Off site
Avoid dining plan and eat off site and CS
Use or avoid dining plan? Assuming your not going during Free offerings.
Stay on-site or off-site?
We drive from MO.
We have a family of 4.
Where do you normally stay off-site? We found a suite at Lake Buena Vista for about $136 per night after adding up all the costs our tickets and extra parking fees 9days and 8 nights at on-site Art of Animation was only $400 more.
When staying off-site I budgeted about $738 for 9 days of food. $10 for breakfast, $36 for lunch probably CS and $36 for Dinner. If off-site for dinner can do better but budgeted for CS is needed.
I suppose we could do McD's for breakfast or find a hotel with breakfast, CS at parks, and eatch at a $25-$30 restaurant meaning we would not stay late at the parks.
Almost 2,000 of it is park tickets though. We are planning for 5 days at Disney, 2 Days at USF, and 1 day at Legoland. We've been to all and for sure wanted to do all USF this trip. Maybe we cut it down some.
Where do you normally stay off-site? We found a suite at Lake Buena Vista for about $136 per night after adding up all the costs our tickets and extra parking fees 9days and 8 nights at on-site Art of Animation was only $400 more.
Almost 2,000 of it is park tickets though. We are planning for 5 days at Disney, 2 Days at USF, and 1 day at Legoland. We've been to all and for sure wanted to do all USF this trip. Maybe we cut it down some.
No matter how you dice it, DVC ownership is not "low cost". It is more affordable than paying Disney for a deluxe resort stay, but it is more expensive than paying for a value resort every year.
The resale market is a seller's market right now. A contract that went for $70/pt. a couple of years ago is now selling for $80+/pt. You also have to remember that there are annual dues that need to be paid on those points. The more points you have, the more you will pay in annual dues. This year, my dues will cost me $1K+, whether I use those points or bank them. You have to factor that into your costs.
I happen to like staying onsite and the annual dues + buy-in costs for the re-sale contracts I have were a better way to spend our money rather than paying OOP for a deluxe room every 12-15 months. "80 points at OKW in a studio" for a week is misleading. There are only select seasons where that would be a sufficient number of points to cover a week's stay at OKW and those seasons may not be a time when the OP can (or is willing) to visit. It wouldn't be enough to cover a week in a studio at any time at any of the other resorts.
For someone who wants to have annual "low cost" visits, an offsite rental just makes more sense. You will get more for your money without the ongoing financial obligation that timeshare ownership creates.
We do breakfast in the room and then plan a mid-day meal in the parks. The break allows us to re-charge our batteries and gives us renewed energy to continue touring. We pack snacks for munching when we get hungry between meals and carry filtered water bottles in case we get thirsty. Dinner can be back at the room if you have a kitchen or else in an offsite restaurant if you have a car.
An AP is a definite "must have" if you expect to go to Disney annually. Not only will it give you cheaper "per day" admission to the parks over the course of multiple visits totaling 10 days or more, it will also give you dining discounts and merchandise discounts. Parking is free for AP holders. You will also qualify for unique onsite room discounts, should you choose to stay onsite.
Frequent visits also mean that you are less interested in purchasing souvenirs than you are when you are a casual visitor. You definitely trim your souvenir budget down when you go more often! You also become more familiar with the area, so you learn where to shop for groceries, where to dine and how to travel around the area efficiently.