - if you're going to quote and challenge comments, quote and challenge all of them, including the posts by Nicole and others that you don't have rebuttals for (or at least acknowledge them). I hate that kind of debating. Sorry to call you out, but you seem to be carrying the torch for "the other side".

No-show stats - source them from Disney before we can take them seriously. Otherwise it's just hearsay and speculation. Until you can source them, please stop quoting them for support/cause.

NLD - I like your customer service views. If you operated a business, I'm sure I would patronize it with your positions.

ADR timing - Disney used to have differing PS (Priority Seating, for newbies) windows for restaurants. One guy (Scott??) even made a web site for people to calculate their call-in dates. That was messy and I'm not in favor of going back.

ADR timing #2 - Disney had a 90 day PS policy for a while a few years ago. I'm sure many of us would prefer to go back to that vs 180 days. I know I would.

ADR timing #3 - DL doesn't open their reservations (I think they've been called reservations - not Advanced Dining Reservations - out there for years - even back in the PS days) until 60 days out. That's one reason why our DL trips are more enjoyable. 60 days out doesn't seem unreasonable to have an idea of what you want to do on a trip.

I am not going to change my ADR pattern at 180 days. I will likely still make 3/day and cancel them "at least one day in advance" while I'm there on the trip.

For the principle of the matter, I will show up at an ADR that I haven't canceled, be seated, then get up and leave. Disney's system is going to show me checked in (not a no-show) and I doubt they're going to go back and try to change my ADR to say I didn't show. If they do, they'll have a fight on their hands. If this forces a table minimum, so be it. This is how I will choose to fight what I think is an ignorant policy that went from 0-60 in one giant leap over a more reasonable step. And I don't care if you think that's childish/immature/whatever. I will be operating within the rules.

Now I'm probably going to really irritate a few people (sorry Tarheel, but I know you're one of them). I'll own up to canceling ADRs for not being hungry, having a good time at the pool, DD sleeping in towards the end of the trip, rainstorm, and all of the other poor/invalid "excuses" that have been cited. That's a vacation to me. And I'll put up the tens of thousands of dollars (probably over $50K when all added up) I've spent as a Disney customer over the past 10 years for my style of vacationing (and that doesn't include the 500 DVC points I've purchased over the past 3 years). And yeah, I do think my spending level and pattern matters, because Disney has made more money off me than most and I do feel that makes a difference. In most businesses' eyes, I'm a platinum/high roller/whatever you want to call it customer that every other business goes the extra step to take care of.

FLAME ON!!!:firefight
 
Wow, go away for a few days again and look at the pages added. I'm not going to take the time to quote all of the posts, but here are my random musings...

Tarheel - if you're going to quote and challenge comments, quote and challenge all of them, including the posts by Nicole and others that you don't have rebuttals for (or at least acknowledge them). I hate that kind of debating. Sorry to call you out, but you seem to be carrying the torch for "the other side".

No-show stats - source them from Disney before we can take them seriously. Otherwise it's just hearsay and speculation. Until you can source them, please stop quoting them for support/cause.

NLD - I like your customer service views. If you operated a business, I'm sure I would patronize it with your positions.

ADR timing - Disney used to have differing PS (Priority Seating, for newbies) windows for restaurants. One guy (Scott??) even made a web site for people to calculate their call-in dates. That was messy and I'm not in favor of going back.

ADR timing #2 - Disney had a 90 day PS policy for a while a few years ago. I'm sure many of us would prefer to go back to that vs 180 days. I know I would.

ADR timing #3 - DL doesn't open their reservations (I think they've been called reservations - not Advanced Dining Reservations - out there for years - even back in the PS days) until 60 days out. That's one reason why our DL trips are more enjoyable. 60 days out doesn't seem unreasonable to have an idea of what you want to do on a trip.

I am not going to change my ADR pattern at 180 days. I will likely still make 3/day and cancel them "at least one day in advance" while I'm there on the trip.

For the principle of the matter, I will show up at an ADR that I haven't canceled, be seated, then get up and leave. Disney's system is going to show me checked in (not a no-show) and I doubt they're going to go back and try to change my ADR to say I didn't show. If they do, they'll have a fight on their hands. If this forces a table minimum, so be it. This is how I will choose to fight what I think is an ignorant policy that went from 0-60 in one giant leap over a more reasonable step. And I don't care if you think that's childish/immature/whatever. I will be operating within the rules.

