I was quite shocked at how much the rooms have gone up!!!! In 2009 we pais £42 a night at pop. If im gonna end up paying £90 odd a night may just borrow sme points from next years allocation. Will see how the funds go.xx
did the price really go up that much ?
2009 prices were based on the GBP exchange rate towards the USD (2008 figures)
it was at $2 for £1
2012 rates were calculated with a Sterling Pound a little under 1.5 buck for a quid.
so your £42 was $84 a night in 2009
today a night (weekdays value season) is at £64
those £64 are calculated (at the time rates were released) to be worth $92.8
so in 4 years the price of a room at POP was increased from $84 to $92.8, or 10.4% which is more than reasonable for a 4 years period.
at the same time, the price moved up from £42 to £64 for UK guests, which is a 52.3% increase in price.
While I do understand it is outrageous, you can only blame it on your currency getting weaker. Not on a Disney price hike gone out of control. Because in the end the value of the room is only 10% higher than it was 4 years ago, not 52.3% higher (even if your wallet doesn't know the difference)
Still, consider yourself lucky, you're living on a beautiful island and you got quids in your wallet ... you could have euros like me instead
just for the record, with the euro crashing over the summer. I had to pay my balance with WDTC-UK
When I booked in april, the euro was holding steady against the sterling pound and the us dollar.
then it started to fall to a record low, and I had to pay my balance at the lowest point.
in 3 months, a 21 nights stay at POP, with 21 days tickets ended up costing me £150 more than the price I would have paid if I had paid in full when I booked
So I guess it's easy to call prices crazy, but we must bear in mind that the price hike is closely related to how our currency is doing versus the US dollar, because in the end we all pay in US dollar for our WDW stays. WDTC-UK only simplifies this for us by converting the prices into sterling pound based on the value of the pound at the time they publish the rates.
(sorry, long post, but I was in the mood

)