Is there a secondary market for WDW tickets, like there are for other events. Something akin to Stub Hub?
If I have a ticket(s) I can no longer use, can they be refunded? And if so, does that open up a slot on that particular day?Tickets are tied to individual people, so if you mean like private sales person-to-person, then no.
No, they cannot be refunded. Their value can be applied towards another ticket in the future. You must have a park reservation to get into a park, and you must have a ticket to make a park reservation. The only way a slot will open on a particular day that is currently "sold out" is for someone to cancel their park reservation, regardless of what they do with their ticket.If I have a ticket(s) I can no longer use, can they be refunded? And if so, does that open up a slot on that particular day?
Ok, that answers my question. Someone with tickets and a reservation can apply their ticket value towards another ticket and subsequently cancel their reservation, thus creating an opening. Thank youNo, they cannot be refunded. Their value can be applied towards another ticket in the future. You must have a park reservation to get into a park, and you must have a ticket to make a park reservation. The only way a slot will open on a particular day that is currently "sold out" is for someone to cancel their park reservation, regardless of what they do with their ticket.
Is there a secondary market for WDW tickets, like there are for other events. Something akin to Stub Hub?
Yes, that's possible. However, most folks who aren't going don't actually change their tickets immediately to new dates. And cancelling a park reservation will not make a ticket available for sale, though it will open up a theme park reservation for someone who already has tickets and wants that particular park. Even if a few folks change their tickets to new dates, I honestly don't see WDW re-opening ticket sales.Ok, that answers my question. Someone with tickets and a reservation can apply their ticket value towards another ticket and subsequently cancel their reservation, thus creating an opening. Thank you
Right, so if I have tickets for a particular park and reserved for a particular day, and someone else cancels (changes) days they were reserved on, then it opens up a slot that anybody can change to with their current ticket or by buying one and reserving the day. Or am I missing something?Yes, that's possible. However, most folks who aren't going don't actually change their tickets immediately to new dates. And cancelling a park reservation will not make a ticket available for sale, though it will open up a theme park reservation for someone who already has tickets and wants that particular park. Even if a few folks change their tickets to new dates, I honestly don't see WDW re-opening ticket sales.
If you already have tickets and just want a park reservation, you are correct. However ticket sales aren’t going to pop open the way theme park reservations do. There aren’t any tickets to buy.or by buying one and reserving the day. Or am I missing something?
2. Disney redistributes pass allocations; but they can't pull availability from the AP bucket if those spots are already reserved, so it wouldn't happen on days already booked to capacity in all 3 buckets.
Does Disney ever redistribute passes? If AP isn't at it's capacity, will they ever pull from that pool and reallocate to theme park and resort guests? If so, when do they typically do that?