Now I'm probably going to really irritate a few people (sorry Tarheel, but I know you're one of them). I'll own up to canceling ADRs for not being hungry, having a good time at the pool, DD sleeping in towards the end of the trip, rainstorm, and all of the other poor/invalid "excuses" that have been cited. That's a vacation to me. And I'll put up the tens of thousands of dollars (probably over $50K when all added up) I've spent as a Disney customer over the past 10 years for my style of vacationing (and that doesn't include the 500 DVC points I've purchased over the past 3 years). And yeah, I do think my spending level and pattern matters, because Disney has made more money off me than most and I do feel that makes a difference. In most businesses' eyes, I'm a platinum/high roller/whatever you want to call it customer that every other business goes the extra step to take care of.FLAME ON!!!:firefight

:worship: Amen!
 
No flames here, Snurk... As mentioned before, we missed an ADR our first trip, too, for an "invalid excuse."

Hmmm, does it make a difference as to whether these reasons are "invalid excuses" if one is on free dining? An argument could be made that when you skip an ADR that you would have paid for with a free dining credit, you've just saved Disney money....
 
Tarheel - if you're going to quote and challenge comments, quote and challenge all of them, including the posts by Nicole and others that you don't have rebuttals for (or at least acknowledge them). I hate that kind of debating. Sorry to call you out, but you seem to be carrying the torch for "the other side".

IMO, it would be ridiculous to quote a post you don't have a reply to. This thread is long enough. I don't read signatures, so I don't know who Nicole is. However, I don't quote posts that I don't feel warrant a reply. Some I find humorous, some I find irrelevant, some are redundant, some are immature or selfish. I try to avoid commenting on the humorous, immature, & selfish, because I don't want to offend anyone on a personal level. To me, there's no need to comment on the irrelevant or redundant. I'm not saying that's the case with Nicole's post, because I don't know who that is. It really doesn't matter to me though. As I've said, this isn't personal to me. A person's user name or real name doesn't make a difference to me. If I didn't post, I'm sure it was for one of the reasons above. When I thought someone on either side of the argument posted something I agreed with, I felt was a good point, or was something new that I felt had merit I commented on it.


Snurk71 said:
Now I'm probably going to really irritate a few people (sorry Tarheel, but I know you're one of them). I'll own up to canceling ADRs for not being hungry, having a good time at the pool, DD sleeping in towards the end of the trip, rainstorm, and all of the other poor/invalid "excuses" that have been cited. That's a vacation to me. And I'll put up the tens of thousands of dollars (probably over $50K when all added up) I've spent as a Disney customer over the past 10 years for my style of vacationing (and that doesn't include the 500 DVC points I've purchased over the past 3 years). And yeah, I do think my spending level and pattern matters, because Disney has made more money off me than most and I do feel that makes a difference. In most businesses' eyes, I'm a platinum/high roller/whatever you want to call it customer that every other business goes the extra step to take care of.

FLAME ON!!!:firefight

You're not irritating me. This is not personal to me. I'm just glad WDW is now doing something to hold people to their commitments.

There hasn't been any flaming in this thread. I hope that trend will continue.
 
I also think the longer the cancellation notice required, the LESS likely it is people will indeed cancel. Once you miss the cutoff, what is the motivation to release that ADR? NONE. You're going to hold it at that point on the outside chance you might be well enough to still make it.

YEP....that's already been confirmed on several other boards that people are thinking this way....multiple people have said if they're going to have to pay the cancellation fee anyway, then no way will they cancel so that Disney can fill their seats and get paid for another family using "their" table. I see the point, but it's rather selfish, because the one really losing by this is that other family who could have enjoyed the pixie dust of getting a walk up they weren't expecting.
 
YEP....that's already been confirmed on several other boards that people are thinking this way....multiple people have said if they're going to have to pay the cancellation fee anyway, then no way will they cancel so that Disney can fill their seats and get paid for another family using "their" table. I see the point, but it's rather selfish, because the one really losing by this is that other family who could have enjoyed the pixie dust of getting a walk up they weren't expecting.

While two wrongs most certainly do not make a right, I think there's a lot of selfishness on the part of Disney here as well.
 
:rotfl2: I can't argue with that logic. Allowing an hour for a 15-20 minute ride seems like a lot of time. Telling guests to allow 90 minutes is over the top.

.

I think you could walk from most of the resorts to a park in a lot less than 90 minutes, lol.


We always rent a car, hate buses and we often go off site. And we've also stayed off site a lot. It is always cheaper to stay offsite not to mention roomier...even the deluxe regular rooms are only a few hundred square feet. A LOT of the inexpensive off site places are actually condos or single family houses. The house we typically rent is $70 a night, included 3 bedrooms (1K, 2Q and 2D, plus there was a den with a twin but no closet). And a kitchen. And two bathrooms, and a private pool, no charge washer/dryer, etc. So about 6 times the square footage of a value for the same price. So even renting a full size car made it cheaper....start adding in having a hearty breakfast at home, doing a CS in the parks and then either another CS or leave and eat in a nice sit down off site or at home and it's still less than the cost of a moderate and the dining plan!

