Len Testa - “Disney positions itself as the all-American vacation. The irony is that most Americans can’t afford it.”

lentesta

Premium Member
Do you see a way Disney could get to that scenario though?

I always got back to those old commercials with the parents around the computer and see the offer of, something like, "$1,600? For all of us? We can do that!"

Could they do some more structured all-in packages that are maybe limited in when valid but could allow a family to have a stay for like $2,500?

I just looked at undercover tourist and the 4-day tickets for that family alone are $2,579 ... So you basically would need to give them hotel and food for free

Could they do that? Obviously while trying to max out spending by guests from higher income brackets?

I'm just spitballing here, so approach all of this with a healthy dose of skepticism.
  • Let's assume that no families in the bottom 60% of American households can afford the kind of multi-day Disney World trip you've outlined. (I'm sure some do. Work with me.)

  • And let's assume that all theme parks have to participate, not just Disney, to make things fair across the industry. Not picking on Disney.

  • And let's assume Disney's park attendance caps stay the same.

  • Assume Disney held a fixed-price lottery for a certain number of 4-night, 5-day all-inclusive Value-resort vacation packages per year. The price is set to whatever amount the BLS said that the middle quintile spent on travel the previous year. So in this case, $1,900 for up to a family of 4. You win the lottery, you pay the $1,900, you get the trip, no questions asked.

  • Let's cap the cash value of the lottery at $500MM per year. That works out to a bit over 260,000 trips at $1,900 each. Assuming each trip cost Disney $5,500, Disney's out-of-pocket costs would be ($5,500 - $1,900) x 260,000 = $936MM.
That would result in more middle-class families going to Disney World than do now. For under $1 billion.

There are obvious objections:

- The wealthy could also enter the lottery and win. Yes, they can. But more middle-class families would go, which is the goal. I'm assuming nobody wants to fill out a FAFSA form to go to Disney World, so means-testing isn't possible.

- Disney would earn $926MM less. The government already imposes on private capital to achieve desired social outcomes through (e.g.,) subsidies, tax rates and credits, and regulations. I'm not sure how this is conceptually different than electric vehicle incentives or pollution laws.

To put that in comparison, Disney's spent ~$2.8B on share buybacks in the last year and $45B since 2010. I'd need to be convinced that the entire house of cards would come crashing down if they only bought back $36B in shares since 2010. Not to harp on share buybacks, but I think until recently the stock was at the same $110 level that it was a decade ago. If the argument is that the share buybacks helped prevent further stock declines, I want to talk about management competency and compensation first.
 
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TheMaxRebo

Well-Known Member
I'm just spitballing here, so approach all of this with a healthy dose of skepticism.
  • Let's assume that no families in the bottom 60% of American households can afford the kind of multi-day Disney World trip you've outlined. (I'm sure some do. Work with me.)

  • And let's assume that all theme parks have to participate, not just Disney, to make things fair across the industry. Not picking on Disney.

  • And let's assume Disney's park attendance caps stay the same.

  • Assume Disney held a fixed-price lottery for a certain number of 4-night, 5-day all-inclusive Value-resort vacation packages per year. The price is set to whatever amount the BLS said that the middle quintile spent on travel the previous year. So in this case, $1,900 for up to a family of 4. You win the lottery, you pay the $1,900, you get the trip, no questions asked.

  • Let's cap the cash value of the lottery at $500MM per year. That works out to a bit over 260,000 trips at $1,900 each. Assuming each trip cost Disney $5,500, Disney's out-of-pocket costs would be ($5,500 - $1,900) x 260,000 = $936MM.
That would result in more middle-class families going to Disney World than do now. For under $1 billion.

There are obvious objections:

- The wealthy could also enter the lottery and win. Yes, they can. But more middle-class families would go, which is the goal. I'm assuming nobody wants to fill out a FAFSA form to go to Disney World, so means-testing isn't possible.

- Disney would earn $926MM less. The government already imposes on private capital to achieve desired social outcomes through (e.g.,) subsidies, tax rates and credits, and regulations. I'm not sure how this is conceptually different than electric vehicle subsidies or pollution laws.

To put that in comparison, Disney's spent ~$2.8B on share buybacks in the last year and $45B since 2010. I'd need to be convinced that the entire house of cards would come crashing down if they only bought back $36B in shares since 2010. Not to harp on share buybacks, but I think until recently the stock was at the same $110 level that it was a decade ago. If the argument is that the share buybacks helped prevent further stock declines, I want to talk about management competency and compensation first.

