ford91exploder
Resident Curmudgeon
Why is that a problem?
Because I can get a suite at the Hilton for the price of a parking lot view regular room at the Poly.
Why is that a problem?
Isn't he comparing like to like? holiday weekends inflate the prices at Disney and in major cities. He also checked a regular weekend for comparison.
$200/night for a high demand location, high demand weekend for a clean/nicely decorated hotel room doesn't seem all that unreasonable to me. I mean, sure, WDW hotels are overpriced, but they are overpriced the same way in demand hotels are anywhere.
Maybe others have different experiences, but a clean (i.e. not roach motel type) basic chain hotel that's "somewhere" (like in a non-downtown area of a city, as opposed to the side of the road places in the middle of nowhere) but not really in demand is probably going to run you $99 a night in general. A similar quality place in somewhere with actual demand that tourists make efforts to travel to being $150-200 a night seems about where I would expect.
Now people can say they are "not worth it" for what you get. I'm not disagreeing, but that's a different argument that the prices are somehow out of whack with the rest of the hospitality industry, which I do not think it the case.
Don't be so shallow and pedantic. There was once a good balance. Obviously no one is saying Disney should charge $60 night for a resort room. But when you consider the high cost of a park ticket (especially park hopper) plus high priced food, and then throw in an extremely overpriced resort room Thays ready 30% off but still $300 per night, you find yourself feeling choked with the cost and just want some type of a break.
I think what else is affecting folks is how quickly prices have increased. Ten years ago, those Value resorts *did* go for $60 a night. Rack rate was like $79. I remember paying $54/57 with my AP to stay at Pop on multiple occasions.
Admission has gone up incredibly. Food has gone up Incredibly. Both have nearly doubled in a lot of cases.
Yes, some will say prices on everything have gone up in life - in some cases true, but you are hard pressed to find anything that has gone up with such vigor and yet the quality and offerings have such steadily declined.
Isn't he comparing like to like? holiday weekends inflate the prices at Disney and in major cities. He also checked a regular weekend for comparison.
$200/night for a high demand location, high demand weekend for a clean/nicely decorated hotel room doesn't seem all that unreasonable to me. I mean, sure, WDW hotels are overpriced, but they are overpriced the same way in demand hotels are anywhere.
Maybe others have different experiences, but a clean (i.e. not roach motel type) basic chain hotel that's "somewhere" (like in a non-downtown area of a city, as opposed to the side of the road places in the middle of nowhere) but not really in demand is probably going to run you $99 a night in general. A similar quality place in somewhere with actual demand that tourists make efforts to travel to being $150-200 a night seems about where I would expect.
Now people can say they are "not worth it" for what you get. I'm not disagreeing, but that's a different argument that the prices are somehow out of whack with the rest of the hospitality industry, which I do not think it the case.
And still attendance and occupancy continues to climb.
Ditto!
Quite frankly I can't even remember the last time wdw1974 even shared information with us which was actually useful or even accurate. It's gotta be at least 5 years and that is being generous.
Just go away!
So, are they overpriced? Absolutely. Is there a reason? Absolutely.
Really?Ditto!
Quite frankly I can't even remember the last time wdw1974 even shared information with us which was actually useful or even accurate. It's gotta be at least 5 years and that is being generous.
Just go away!
Facts are such pesky little things...Well, if current plans (and they are subject to change, but accurate as of this posting and that is all I can ever offer) follow through, sometime in either 2017 or 2018 you will get to experience a true GotG E-Ticket at The Corpse of The Disney-MGM Studios. Fast construction timeline you say. Or the Spirit is smoking on some bad Kissimmee weed you say?
Nope. Welcome to The Guardians of the Galaxy Tower of Terror. Yes. Really. Yes, Disney wants to destroy (or make over depending on how you look at it) one of its high points of creative product in the last 25 years to tie it to a BRAND that it can't even use to advertise and promote, in Florida that is.
