Possible that both could be part of the record - server space is a lot less expensive than it used to be. Keeping extraneous data that could become useful in the future is no longer the cardinal sin it would have been 25 years ago.The "rack rate" has not been a part of the record associated with 3rd party reseller tickets. (The wholesale price was.)
Here is the message I received from UT this afternoon to my pp question.
"We heard back from Disney and you will not have any problem upgrading at the park...they will look at the ticket you have and give you the amount we paid for the ticket toward your upgrade.
Thank you,"
This confused me even more so I requestioned them & then received this reply
"I just receive a new update and it will be upgraded at Disneys current gate price not what we paid. Sorry for the confusion...
Thank you,"
Which I believe is what dmunsil has stated.
I am sorry to say that I got different (and, IMHO, worse) news from the lovely folks at UT; according to them, Disney will still allow upgrades, but instead of bridging from the gate price (2014 or earlier) or the price you paid for the tickets, they will use the price paid to Disney by the 3rd party re-seller. So, if you buy from anyone other than them and decide to extend your pay, you'll pay a steep penalty: wholesale price to 3rd party reseller + reseller's markup + difference between wholesale price and gate price. Extortion!
I was ok paying an extra 70 dollars for our family to go for about 3-4 hours....but I'm not ok paying way more than that!
Looks like it will be pool time instead!Disney has no idea when I bought my ticket from a third party. They only know when that third party bought that ticket. So, hypothetically, I may have purchased my ticket in 2013, but the third party purchased it from Disney in 2011. When I try to add a day in 2014, is Disney going to make me pay the difference between 2011 prices and 2014 prices? That would have to be how it worked, since they'd have no way to know that I actually bought it in 2013.
Okay, if Disney will now only bridge to the gate price when you purchased the ticket, rather than the current gate price, that STILL doesn't make sense.
Disney has no idea when I bought my ticket from a third party. They only know when that third party bought that ticket. So, hypothetically, I may have purchased my ticket in 2013, but the third party purchased it from Disney in 2011. When I try to add a day in 2014, is Disney going to make me pay the difference between 2011 prices and 2014 prices? That would have to be how it worked, since they'd have no way to know that I actually bought it in 2013.
I still don't think we know the actual story here. Nothing I've heard so far makes any sense whatsoever.
Don, then has Disney changed what Cheshire Figment states here......?We have heard from Undercover Tourist, and we have a clearer understanding. Everyone we and they have spoken to has said that upgrading tickets is still allowed, and bridging still exists.
There is a small change to bridging policy - they will no longer bridge a ticket to the current gate price. They will bridge the price to the gate price as of the date you bought the ticket. This is the same policy they've had for years for tickets purchased directly from Disney Ticketing. See Cheshire Figment's "all about WDW tickets" sticky post #22, here:
http://www.disboards.com/showpost.php?p=48592501&postcount=22
Basically this makes everything more harmonious. All "normal" Magic Your Way tickets, whether purchased from Disney or from any other source, are worth the gate price on the date they were purchased.
So if you buy a discounted ticket, you "lock in" that discount, but you will not get an extra benefit if the gate price goes up between the time you bought the ticket and when you want to do the upgrade.
Otherwise, as far as we can tell at this time, there has been no change to the policy on upgrading an existing ticket.
--
Don - MouseSavers.com

Disney has no idea when I bought my ticket from a third party. They only know when that third party bought that ticket.
Don, then has Disney changed what Cheshire Figment states here......?
The basic concept is that an eligible ticket, once it has been used for a Park entry, will have a two step procedure. The first is to bring the price of the ticket to the current Gate price.
When did WDW start issuing the RFID tickets?
In that case, Don, the fact that UT is currently (at least as of this morning) selling tickets linked from Mousesavers at a lower price than not linked from MS, would make no difference if using the tickets to bridge? They would both bridge to the price of a gate ticket at the time of the UT purchase. (Did I lose you on that? I think I lost myself, LOL)Yes, that is what we are being told; the only change is that you're credited for what the original gate price was when you bought the ticket (or perhaps when the ticket was issued, which should be very close together), instead of the current gate price.
--
Don - MouseSavers.com
Early 2013.
February,or so.
If there was a discrepancy, i.e. you buy the ticket the day after an increase but the ticket was issued just before the increase, I would expect that Disney would give you the price credit for the date of purchase; it would probably be at the discretion of the CM. Having the original order receipt or confirmation printed out would be useful in that case.
So if you're worried that you should get the post-increase price but the date on your tickets is from pre-increase, come to WDW with documentation that you bought it after the increase. No guarantees that it'll work, but it couldn't hurt.