Didn't read all of the replies - but does this also the fix the loophole a lot of British visitors abuse ... booking one night at the campsites - but never actually check-in (they don't cancel either), and get the ability to book rolling 60 day FastPasses for their entire 14-21 day vacation? As a Brit visitor myself who stays on site - this one really irks me, as it's taking away FP's from those who actually do stay on site (Yes, I know those with a longer length of stay get a slight advantage as they can book immediately for those days - but still).
The conversation about this is prolific over on a British forum.
Yes this is closed. Every possible abuse of the system has been closed.
But that loophole isn’t a British one in particular, it’s probably more pronounced because of the 14 and 21 day tickets. There are far more US guests sdoing the same.
To summarise:
You can only book for the days you are onsite for at the 60 day window.
No rolling window, no earlier dates opening up.
Split stays have two booking windows.
A stricter enforcement about dropping days from a reservation, that’s been happening lately.
And of course FPs being cancelled if you cancel a reservation.
The cancellation appears to be linked to the reservation number, so if you cancel a reservation, no matter whether inside the 30 day window, any FPs linked to that reservation # will be cancelled.
If you switch entirely to a new resort, that’s OK, they’ll just modify the reservation.
But if decide to switch and split your stay, only the first stay will have the same reservation #, so it seems as though the remaining FPs will be cancelled. That is causing some concern, because it isn’t tested yet and no one knows for sure.