cruiser21
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2016
- Messages
- 3,311
I homeschool and I an am flexible, but I already know when it crowded and when it’s not. What’s going to motivate me to go in September or January or any other slow time is the fact that I can stay at A deluxe for 300 a night and not 600. The few dollars I’d save off a ticket wouldnt matter. Off sight or on sight hotels are going to cheaper. Locals most likely have aps so that’s not a factor. I think most people know when the busy and slow times are without looking at ticket pricing chart.I have a slightly different interpretation. Some of us have flexible vacation schedules and no kids to pull out of school. I can go to WDW almost anytime my boss approves, so when the ticket is $112 per day, that signals to me it's less crowded than a period when the average is $124. I will avoid the $124 day ticket, because aside from the extra cost, that's a signal to me that it's much more crowded. So then Disney will have successfully moved someone off the more expensive date to the cheaper date. Of course, if enough people are flexible like me, it will backfire. I'll be more miserable on a cheap day with all my fellow cheap guests, and the $124-paying guest will benefit from others leaving that date.
About time. With Galaxy's Edge opening and Toy Story at DHS, plus Pandora at AK, MK is no longer the only park with high demand. Woo hoo.
If paying a thousand dollars a night hasn’t scared people away from Christmas week an extra 10 bucks for a ticket certainly won’t.