MickeyLuv'r
Well-Known Member
Yes, so long as you have a good connection. I have not done this personally, but I have heard as much.I’m not sure if this has already been answered, but does anyone know if you can book a LL while out of state for your arrival day?
We will be traveling this summer and taking an early morning flight and will be in the parks for the afternoon and evening on our arrival date. If I’ve got a park ticket and buy G+ the night before, would I be able to book a LL at the opening window for later that afternoon/night. I would be in a different time zone and account for that for the opening window. I wasn’t sure if someone had already tried it and was curious to see if it would work.
One caution though, is that I have fairly often experienced travel delays. For G+, I'd leave a healthy time margin, and I'd be even more careful about booking any ILL's, at least if you have more than 2 people in your group.
Oh, in summer afternoon storms are fairly common. I actually enjoy visiting in summer, but it takes a bit of strategy. I'm not 100%, but I think if the attraction happens to be down during your time window, it works like FP+ did. In the past, if attraction was down, you got an anytime/any attraction pass (well almost any attraction: like for MK Jungle Cruise might be excluded.)
The other thing is, We don't have much say in the return window times. If you have say a park reservation for MK that day, then the system will not know that you are not at WDW. If you are booking a pass at 7am, it can be tricky to get a 6pm pass.
If you have MK as your park, you could try booking passes for another park, and that would kinda solve one problem: your return times windows will automatically be for 2p or later, BUT that creates a new problem: you would have to either: A.) enter MK BEFORE you could enter a different park, OR B.) change your park pass to the other park. BUT...that is assuming the second park is available. It is a gamble.
This is another example of how WDW is just more dumbly complicated than it needs to be or ought to be.