glassslippergirl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2010
- Messages
- 1,177
@Ryan Landrum, we are a two-teacher, one student family, so we understand how tied every aspect of life can be to one school calendar. Living in South Florida, we also understand how far that teacher’s paycheck can go when the cost of living (particularly housing) is so high.
Because we live so close, a trip to WDW is more of a weekend escapade for us than a major vacation, but because of this, we’ve been just about every time of year. The last couple of years, summer has been relatively low crowds. As for the heat, you live in Texas. It would be hot and humid if you stayed home. And going to WDW is always better than staying home.
To me, the real tips for teachers are in how to stretch your Disney dollar. There are ways to get deals on tickets like through Undercover Tourist or Park Savers (if you’re in a union, they like to push Tickets at Work, but in my experience they are usually not the best deal).
We save money by staying and eating off property, but we also have a car. YMMV with that tip, but it’s worth researching and running the numbers for offsite and onsite stays. In addition looking at hotels, look into renting someone's vacation home or time share points.
Look into ways to save money on meals. DDP is rarely a real value, but consider other tips like eating breakfast (cereal, granola bars) in your room, packing snacks or sandwiches so you don’t have to buy as much food in parks, keeping water bottles/soda/Vitamin Water (whatever your beverage preference) in your room so you don’t need to pay their mercenary beverage prices, even keeping a bottle of your nightcap of choice in your room so you aren’t as tempted by the really expensive adult beverages that look so good when everyone is walking around with them. It doesn’t have to be a spartan existence, but exploring options like these let’s you prioritize how you really want to spend your money.
Because we live so close, a trip to WDW is more of a weekend escapade for us than a major vacation, but because of this, we’ve been just about every time of year. The last couple of years, summer has been relatively low crowds. As for the heat, you live in Texas. It would be hot and humid if you stayed home. And going to WDW is always better than staying home.
To me, the real tips for teachers are in how to stretch your Disney dollar. There are ways to get deals on tickets like through Undercover Tourist or Park Savers (if you’re in a union, they like to push Tickets at Work, but in my experience they are usually not the best deal).
We save money by staying and eating off property, but we also have a car. YMMV with that tip, but it’s worth researching and running the numbers for offsite and onsite stays. In addition looking at hotels, look into renting someone's vacation home or time share points.
Look into ways to save money on meals. DDP is rarely a real value, but consider other tips like eating breakfast (cereal, granola bars) in your room, packing snacks or sandwiches so you don’t have to buy as much food in parks, keeping water bottles/soda/Vitamin Water (whatever your beverage preference) in your room so you don’t need to pay their mercenary beverage prices, even keeping a bottle of your nightcap of choice in your room so you aren’t as tempted by the really expensive adult beverages that look so good when everyone is walking around with them. It doesn’t have to be a spartan existence, but exploring options like these let’s you prioritize how you really want to spend your money.