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October 2025 Price Increases

Miss Bella

Well-Known Member
I have no interest in justifying, or attempting to justify, the increases. I can certainly be accused of being too tolerant of them, or seeing value where I shouldn't, but I have never offered a reason, much less an excuse, for why they're happening (and if I had to give a reason, it would be the self-evident one: they're charging more because they want to increase their profit margins and feel they can get away with it).
They are going to charge what people are willing to pay. When people stop paying they will lower prices. It's pretty basic economics.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
And I identify (as I said before) in the group that feels Disney no longer provides the type of experience it once did. That it is vastly overpriced for the type of experience it delivers. And that my expectation of what the experience will be is not what it used to be.


That doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy FoP or PotC or the Haunted Mansion. Just means it has become a normal vacation. No higher standard than spending a week in Vegas, Pigeon Forge or taking a 4 day trip to Montreal to catch a hockey game and eat at Gibby’s.
Speaking of…

Do you want Letang? Please 🙏🏻

What if i throw in a lock of Crosby’s hair to sweeten the deal? 😘
 

TrainsOfDisney

Well-Known Member
You don’t “hate it” if you point out diminished or bad offerings and express why you think it…you actually love the place on a different level
Oh I completely agree. I regularly express my negative views. And still enjoy my time at the parks.
No higher standard than spending a week in Vegas
That’s not my experience at all - Disney parks are still a much higher standard than Vegas has dropped too. The prices at Vegas make Mickey look downright charitable!
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
You quoted me in a post when I was talking about Grand California......so
Reread what i asked…

It was about location justifying price…and asking why a $500 a night hotel with less convenient access makes sense over a $200 one?

It’s not the that simple…but what is pretty simple is the surcharge for the “D” when you stay…which feeds this beast of “luxury” in the end as well
 

Miss Bella

Well-Known Member
Reread what i asked…

It was about location justifying price…and asking why a $500 a night hotel with less convenient access makes sense over a $200 one?

It’s not the that simple…but what is pretty simple is the surcharge for the “D” when you stay…which feeds this beast of “luxury” in the end as well
Over the 4th of July I stayed at the Hilton Maren in Fort Lauderdale I used a free night reward from Hilton, but the hotel was packed and it was 500 a night. Prime location on the beach, concert and fireworks right across the street, walking distance to numerous bars and restaurants. Absolutely nothing luxurious about this hotel. Location is everything when it comes to hotels..thats just common knowledge. I could have stayed at much more luxurious hotel miles from the beach. I don't see WDW as being much different.

In regards to DL there are many hotels within walking distance that are cheaper than the DL hotels. I agree with you I don't see the point in staying at DL hotel with the current prices. At WDW location does account for a lot of the price....not that I would pay it, but it is a big factor.
 

Tom P.

Well-Known Member
They are going to charge what people are willing to pay. When people stop paying they will lower prices. It's pretty basic economics.
All signs, though, are that attendance and hotel occupancy is far below the norm and continues to fall. That's why we are seeing so many unusual offers being made right now. Yet Disney still chose to roll out a new price increase. They didn't have to lower prices. They could have built a great deal of goodwill by simply announcing they were keeping prices the same for another year.
 

Touchdown

Well-Known Member
I know you guys don’t really want to hear this, but, I’ve stayed in luxury hotels and they are priced 30-50% higher per night than your $800 monorail room. Compared to actual luxury hotels, the Disney Hotels are cheaper but you get far less perks. They are still priced higher than most mid-tier or business hotels but they are not priced as luxury hotels. Price out the four seasons in Orlando, the Waldorf in New York, Hotel Del Coronado in San Diego or a Fairmont Chateau in Canada to see what an actual luxury property costs. That doesn’t negate the arguments being put forth here but do want to correct that misnomer.
 

GhostHost1000

Premium Member
They are going to charge what people are willing to pay. When people stop paying they will lower prices. It's pretty basic economics.
Less people are going and paying Disney. Disney then raises prices to offset that. This trend can’t continue and be successful long term. Social media “influencers” would be the only ones left until they realize the perks they get aren’t worth the everything is awesome content.

They can only do so much to make Disney look like a dream vacation destination with less offerings that costs more than ever before.
 

DisneyHead123

Well-Known Member
I know you guys don’t really want to hear this, but, I’ve stayed in luxury hotels and they are priced 30-50% higher per night than your $800 monorail room. Compared to actual luxury hotels, the Disney Hotels are cheaper but you get far less perks. They are still priced higher than most mid-tier or business hotels but they are not priced as luxury hotels. Price out the four seasons in Orlando, the Waldorf in New York, Hotel Del Coronado in San Diego or a Fairmont Chateau in Canada to see what an actual luxury property costs. That doesn’t negate the arguments being put forth here but do want to correct that misnomer.

It’s not that Disney is entirely unique (prices for hotels at popular beach destinations are often similar to monorail hotels), I think it’s a question of the sustainability of inflated post Covid prices all around. I don’t see this as a Disney problem specifically, just an inflation problem in general.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
It’s not that Disney is entirely unique (prices for hotels at popular beach destinations are often similar to monorail hotels), I think it’s a question of the sustainability of inflated post Covid prices all around. I don’t see this as a Disney problem specifically, just an inflation problem in general.
I think it’s their market that makes the difference…

A beach hotel with 250 rooms during the high season on a seasonal basis is one thing

Disney is different. It’s designed on volume…

You have 30,000 rooms as a “gateway” for those staying to spend all their money for a week into your coffers…24 hours a day.

And they’re expected to be filled 365 days a year to 100%

That’s the design and model


All of a sudden thinking you can compensate for losses of traffic across all venues by giving out champagne in the lobby and double charging people to ride mine train is an “idea” for sure…a stupid one
 

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