Lots of people claim that staying off site somehow ruins the magic....and so they're willing to pay the price for that magic. We've never felt it was less magical to stay offsite, though now that I have teens that I'll let go to the park without me, on site is a bit more convenient for those days they want to go to a park and I want lay by the pool and soak my aching feet, lol.
 
While two wrongs most certainly do not make a right, I think there's a lot of selfishness on the part of Disney here as well.

How do you see selfishness by Disney in their new policy? NOT being snarky, just curious as the word selfish doesn't fit for me on Disney's policy.

I have some inside knowledge of restaurants so I would hesitate to call it greed......but it's definitely with a lot more eye towards making money than us diehard "Disney is about guests happiness".......though the big difference between an ordinary restuarant and Disney is that ordinarily you don't have a long line of people hoping for a walk up, lol.

I've also been reading about people talking to managers and supervisors about the new policy and finding that they are expressing that it will have "teeth" and no tolerance etc. Well, we'll have to wait and see if that's true, but really, what did you expect them to tell you a week after they released the policy "nah, don't worry, just call us and tell us any ole excuse and we'll waive the fee", lol?

I keep going back to the hard ticket "absolutely no refund" policy but the fact is that loads of people, myself included got refunds just for the asking. I figured it was worth asking in my case because others had gotten refunds of their entire party when all I was asking was for my DH's ticket because his work prevented him from even coming on vacation at all....but we were keeping our 3. I was prepared for a no from the first CM and told myself I'd only go up one level, as it truly wasn't their fault....but the very first CM practically had my card credited before I could tell her the whole sob story, lol. I personally think the folks in early spring are going to be the worst hit....that's when the policy is going to hit hardest....right now most of the reservations are grandfathered in, but come late winter, early spring, that will shift and those folks will pave the way with complaints, exceptions and loopholes, lol. I keep waffling on how I feel about that...I guess I'm all for strict if it means that walkups and last minute calls will net a reservation. Upon reflection, and since I haven't cancelled or skipped too many reservations in all my years at WDW, I don't know that it's going to affect me nearly as much as I worried when it first came out. Guess time will tell.
 
I agree that this was short-sighted. They are adding the "Be our Guest" restaurante in the expansion, but right now it's only slated to be TS for one meal a day. I'm guessing that alone will put it in VERY high demand.

So why do you suppose they have opted not to add more TS locations with all the added rooms? Either they like running at 100% capacity or they're just poor planners.

I'm sure it will be in high demand and yes, I agree having only one TS meal there is a mistake. They should at least be running it as TS for breakfast and dinner, if they think they need more counter service at lunch.

But yeah, I do think it is because they like running at 100+% capacity at all times, because that's strong justification for the constant price increases. If you have enough capacity to meet demand and then hike prices the way Disney has been doing, particularly with their fixed-price meals, you risk having too much capacity when more price-sensitive guests choose other dining options. And then there's the hype factor - if a dining reservation is that hard to get, the restaurant must be good, right? I've fallen victim to that one myself; I'm not a big meat eater and might have 2 or 3 steaks a year but twice I've booked Le Cellier to see what all the hype is about.
 
I feel the same, but to a point. That point is on the wrong side of Disney dining apparently. Doctors, dentists, work, personal obligations, etc, are all one thing. A meal at Disney is something different, especially since Disney goes on record to state that ADRs are NOT reservations.

I agree. I don't see making ADRs as having an obligation to fork over money to Disney regardless of whether we're able to actually have that meal, and the fact that the obligation is entirely one-sided makes it that much worse. I have an obligation to be at the restaurant within 10-15min of my ADR time but Disney has NO obligation to seat me within a reasonable time frame. No thanks.
 
Could you please verify the timeframe for cancellations on the new Dining Reservations of certain restaruants, particularly the character meals? I know you have to now leave a credit card and will be charged afee of $10 per person if you cancel. What is the timeframe that you cancancel without a fee? I have read anything from 24 hours before to a full day before. I think this is limiting flexibilty in vacationing, making it extremely hard to dine with kids and older people who could have things pop up that would cause them to cancel prior to the day before. I would like WDW know my complete displeasure with this new policy. I think it is acceptable to charge for no shows, but you need to give a more family friendly window for cancelling.


Above my email to WDW.

Their response:

When booking a reservation at the following restaurants, you will be required to provide a credit card to hold the reservation and will be charged $10 per person if you need to cancel and do not cancel at least one day in advance.

Subject to change without notice.


Still no clarification to me on the timeframe...I sent another email asking the definition of one day in advance.

