2020 The Year of the Upcharge >:(

NickMaio

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Some number crunching here - - -


The first half of 2020 being almost half the calendar days involving upsell tickets and / or early closures.

Should give everyone a good idea of where WDW is heading?
Not great for those of us that do not partake in the upsell stuff. This potentially drastically lowers the operating hours for us "regular" guests.

Bummer:(
 

NCO91590

Active Member
These two events seem to be held before the parks open and after they close. Have the parks been open earlier than 8am-9am and close after 8pm-9pm? It's been a while since I've been to the parks at night. My were too little to stay up late on our previous visits. I guess I never really paid much attention!
 

monothingie

❤️Bob4Eva❤️
Premium Member
Nothing like selling the parks 2 twice.

So far it hasn't impacted normal hours, like the party nights, 9 and 10 PM closings have been fairly standard. But your EMH hours have been curtailed.

But this shouldn't surprise anyone.

Just hope that economy keeps up so that people are willing to spend....
 

Queen of the WDW Scene

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
The trouble is that people keep asking for more and paying for it.

I like MNSSHP and MVMCP but I can leave EMM, DAH, and parties within parties and I do and just plan around the things I don't care for.

Other guests want to feel "special" though so as long as their are people willing to pay Disney will continue to come up with different instagramable events.

Some of us saw that these pay to play events were going to replace EMH yet people took the bait anyways
 
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NickMaio

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
The trouble is that people keep asking for more and paying for it.

I like MNSSHP and MVMCP but I can leave EMM, DAH, and parties within parties and I do and just plan around the things I don't care for.

Other guests want to feel "special" though so as long as their are people willing to pay Disney will continue to come up with different instagramable events.

Some of us saw that these pay to play events were going to replace EMH yet people took the bait anyways
Sadly - - - you are most correct.
 

Vacationeer

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
No
Tony’s Most Merriest Town Square Party with reserved parade viewing will take place from 9:30 PM to 12:30 AM during MVMCP.
About $125 for MVMCP ticket. Add $100 to experience Tony's.

Who is buying? The Parade shows twice; not much advantage. You'd need to drink a keg worth of beer to offset the cost. Inconvenient to continue returning to the park entrance. You'll miss rope drop tomorrow if you have that much beer and salami at midnight. Oh yeah, and it's Tony's.

FWIW, I've heard of at least 3 5 ppl enjoying themselves here :D
 
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eliza61nyc

Well-Known Member
They’ve clearly hit a ceiling of sorts when it comes to attendance, ticket and merchandise sales. So how do you grow that revenue ASAP? Sell the same experience twice and say it’s new or special. Sadly, it seems to be working.


Why do you say that they clearly hit a ceiling? according to the earnings transcripts for 4th quarter guest spending was up 5% higher on admissions and merchandise. They did say they are anticipating a decline in their international operations mainly due to the unrest in Hong kong.
Just wondered why you see a decline in sales.
I too know quite a few people that enjoy the after hours events.
 

wdisney9000

Truindenashendubapreser
Premium Member
Tony’s Most Merriest Town Square Party with reserved parade viewing will take place from 9:30 PM to 12:30 AM during MVMCP.
About $125 for MVMCP ticket. Add $100 to experience Tony's.

Who is buying? The Parade shows twice; not much advantage. You'd need to drink a keg worth of beer to offset the cost. Inconvenient to continue returning to the park entrance. You'll miss rope drop tomorrow if you have that much beer and salami at midnight. Oh yeah, and it's Tony's.

FWIW, I've heard of at least 3 ppl enjoying themselves here :D
Wife and I attended MVMCP and also Tonys Town Square Party. Tonys, IMO was actually well worth the extra money. The food and desserts were decent and there was a good selection of wine/beer. But what made it truly unique was that Equity Ben was playing Tony that night and I gotta say, that man puts on a show! He was absolutely hilarious, quick witted and extremely interactive with the entire restaurant.

We visited twice during the night. It wasnt a hassle to return to the front of the park (at least not for us).
 

