Am I right in thinking that they haven't implemented park-specific pricing yet, as they were originally rumored to be thinking about?
Edit: I see from
the other thread that indeed, they're also eliminating park-specific pricing.
In addition to the "complication", I suspect this is also a simple money-grab (or revenue-enhancement, as I've called it at work) to enable price increases for high season while maintaining current pricing for low season.
@CaptainAmerica, it may seem beyond the pale for Disney to increase prices by 20%, but I suspect they could do that or more for spring break and Christmas week.
Looking at my DVC point chart, I see that those weeks are 70% more expensive that "Adventure Season" (or 60% more expensive than average pricing). Do your point about discounted off-season, Note that "Adventure Season" is about 10% cheaper than average pricing. Magic Season pricing during summer vacation is about 20% higher than average pricing.
Raising ticket prices for spring break and Christmas Day to New Years by 50% *would* be umm, "bold" (or some other word that starts with a "b").
I could see them *not* lowering off-season pricing in the first year, but just having it flat for a couple of years. This would make people who bought tickets before the pricing scheme from experiencing remorse. OTOH, I could also see them lowering off season prices by, say, 5% to be able to say that some prices have gone down while others went up. My bet would be on long-term summer pricing 20% higher than average and off-season pricing 10% lower than the average. All bets are off for Christmas and Spring Break.
Given that this seasonal pricing is anticipated to change the seasonality preference behavior for guests both on and offsite, I wonder if it will mean that the seasonal pricing for DVC and onsite resorts will be lessened? I'm thinking that the seasonal ticket pricing will contribute to more DVCers wanting to visit during off-season, so off-season DVC pricing would adjust to follow that demand.