According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, the top 20% of US households by income, spend more on vacation each year than the bottom 80% combined. That's what Disney is focusing on.
Those of you with access to Disney's TA marketing material, look for a document titled "Selling Disney Destinations: Seven Market Segments." It lists Disney's 7 "priority" demographics, along with how much those families spend on vacation each year.
Here are those vacation spend levels: $1,860 / $3,100 / $3,820 / $4,170 / $6,970 / $7,650 / $7,890
6 of the 7 "priority" demographics are in the top 20% of US household incomes; two of them spend
double what the top 20% does, which probably puts them in the top 5% (or higher).
To put that in perspective, 6 of Disney's 7 "priority" demographics come from households making $100,000/year or more. (
Here's a handy tool to figure this out.) The top couple of demographics are probably from households making $140,000 - $180,000+ per year.
That said, I think a lot of this debate, including a lot of what I wrote, is really a proxy for a discussion about income inequality in general. I would care a whole lot less about the cost of a Disney vacation if it was affordable to the top 50% of US households instead of the top 20%. But that's another subject.