Soo...do you want Disney to charge interstate motel/hotel prices for their 'value' accommodations? Or increase the quality of these accommodations (other than normal renovations) while keeping the price the same? Or something else?
The reason is that the hotel industry prices competitively according to price transparency - anyone can look up any price for any fixed period of time. Published prices and rack rates serve as reference points for the consumer, and are only one indicator of the market.
You know how years ago, Mars Needs Moms killed Zemeckis's mocap unit at Disney and his plans for a Yellow Submarine remake? They were also making a giant monster movie over there, "Calling All Robots". Bunch of artwork and a story reel have emerged.
http://astoundingbeyondbelief.tumblr.com/tagged/calling-all-robots
Real shame. Kaiju films are a genre I'd love to see feature animation do more in.
Don't be so shallow and pedantic. There was once a good balance. Obviously no one is saying Disney should charge $60 night for a resort room. But when you consider the high cost of a park ticket (especially park hopper) plus high priced food, and then throw in an extremely overpriced resort room Thays ready 30% off but still $300 per night, you find yourself feeling choked with the cost and just want some type of a break.
My preference would be somewhere in between. My personal preference for a room style is more in-line with what Disney coins as their moderates... in terms of room features, etc. If Disney wants to have a product in a motel level of room below that level... I'm not going to have a fit about it. But the pricing of the values impacts the pricing on the moderates for obvious reasons. So I can't flush them from the equation entirely.
If Disney were charging more like $130-$180/200 for their moderates... I think that would be a better balance of my willingness to pay for what product they are offering. I think their Values should be more like $90-$120. But their actual prices are more like $120-210.. and moderates are more like $220-$300 hence the disconnect in the pricing.
I am fine with most of the amenity levels at the value and moderates with the exception of transportation... I just don't want to be paying an ultra premium when the product does not match the price.
When I have to stay in NYC and pay redonkulous prices... it doesn't mean I'm willing to pay those prices, I'm pretty much forced to and do so begrudgingly. I don't want to be UPSET by my vacation... that kind of sets things off on the wrong foot.
Well in a recent article about the Disneyland Paris Nature villages (or whatever it is called) it said they would use magicbands in that development but only magicbands nothing else like FP+, etc.
Hey buddy. I live in KC (actually on the KS side but still in the metro area) so dont be bad mouthin KC.......I agree id rather be in WDW.So with the earlier complaints of Disney's hotel prices, I decided to do some checking. I went online to search for Friday and Saturday night hotel options on both Presidents' Day weekend (one of Disney's busiest) and the weekend after 2/24-2/26 (relatively slow weekend). 2 nights, family of 4. Basic room.
I searched Disney, Universal and downtown hotels in the following cities: New York, Chicago, Nashville, Dallas and Kansas City. I chose a reasonable comp for Value, Moderate and Deluxe (you can quibble with my choices, but all were representative of the overall Expedia star categories and price points). I used Disney's site for its hotels, Uni's for theirs, and Expedia for theirs. I didn't include parking or resort fees, but that would mostly have helped Disney.
Here's what's interesting... Disney is competitive with these 5 American cities. Uni was slightly higher than Disney on these weekends, but not out of the ballpark. Simply put, look at these locations during the last two weekends of February. Where do you want to be? Sure Kansas City is cheaper, but would you rather be there or at WDW? Here's the comparison:
View attachment 171708
This came as a surprise to them?
Did they not have any market research as to whether people would miss the Tower?
I wonder whether their decision was based on actual guest visits to the attraction and/or utilization of theoretical capacity.
Well you're half right.
Ten years ago, whoever would have predicted that Captain America 3 would stomp a movie called "Batman vs Superman"?
yet inclusive booze isn't even an option on DCL... and is a paid upgrade on most lines. The narrow minded thinking never ceases to amaze me when people shutdown on things they've not even researched, let alone experienced.
THANK YOU.
I said the very same thing over in the dedicated thread in the DL forum, and I got mocked. Some of them really just don't get it and don't care.
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