tcarr5 said:especially since sprite is a coca-cola product![]()
If I really wanted a Sprite and was told I could only have Coke, I'd probably say "ok can you bring me a caffeine free clear colored coca cola beverage which is lemon lime flavored?"
tcarr5 said:especially since sprite is a coca-cola product![]()
goldz said:Why would you give up the free dining? It's free. The AAA discount will save you some money, but food for the entire trip? I'd reconsider if I were you.
calgarygary said:As far as spending big $ for tickets you do not need, that is not necessary. I believe you would still come out ahead by paying rack rate, getting 1 day of passes to qualify for the free dining for your entire stay (which you would not have to use but could save for future use) and then using your AP for visiting the parks. Plus, if there is something that you want to pay OOP that the plan doesn't offer, you would still have the AP discount.
NewEnglandDisney said:I guess I've just missed where the plan is actually "complicated".
I've seen lots of posts where people were ill informed as to how the plan worked, but it's very simple. The only true problems I read about at this point are people who try to add skewers of shrimp, or have 2 apps instead of an app and an entree (which is not what the plan entails).
You get to choose one appetizer from the menu, one entree (without additions), and one dessert, OR you get one full buffet/family style meal. You can't get things that are labeled "for two" or things that add an additional cost to the entree.
It's a tremendous value. It's really going to change our trip - no longer worrying about spending too much on too many sit-downs, and getting to try things off of menus I normally wouldn't (never usually try apps, for instance).
Everyone has to make the decision for themselves, but if I went by some of the posts I read I'd think it was as complicated as Federal Tax code. It's pretty straight-forward, and any questions can be answered by your server before you order so there are no surprises.
We had to give up an AP discount to get the plan - for a 7 night stay that cost us $140. The discounts buying from MapleLeaf are like $3 on 7-day MYW hopper tickets (and yes, I am including tax on the Disney prices - with tax a 7-day hopper is $237 with Disney, $234 with maple) - which isn't worth the hassle of buying from a non-Disney company to me.
So, by giving up about $150 in discounts, we'll be able to have over a thousand bucks worth of food (conservative estimate).
It may not work out for everyone financially, but the vast majority of people are going to do VERY well on it.
N.E.D.

shellybaxter said:Free food isn't really free if you can get the room with a AAA discount. You have to pay rack rate for the room, have to purchase your tickets from Disney (instead of a discount company like Mapleleaf) and have to put everyone one on the plan that is staying in your room. The combination of the rack room cost and the no discounted tickets and not being able to use your APs for anyone if someone has one, would make the "free dinning" kind of expensive.
I can see why someone would choose to decline. As an AP holder with DDE I would MUCH rather eat where I want (all TS if I want and no CS), order what I want(sometimes an app sometimes not, sometimes a dessert, and sometimes just an app and dessert and no entree) get 20% off everything (including alcohol and specialty drinks, dessert samplers, and highest price meals and add ons) and not worry about following the "plan".
Shelly
spacemtn1971 said:my only point was how complicated the plan appears to be based on what you can and cannot get. i agree that it is great if you are 4 adults but with four year old twins with the appetite that varies from day to day and sometime just likes the pintos and cheese at taco bell (which isnt health food i know but at least it has protein!)
if we lose the aaa rate it amounts to $160.00 plus full price for tix which we can get for $175 less than full price we have now paid $335 for "free food". granted we will probably eat more than that amount but it may be at jungle jims (great peanut butter burger) or cici's (i know not everybody likes them but our girls love the pasta and breadsticks and its cheap)
i am not telling anyone else to forgo the "free dining plan". all i was saying was that based on circumstances and concern about information which is readily available on this board and information about how servers pushed my friends to order food that they did not want, even bringing it inspite of refusing it (in a doggie bag) and Yes, after specifically asking for a 20oz sprite at a stand in frontierland and being told that the plan only covered coke (I know that this is not the norm but it did happen)...
based on this we have decided to enjoy our vacation and not use the package.
then again i suppose you could ask why i am sharing...i'm not sure but i thought somebody else might benefit from a different point of view on the dining plan.
what a wonderful world.... walt disney world that is!![]()
ElizabethB said:The "free" dining is a great deal if you're paying rack rate anyway. If you're not paying rack rate due to AP or AAA, for example, you have to realize that the "free" dining is the cost of your discounted room versus your rack rate room.
At a value resort, the difference is not that great, so it's probably worth it to pay rack rate and get the "free" dining.
On the other hand, if you're at a deluxe resort, it may not be worth it to give up the discount. For us, the difference between GF AP rate and GF rack rate was about $650. Plus, we needed trip insurance at $85.
We figure we can eat quite a bit of food for that $700 -- and do it eating exactly what we want, when we want it, where we want it. And, if we're not hungry, we won't eat. We won't already have a "sunk" cost of $700 that we can only recover by stuffing ourselves with food.
Works for some -- doesn't work for others.
ElizabethB said:The "free" dining is a great deal if you're paying rack rate anyway. If you're not paying rack rate due to AP or AAA, for example, you have to realize that the "free" dining is the cost of your discounted room versus your rack rate room.
At a value resort, the difference is not that great, so it's probably worth it to pay rack rate and get the "free" dining.
(snip)
Works for some -- doesn't work for others.

