nickys
Premium Member
Yes. But it's getting more and more inconvenient to use cash today. I live in Florida. I could wait 10 minutes at the Turnpike booth to pay my $7 toll. Or I could just tag a credit card to a Sunpass sticker and fly right through.
Or I could spend 20 minutes in line for QS at Disney. But it is more convenient if I mobile order.
Toll Booth operator is not a growing field. Similar to "mail carrier who can ride a horse and travel long distances".
Changes are generational. We are around now, and nobody likes "change" - So we resist. But the kids today (the ones who will have the expendable income in the next 10- 20 years) this is how they operate. Try "calling" a twenty year old. Their first response will be "Why are you calling?...just text me." I didn't know what a "text" was 20 years ago - I had just given up my beeper for a fold-able cellular phone.
I used to take my fold-able cellular phone to Burdines to buy a Polo shirt (in cash of course). If somebody would have told me that in 20 years, I could just order that shirt online and it would be delivered right to me. I naturally would have asked "Well, how do I pay for that?" The response would have been "we'll have a credit card on file".....to which my response would have been... "Yeah....right!"
Never had a problem at the toll booths. Slow down, choose a lane, drive through, chuck money into nets, drive off, rejoin highway.
Or stop at a toll booth. Most we’ve ever waited is for two cars to pay. The bigger issue is that the sat nav thinks we’re turning off the highway and frantically tries to reprogramme the route as we’re rejoining the highway!
Disney have a huge mountain to climb still in monitoring international guests. Whatever rules stop them shipping magic bands (whether import regs at our end, or export regs in the US) causes issues. Most people buying the special tickets will do so through a 3rd party seller. I have no idea how or if Disney find out total numbers sold from the sellers, but unless they’re linked to MDE they have no way to track them until people show up at the gates.
Then their gift cards that they sell in the U.K., for example, can only be used in the U.K. So therefore visitors can’t even be encouraged to use gift cards in lieu of cash.
Plus, as you say, you can’t pre-load cash onto magic bands or the RFID tickets. And even if they did allow that, the casual visitor who is just picking random days to come and don’t know how many further days they will return, will be unwilling to load cash onto them anyway. That applies as much to US visitors as international ones.
A surprising number of international visitors still use traditional bank credit cards, which have minimum foreign transaction fees attached. So they won’t want to use them for small amounts.
Ultimately, since the offsite visitors outnumber onsite visitors, any move to cashless is fraught with problems.