Jon81uk

Well-Known Member
These two events seem to be held before the parks open and after they close. Have the parks been open earlier than 8am-9am and close after 8pm-9pm? It's been a while since I've been to the parks at night. My were too little to stay up late on our previous visits. I guess I never really paid much attention!

Indeed, I don't think the park was open much past 9pm in Jan/Feb time anyway. For May onwards the Magic Kingdom should offer 10pm or midnight closing as the default though.
 

bUU

Well-Known Member
Disney has been upcharging since the first Club 33 opened and perhaps even before. The real bump in upcharging happened a few years ago as a reflection of the more general change in preference by consumers in our society for lower base prices with upcharges. We see it with airlines (lower base airfare and now we pay for even the first piece of checked luggage), hotels (with new "resort fees"), new cars (now charging a "documentation fee" for paperwork they used to handle for free), salons (many now breaking off parts of provided services imposing an upcharge for each), oil changes (now charging a fee to discard your old oil, where before that was included in the quoted price), credit cards (more and more companies and agencies charging a "convenience fee") and even Starbucks has at times in certain places charged extra for vegan milk.

When consumers change their attitude toward higher base prices instead of upcharges, we'll see a change in the way things are priced - not before.
 

MickeyLuv'r

Well-Known Member
Disney has been upcharging since the first Club 33 opened and perhaps even before. The real bump in upcharging happened a few years ago as a reflection of the more general change in preference by consumers in our society for lower base prices with upcharges. We see it with airlines (lower base airfare and now we pay for even the first piece of checked luggage), hotels (with new "resort fees"), new cars (now charging a "documentation fee" for paperwork they used to handle for free), salons (many now breaking off parts of provided services imposing an upcharge for each), oil changes (now charging a fee to discard your old oil, where before that was included in the quoted price), credit cards (more and more companies and agencies charging a "convenience fee") and even Starbucks has at times in certain places charged extra for vegan milk.

When consumers change their attitude toward higher base prices instead of upcharges, we'll see a change in the way things are priced - not before.

Mostly, I think consumers are just being tricked. If they see airfare for $50, that looks like a bargain.

Most folks don't really stop to analyze all upcharges.

Some folks maybe don't really think about them, but I think most folks just don't have the bandwidth to deal with all the fine print all the time, and corporations know this.
 

networkpro

Well-Known Member
In the Parks
Yes
Historically Magic Kingdoms normal hours of operations have been all over the place. I'm sure some will take the maximums as their baseline for comparison, but during the winter months 6 or 7 pm closings were not uncommon. Folks who currently live in highly urbanized environment now expect schedules more like their own for entertainment venues.

(spelling correction expect instead of expert)
 
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bUU

Well-Known Member
Mostly, I think consumers are just being tricked. If they see airfare for $50, that looks like a bargain.

Most folks don't really stop to analyze all upcharges.

Some folks maybe don't really think about them, but I think most folks just don't have the bandwidth to deal with all the fine print all the time, and corporations know this.
That's not, "being tricked." It's acknowledging and maturely accepting the inescapable reality of the mass market. I know there is a lot of support in these forums for ignoring or railing against realities of the marketplace like that but most consumers are more mature than that.
 

bUU

Well-Known Member
Historically Magic Kingdoms normal hours of operations have been all over the place. I'm sure some will take the maximums as their baseline for comparison, but during the winter months 6 or 7 pm closings were not uncommon. Folks who currently live in highly urbanized environment now expert schedules more like their own for entertainment venues.
Precisely and an unfounded sense of excessive entitlement is at the root of most wrongheaded comparisons like that.
 

eliza61nyc

Well-Known Member
That's not, "being tricked." It's acknowledging and maturely accepting the inescapable reality of the mass market. I know there is a lot of support in these forums for ignoring or railing against realities of the marketplace like that but most consumers are more mature than that.
👍

I've always shaken my head at this concept that wdw consumers are stupid. "If they like after hours events, they are obviously too "stupid" to know they are being sold the park twice", a family stays deluxe but according to some they're too "stupid" to realize that the deluxes are not worth the price and it's cheaper off site. :rolleyes: go figure? lol, I think airline travelers are some of the most savvy consumers around,they know how to research a flight to get the most bang for their buck.
 
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