Yes, if one person in the room has the dining plan, everyone in the room must have it. They also must have the same tickets. :wave:
Ask the person who doesn't think he/she has the money how much he has budgeted for food each day? You do have to be realistic and have money set aside for meals. $39 per day is a fair amount for food and, for that money, he can have the meal plan. Honestly, if your friend is figuring $20 per day for food, he'll be either hungry or full of junk food. Do some Math and show him the value of the meal plan.Just wondering if everyone attached to the room I have at Pop Century has to have to the Dining Plan or not. Some of us have the money for it and some don't. Just wondering if I can get on the Dining plan for 2 adults out of the 3 going and staying in the room.
Ask the person who doesn't think he/she has the money how much he has budgeted for food each day? You do have to be realistic and have money set aside for meals. $39 per day is a fair amount for food and, for that money, he can have the meal plan. Honestly, if your friend is figuring $20 per day for food, he'll be either hungry or full of junk food. Do some Math and show him the value of the meal plan.
Technically, a person can eat only counter service meals two or three times a day and pay less than 39 bucks. But not only could that be considered "junk" food, but I would think it would also get incredibly boring. Part of the fun of the whole thing is eating at at least a few good sit down restaraunts.
But I think, between my wife and I, our counter service totals usually came to 12 to 16 bucks. Divide that by two (the price for one person), you come out to 6 to 8 dollars. So two 8 dollar counter service meals per day would be 16 bucks. 24 bucks if you have three per day. So it can be done. But I'd rather pay a little extra per day and have some much better dining options.
Ask the person who doesn't think he/she has the money how much he has budgeted for food each day? You do have to be realistic and have money set aside for meals. $39 per day is a fair amount for food and, for that money, he can have the meal plan. Honestly, if your friend is figuring $20 per day for food, he'll be either hungry or full of junk food. Do some Math and show him the value of the meal plan.
I must respectfully but very strongly disagree with both of you, and I speak from experience.sbkline said:Technically, a person can eat only counter service meals two or three times a day and pay less than 39 bucks. But not only could that be considered "junk" food, but I would think it would also get incredibly boring.
Just wondering if everyone attached to the room I have at Pop Century has to have to the Dining Plan or not. Some of us have the money for it and some don't. Just wondering if I can get on the Dining plan for 2 adults out of the 3 going and staying in the room.
I must respectfully but very strongly disagree with both of you, and I speak from experience.
On a Disney vacation with our kids, we just don't feel like sitting down to table-service meals, and we certainly don't want to get involved with strictly following plans, which is usually necessary if one is to use ADRs. During two separate one-week vacations, we ate at exactly two table-service meals during each seek (one time was Crystal Palace dinner and Hoop Dee Doo Revue, and the other time it was CRT breakfast and Chef Mickey's dinner).
I will use the word "ignorance" here not in a bad way, I'll use it with its pure meaning, "lack of knowledge." Ignorance abounds regarding counter service choices, both in terms of health and variety. My wife and I were training for our first half-marathon during our most recent trip, so we certainly weren't about to assault our bodies with a stream of fried foods and fat-laden meats. If you open your eyes and look at what's around, you'll see you can eat heathfully and also enjoy a tasty variety. No, of course it's not fine dining, and I'm not trying to compare it, I'm just saying it's not all bad food that's bad for you.
I could go on and on, but I'm running out of time ... and you all kinda get my point by now.
And even though we don't like making set plans with where we will be when, I obsessively STUDY all the WDW info relevant to my family, and part of that was looking at our eating habits and pricing out the DDP. It wasn't even close, spending out-of-pocket was MUCH cheaper for us. First of all, we're not big restaurant breakfast eaters, so we got a grocery delivery that covered breakfasts (yogurt, bagels, instant oatmeal [heat the water in the coffee maker!], fresh fruit, cold cereal and milk, cottage cheese, etc.). And on the counter-service meals we like, there's no way my wife and I would each spend anywhere near $38.99 each per day -- including a snack and two meals, we each spend about $22 per day on meals. That means that, for us, the DDP is a horribly bad deal. But for someone who eats at least one table-service meal a day, the DDP is a no-brainer GREAT deal.
I just wanted to educate y'all that, at least at WDW, counter-service doesn't have to equal burgers and chicken fingers and other slow death. Our half-marathon training would never have survived a week of Attack of the Killer Bacon Cheeseburgers!:lol:
Thank you for pointing out your Post #9. You are 100% correct, I didn't notice it at all when I responded to your Post #7 snd sbkline's Post #8. I understand what you are saying in Post #9, and it is a much better-stated argument than you had in Post #7, in my opinion. You contradict yourself between the 2 posts in whether or not counter-service fare is "junk food."I wouldn't say that I'm ignorant with regard to the WDW counter service meals and neither is SBKline. Both of us have made several trips to WDW and were voicing our opinions based on our experiences.
If you go back and read my last post before this, it states that I just wanted the person going to WDW to think about what kind of daily money was budgeted for food and be realistic about it. The difference in $$ could be minimal. You and I are both ignorant as to what kind of eater this person would be on vacation. I just wanted him to crunch some numbers before saying no to the DDP. I also stated that I did not feel counter service meals are junk. After all, they are included in the DDP, which I favor.
Thanks, "y'all" for the input.
lewis,Will the three of you be spending the trip together? If so he really needs the dining plan. It will cost him more if he has to pay cash for TS meals. He'll have to pay full cost at buffets and restaurants that serve all you care to eat. DDP guests aren't suppose to be sharing meals with guests not on the plan. I hope he isn't planning on just sharing your food.
The trip won't be memorable if he heads over for a CS meal while you go for a TS meal and then asks when you think you'll be done and where he should meet you.
The question isn't if a person can have a nice vacation with a minimum of TS meals, they can but can, a group have a workable vacation if one person doesn't want to pay for the same meal experiences as the rest of the group.
In Post #7 you must admit that you clearly stated in plain English that a person who spends $20 a day on counter-service food will be, in your exact words, "either hungry or full of junk food." You then state the opposite in Post #9.
Then please let us all know to what type of food you were referring, when you said that if someone "is figuring $20 per day for food, he'll be either hungry or full of junk food"???In Post #7 I didn't mention the words "counter-service" at all.
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