goofyboyzmom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2006
- Messages
- 541
What ticket is there a discount on?
What ticket is there a discount on?
You don't have to pay as much for your ticket. So you save money. Thus your discount. If you save $10 a ticket by buying through a reseller (or use those older tickets with no expiration or got the $100 off AP), you divide your savings by the number of nights you are getting the DDP. Subtract that from the cost of the DDP and you got a discounted DDP.
Annual passes, premium annual passes or any ticket through Underground Tickets or other resellers.
I guess some of you newer DVC members haven't heard there is no free lunch with DVC yet. They have you and your money already.
Unfortunately, for those of us who can only go once a year and cannot time it within the same 12 month window, the discount on the Annual Pass means nothing to us so discount the tickets another way (like they apparently used to) or discount the dining or something. And five years into the DVC is not exactly "newer". I am not expecting a "free lunch", they should just not forget about the people who have already spent $20,000 - ?????.
Would buying non expiring 10 day tickets help you? You could use them over 2 (or 3) trips? You can add waterpark/disney quest to add more things to it, which would be like 20 "days" of things to do, and that ticket never expires.
-mary
Disney does not offer promotions and discounts to be nice to people, or to reward loyalty. They offer promotions and discounts to encourage people to spend even more money with the Mouse instead of on some competing discretionary purpose. Most DVC Members are already "locked in"---they are coming no matter what, because they have paid for their lodging in advance.I am not expecting a "free lunch", they should just not forget about the people who have already spent $20,000 - ?????.
We drive. It saves us a ton of money and it isn't a hardship at all...plus we then have our car with us. We are in NE CT and the drive takes us 20 hours, door-to-door. From Northern NJ it would be 16-17. We leave at 2am and arrive at WDW at 10pm. It's perfect!
I figure that it will cost us approximately $350 to drive, round trip, to FL in December. Compare that to the $1000 for airfare and you can see that we get nearly 3 driving trips for the same cost as flying once.
I know that many people refuse to even try the drive, but I'd definitely recommend trying it. We've been doing it since our DD was 2 years old (our kids are now 16 and 13) and never had a problem.
Disney does not offer promotions and discounts to be nice to people, or to reward loyalty. They offer promotions and discounts to encourage people to spend even more money with the Mouse instead of on some competing discretionary purpose. Most DVC Members are already "locked in"---they are coming no matter what, because they have paid for their lodging in advance.
What I would expect are other promotions that are really upsells in disguise. For example, a break on the Deluxe Dining Plan, or a deeper discount on the Tables In Woderland card, or an extension of merchandise discounts. These all end up getting you spending *more* than you otherwise would, even though the *more* is a nice value.
Sure, but the Budget Boarders are practically a species unto themselves. I doubt very much that the "average" DVCer is thinking in this way.
And, as I've mentioned before, the ancillary spending can be stimulated by offering "upsell discounts".
Anyone who thinks about this even for a few minutes will realize that DVC Members are pretty close to the last people on earth that Disney will need to offer "real" discounts to to get them to come and spend money.
Disney does not offer promotions and discounts to be nice to people, or to reward loyalty. They offer promotions and discounts to encourage people to spend even more money with the Mouse instead of on some competing discretionary purpose. Most DVC Members are already "locked in"---they are coming no matter what, because they have paid for their lodging in advance.
Maybe Disney will form their own airline.![]()
With our Disneyland APs now expired, we have no plans to go back to the California parks anytime soon. If there was a good deal on AP's, it might entice us to schedule a trip or two for 2009. I think that discounts on APs for both DL and WDW would help to bring DVCers who may be banking up points now, wanting to save on vacation expenditures.
Thank you, Mary, but the 10-day does not generally work for us, because we tend to do 7-8 days at a time.