allisonswonderland said:
I am staying at the Beach Club the whole time and the comp night will also be at the BC, so would they make me switch rooms?
That is a tough question. I will try to cover as many bases as I can, but please remember that I am only sharing my experiences with you. I do not work for Disney. They are truly the only ones who can answer your question.
Now that my disclaimer is out of the way, here goes. My answer will be involved so please let me know if I have been unclear.
Assumptions:
Wedding / Vow Renewal will happen on Night 3 of your 6-night vacation
Standard Room booked at Beach Club
Comp Room booked at Beach Club
Wedding Week Scenario One:
Beach Club Room A (5 nights)
Beach Club Room B (1 night Comp Room)
Disney will make you switch rooms twice.
Begin in Room A for 2 nights
Move to Room B (Comp Room) for 1 night
Move back to Room A for last 3 nights
This would require a room key for Room A, a room key for Room B, and then a room key for Room A again because in all likelihood you will be given a different room since you gave up Room A for the night of your wedding (and even if Disney gave you the exact same room again, you would still need a new key issued for it).
Wedding Week Scenario Two:
Beach Club Room A (6 nights - double-booking the wedding night)
Beach Club Room B (1 night Comp Room)
If you kept Room A for all 6 nights of your stay, it would go like this (note: Disney will still make you switch rooms twice):
Begin in Room A for 2 nights
Move to Room B for 1 night (Comp Room)
Move back to Room A for last 3 nights
This would require a room key for Room A, a room key for Room B, but when you switch back to Room A, you would use the original room key since you never gave up possession of Room A.
Wedding Week Scenario Three:
Beach Club Room A (5 nights)
Beach Club Room A (1 night Comp Room)
Disney allows you to stay in Room A for entire vacation. Note, two outcomes could happen.
Outcome A:
Begin in Room A and stay in it for 6 nights
This would require a room key that works for all 6 nights of your stay.
Outcome B: (Note: This is not as farfetched as it seems)
Begin in Room A for 2 nights
Stay in Room A for 1 night (Comp Night)
Continue staying in Room A for last 3 nights
This would require a room key for Room A, a room key for your Comp Night (even though youre still in Room A), and when you switch back to your regular resort reservation, a new room key would have to be issued yet again (even though youve never left room Room A and are still in it).
Yes, I experienced that last scenario's Outcome B for my vow renewal. I was allowed to stay in the same room for all three nights of my three-night stay. I had a room key issued for the first night, a room key issued for the second night, and a room key issued for the third night. I didnt know it would be handled that way until the evening of my first night when a room bill and new room key were slid underneath my door. Huh?
Upon check-in on my first day, I was assured that I would be staying in the same room for all three nights of my stay (the 2nd night was the night of my vow renewal and thus was my comp night). Why did the resort check me out and then check me in again without my knowledge at the end of Day One? Who knows. I certainly didnt expect it to happen that way and thus called the concierge to inquire about it. I was informed that since my 2nd night was my comp night, that was how they were handling things.
Things got a little more involved from here on out.
I didnt discover that I needed a new room key for the 3rd night of my stay until shortly after 1 AM (which was technically Day Four of my stay). My young daughter and I were returning from our midnight swim when we discovered that our room keys would not work in the elevator. Without elevator access, there was no way that we could make it up to the floor where our resort room was located. The odd thing was that our resort keys had worked about an hour or two prior (we had returned to the resort shortly before midnight, after a very long day in the theme parks with our guests).
So, there we were at 1 oclock in the morning, standing in our soaking wet bathing suits before the Front Desk. Our resort keys had obviously pumpkined out at midnight (just like Cinderellas golden carriage had pumpkin'ed out). I wasnt terribly pleased with the turn of events, and if someone would have warned me that I needed new keys issued before midnight, I would have gladly done so. But no one told me, and as the saying goes, you live and learn.
As you can see, your easy question has very complex answers. I dont know how Disney is handling things now, but I have had things like this happen to me on more than one occasion in all sorts of room types and room categories. I thought it best to warn you (I wish someone had warned me). The best case is that you'll have the same room for every night of your stay and your room key will work throughout. The worst case is that you'll have to switch rooms twice and will need room keys issued three times. I hope this helped.