Robo
1971 Castle in the Hub: Your lights are on!
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2001
That would almost certainly be the case.Will there still be Florida resident rates with the new ticketing system?
That would almost certainly be the case.Will there still be Florida resident rates with the new ticketing system?
No, you can book as many dates as you want. Each adult on the current reservation can book a room as the bounceback, but you can do as many dates as you want. I do it all the time, just did this past Sept for bounceback next yr... it does take a while on the phone though just to get through it all, but you can def book more than one set of dates.The kids won't be with us on the first trip in October. It is for DH and I to enjoy Food and Wine.
I think we can each book one bounce back offer, so I would book July and DH would book December.
Whenever you purchase an AP you get a voucher. You have to activate that voucher at guest services and enter a park for your AP to become active. You don't have to activate that AP voucher at any specific time. So you could purchase an AP now, receive the voucher now, but not activate the AP until 10 years from now (or whenever you want to start using that AP). Once you activate it and then enter a park, that is the first day the AP is active and it will end a year from that date.Where can you buy the voucher instead of ticket for AP? I haven't read all pages. (stop on 13) but someone mentioned the voucher for AP doesn't expire.
I know everything is an assumption right now, but I have a quick question.
I just got an AP that will expire in September. We were just at Disney and booked a bounce back for next July which includes 4 day hoppers.
We were going to use those hoppers toward renewing our APs next fall, however with the uncertainty of this being a possibility I was thinking of just upgrading the package tickets to 8 days which we would use for a December 2019 trip. Those package tickets would be valid to use for December even though the package was for a July trip, right?
I am in the same position as a lot of folks. Trip coming up in October, already purchased 4 day hopper, and planned on upgrading to AP when we were there before having knowledge of this new ticket system starting Oct. 16th. Is it fair to say that the prudent thing to do is upgrade now to AP before the presumably price increase on AP? Thanks!Whenever you purchase an AP you get a voucher. You have to activate that voucher at guest services and enter a park for your AP to become active. You don't have to activate that AP voucher at any specific time. So you could purchase an AP now, receive the voucher now, but not activate the AP until 10 years from now (or whenever you want to start using that AP). Once you activate it and then enter a park, that is the first day the AP is active and it will end a year from that date.
I am in the same position as a lot of folks. Trip coming up in October, already purchased 4 day hopper, and planned on upgrading to AP when we were there before having knowledge of this new ticket system starting Oct. 16th. Is it fair to say that the prudent thing to do is upgrade now to AP before the presumably price increase on AP? Thanks!
I am in a different situation regarding tickets. Planning a trip in May and only going to be at Disney for 2 days. Not getting park hopper tickets. Should I wait to purchase the one day tickets? We are going a Monday/Tuesday May 13th and 14th and think they might be regular days for pricing. I know I only want to go to Magic Kindom and Animal Kingdom. I appreciate any suggestions.
I didn't see this answered in all 35 pages ...
(1) Is there any indication that these ticket changes will change the ability to activate our tix a day early for a trip this Thanksgiving?
(2) We want to add an 8th day of tix to two people in our party, but not the other two. CMs told me I can't do that til I arrive onsite.
(3) Do you think the cost of that 8th day (currently about $10/person) will go up enough that I would be better off getting an 8th day for all four of us NOW, even if two of the four people never use it?
I can't see them changing it by much for the exact reasons you say. We had 7 day tickets booked and for $20/each we upgraded to 9 'just in case' we decide to go arrival and departure day. If I way paying a lot more than the small price of $10 we'd be sure to find other things to do those days rather than go to the parks.I think they'll still have a discount but not the drastic reduction that we see on days 5-10 now. Which is where some tickets may go down in price, and others up. But no real insight it's purely my gut guess.
Thanks, purchased via DVC. Hopefully, won't be a problem. I will post if/when we decide. Seems to be the smart way to go.The only problem with upgrading to AP is that you will have to do it onsite. You may be able to do it on the phone if your tickets were purchased directly from Disney (I think). If you bought them from anywhere else they will not typically let you do it over the phone. Some people have been lucky when they called in, but most have not. I tried a couple times, with no success. If you do try, let us know if it works.
I can't see them changing it by much for the exact reasons you say. We had 7 day tickets booked and for $20/each we upgraded to 9 'just in case' we decide to go arrival and departure day. If I way paying a lot more than the small price of $10 we'd be sure to find other things to do those days rather than go to the parks.
Agree. I think it will depend too if they keep a similar view to this when purchasing tickets as part of a package:I think the reductions will still be there, possibly not hugely different than now especially in the off-peak season. But I don't think it's going to be as easily recognizable that the extra day only costs ~$12. What I envision is the price calendar will reflect that discount calculated into the "per-day" ticket price.
Using the example data below from the video {data does not reflect actual pricing}: the online system won't show prices until you tell it how many days. In this example, the guest choose a 4-day ticket so the calendar is showing per-day tickets starting at $79 per day. If the guest were to chose 2-day tickets, the calendar would show per-day tickets starting at $100 per day. Likewise, if the guest chose a 10-day ticket, the base would show starting at $47. So the discount comes into play with the base per-day ticket price.
View attachment 354626
How much that base per-day ticket will change remains to be seen. I suspect a "low-season" and midweek, it won't change a whole lot from current. Peak season and weekends will see the increases, some possibly considerable (notice the above example shows weekend rates as high as $97 per day for a 4-day ticket).
At least, that's what I'm envisioning based on the info released to-date.
I’m in the exact same situation as you. I’m not really sure what I’m going to do.
I’m thinking about changing my summer FD bounceback to December, upping my four day tickets to ten day tickets, and getting a room discount instead this summer. Then, I won’t renew my AP. Depending on the new rules and /or price, I may use my December tickets to upgrade to an AP instead, but at least with ten day tickets, I won’t have to make a change to my package and be subject to the new rules and prices, if I don’t upgrade. I guess we’ll see.
Whenever you purchase an AP you get a voucher. You have to activate that voucher at guest services and enter a park for your AP to become active. You don't have to activate that AP voucher at any specific time. So you could purchase an AP now, receive the voucher now, but not activate the AP until 10 years from now (or whenever you want to start using that AP). Once you activate it and then enter a park, that is the first day the AP is active and it will end a year from that date.
Yes. TAW sells regular Disney tickets that can be upgraded.
But if I know I can buy them spaced out, and then just activate them at the same time, this helps our budget!