ParentsOf4
Well-Known Member
Don't judge WDW like other hotels. WDW has a very different cost structure.Any hotel company will tell you 80% occupancy is w jat they shoot for and when it goes over 85% its time to start planning for expansion. Disney needs more rooms now. Universal is adding another 4,000 to the 6,200 they currently have. They will keep building and wind up with 15,000 on the property they own. They will also according to everyone here build one or two more gates on the land they purchased to go with the 5,000 more hotel rooms. Universal knows the market will continue to grow. Even the vast majority on the site know it. Its a minority who think Universal will grow and WDW will shrink. WDW will continue to grow and prosper. Look at all they are doing now and will be announced soon at Epcot. All 4 gates are being expanded and attendance is growing. 2016 was a bad year but just think, 2017 Pansora, 2018 Toy Story Land, 2019 Star Wars, 2020 The Rat and more in Epcot. 2021 the 50th with something new at MK ans 2022 a new Country and more in Epcot. How many more people will want go vacation at WDW witj all that?
Disney has to pay for airport transportation, daily bus, boat, & monorail service, and Extra Magic Hours from its hotel income. Anything under 85% occupancy is a weak number for WDW, and under 80% is bad.
Even during the post-9/11 period, WDW's annual hotel occupancy bottomed out at 76%. This was a time when Disney laid off cast members and temporarily closing hotel wings. If I correctly remember, all of POFQ was closed.
Again, 80% hotel occupancy for WDW is a bad number.
Remember, when WDW's occupancy approaches 80%, it means the economy is bad and Disney typically is offering deep discounts to get it to 80%.
Conversely, when occupancy approaches 90%, Disney is offering considerably fewer discounts and the cash is rolling in.
It's only about a 10% difference between a really good and really bad occupancy number at WDW.