Guess that would be the key - be it a lottery or just they do a number of "special packages" like that available on a first come/first serve basis (similar to a free dining promotion) that they can show the long term benefit of these families fighting over the deals getting to experience the magic would increase the value of the company('s stock price) more than share buybacks or other things they could do with the money they would lose

Although it wouldn't be a full net loss as I would assume these packages would only be available during times that are seeing lower than average attendance so could be additive vs replacing higher cost stays
 

monothingie

The Most Positive Member on the Forum ™
Premium Member
Pm me the deets and I’ll check it out…

Hopefully it’s an Uber ship that can chomp the wonder in half and leave it in pieces off of Nassau…

Like the 🦈 did to Quint

It is on the Star of the Seas so it is definitely a larger ship. It is cruising out of Port Canaveral going to Perfect Day at CocoCay in the Bahamas, then off to San Juan Puerto Rico, Philipsburg, St Maarten and then back to Port Canaveral (Orlando). I'll get you all of the other particulars when I get in this evening! Marie
You'll have to deal with me if you decide to book. Just had @wannabeBelle put the deposit down today. (Sorry in advance @Kingdom Konsultant)
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
Just for fun, I priced out a stay for a family of 4 (2 adults 2 kids) next June.

I did June 21-26:
- 5 nights at the All Star Sports
- 4 park days, one park per day
- Disney Dining Plan (so 1 TS, 1QS, 1 snack per day)
- I assume would get water park on arrival day

Subtotal: $ 4,680.68 ... For the whole stay including food, and this is before any hotel discounts are available (rack rate was $180/night) ... Not cheap but I think doable for many

Obviously not staying deluxe, does have LL, doesn't have trader to MCO, etc, but not crazy
Travel costs are another $2-3K.
 

Disstevefan1

Well-Known Member
Original Poster
Just for fun, I priced out a stay for a family of 4 (2 adults 2 kids) next June.

I did June 21-26:
- 5 nights at the All Star Sports
- 4 park days, one park per day
- Disney Dining Plan (so 1 TS, 1QS, 1 snack per day)
- I assume would get water park on arrival day

Subtotal: $ 4,680.68 ... For the whole stay including food, and this is before any hotel discounts are available (rack rate was $180/night) ... Not cheap but I think doable for many

Obviously not staying deluxe, does have LL, doesn't have trader to MCO, etc, but not crazy
No LLs ?
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
Just reading this thread, I'm encouraged that everyone posting knows to be thankful for the trips we can afford to take the parks. I've read worse. Much worse. I'm thankful for this community.
When you grow up poor and basically have nothing of monetary value, you tend to value and be grateful for what you have when opportunity comes your way. I am thankful (and grateful!) every single day for the life we have, because I know what the other side of the coin is like.
 

monothingie

The Most Positive Member on the Forum ™
Premium Member
There’s a long list around here that will help you push 🤨
sinking london GIF
 

Splash4eva

Well-Known Member
I am retired living on fixed income with my wife, but we still afford to go to WDW at least 2 times a year. We bought DVC 15 years ago. Get annual passes thru DVC, approx cost is $1000 per person, if we go 2times that is $500 per or $1000 for a trip (math gets even better if go 3 times). Biggest cost is food, but since we always book a 1 bedroom with full kitchen, order food to be delivered to room. This way we save mega bucks by NOT buying Disney food service which is not only costly but low quality. Want to save more dollars, fly out on Tues, Wed, or Thur--much cheaper than the weekends. Merchandise is rarely bought since we go so often there is not that great of new stuff each visit. Also, due to the elimination of package delivery to resorts, neither of us wish to lug around packages so even if we see something that catches our eye, we tend to pass buying. Our typical stay is about 8 nights with a cost of less than $3000 per trip. The advertising about buying DVC back in a day stated the great long term savings and boy has this turned out to be true-- our direct cost per point was Less than the current resale prices I see online.
Great post. Listen im not saying Disney is ever going to be cheap but to sit here and claim the middle class is completely priced out is just an outright lie
 

Splash4eva

Well-Known Member
I didn't claim the entire middle class is priced out. But that seems to be the demographic that is hit the most at this time. It isn't just the price of the resorts at Disney. It's the flights or drive, food while at Disney, souvenirs, tickets and the paid for line skip, and on and on. It all adds up for a vacation at Disney, or anywhere at this time.
Souvenirs are not a necessity on a vacation. Food there are ways to save there as well. Garden Grocer, Target etc delivery to hotel… no PH skip pricey meals. The list goes on and on. Again as you said its not just Disney and i think thats been one of my original points.
 

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