I don't think you're going to get any clarification at all via e-mail unless you get past the front-line people, because I got the same canned non-answer to my e-mail asking for clarification of "exceptional circumstances" or whatever the wording was in the memo quoted from the Hub. I asked about two specific situations that have happened to us - 12+hr flight delay and puking kid in the room. The response I got back was a two sentence nothing restating the exact same wording in the memo without any actual information as to how either of those situations would be treated.

I really don't think we'll have any idea how any of this will work in practice until people start cancelling (or not) and having unexpected situations arise under the new policy.
 
YEP....that's already been confirmed on several other boards that people are thinking this way....multiple people have said if they're going to have to pay the cancellation fee anyway, then no way will they cancel so that Disney can fill their seats and get paid for another family using "their" table. I see the point, but it's rather selfish, because the one really losing by this is that other family who could have enjoyed the pixie dust of getting a walk up they weren't expecting.

The cancellation fee can be 30-50% of the cost of the meal. Disney could conceivable make more money, OK maybe not literally true, if the restaurant was empty but every potential diner paid $10 then they would make if they actually had to serve customers.

Not selfish at all. Disney has told us to cancel one full calendar day in advance, or don't bother.



Did I miss the percentage of tables that were left open? I saw the 10-33% no show rate, but didn't see how many empty tables that translated to. What percentage had Disney Overbooked that restaurant when reporting the no-shows?

You didn't miss it. Posters are assuming things and making up things. The only "evidence" was a poster who quoted statistics from Touring Plans which said no-shows vary by month. Up to 30% in Jan but 10% (or less) during peak summer months. I don't think Disney releases that kind of information to places like Touring Plans.:) Other posters are making up statistics based on posts in the reservations being cancelled threads.

The only thing we know for sure is Disney found a new "revenue stream". A year (or two?) ago Disney discovered peak surcharges. What's next? A Ticketmaster types of fees for making your ADR?
 
YEP....that's already been confirmed on several other boards that people are thinking this way....multiple people have said if they're going to have to pay the cancellation fee anyway, then no way will they cancel so that Disney can fill their seats and get paid for another family using "their" table. I see the point, but it's rather selfish, because the one really losing by this is that other family who could have enjoyed the pixie dust of getting a walk up they weren't expecting.

Not selfish at all, although I'm sure some will do it just to be spiteful.

But once I know I've hit the point of no return (where I've been charged) then I figure I've paid for the right to decide right up until ADR time if I want to go or not. Under the old policy I would have released the ADR several hours in advance, wanting to offer the same courtesy to Disney that I felt they had offered me. Once they step it up to hard ball, it cuts both ways.
 
I'm sure it will be in high demand and yes, I agree having only one TS meal there is a mistake. They should at least be running it as TS for breakfast and dinner, if they think they need more counter service at lunch.

But yeah, I do think it is because they like running at 100+% capacity at all times, because that's strong justification for the constant price increases. If you have enough capacity to meet demand and then hike prices the way Disney has been doing, particularly with their fixed-price meals, you risk having too much capacity when more price-sensitive guests choose other dining options. And then there's the hype factor - if a dining reservation is that hard to get, the restaurant must be good, right? I've fallen victim to that one myself; I'm not a big meat eater and might have 2 or 3 steaks a year but twice I've booked Le Cellier to see what all the hype is about.


I agree that full capacity is where they want to be. Unfortunately I think that's where they aspire to be (obviously) with park attendance as well. It has made the previously lower crowd times much busier than in the past.

I do wonder if they plan to add another TS meal at the new restaurant during peak seasons. They'd be crazy not to.

I'm sure the staffing situation is far easier when they just plan for full capacity every night.
 
The only thing we know for sure is Disney found a new "revenue stream". A year (or two?) ago Disney discovered peak surcharges. What's next? A Ticketmaster types of fees for making your ADR?
Which has even been suggested in this thread, though most people call it a "deposit". However, if my 180 day falls on the weekend before a payday, and I'm doing DxDDP with 18-20 ADRs, I may not simply have the money to book all of them.

Of course, with the current system, you'd lose your deposit AND be charged extra, for even more free money.

Soon enough, everything will just be fully prepaid with a 7 day cancellation window, while charging an actual cancellation fee no matter when you cancel (another thing that's been suggested either here, or on other similar threads).
 
Disney lets you book 180 days in advance....they are only asking for ONE day to cancel. I don't see why this seems to "selfish" to everyone. It's a business. They just want their restaurants full right? So they keep making money? If you leave their table empty then they take a fee from you for not showing up. Right?

I don't understand why there aren't tables that are NOT reserved so that guests would be able to make an ADR that morning or walk up and get seated in a reasonable time frame.

I haven't been to Disney World in over 15 years but I don't see why this new thing is a big deal. I will make my ADRs on the days I want and then I will show up for them.
 














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