Lightning Lane Premier Pass

SplashJacket

Well-Known Member
What is happening with prices and why are people not pushing back against this? Just 4 years ago, a family of 4 could get into a park and have a nice day for under $700. Now it’s closer to $2000. I’m sure most of this is going on credit cards or coming out of home equity, because incomes have went up, but not by 150%. I’m seriously beginning to worry about what happens when this crazy inflationary period busts. It’s going to be brutal and could make 2008 look like a walk in the park. (No pun intended)
Your family from Missouri isn’t buying this.

Your CEO or business owner pulling in a a million a year is buying this. It’s likely an extremely small percentage of people buying this, but people very largely underestimate wealth inequality.

Going to Disney in general is out of reach for most people, but within that gradient, there’s a group making an incredible amount of money.

The star cruiser failed not because there weren’t enough people who could pay, but because there weren’t enough people within that group who wanted that experience.
 

SingleRider

Premium Member
Lightning Lane Premier Pass is now sold out for all parks tomorrow, November 25:

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SplashJacket

Well-Known Member
How do you know who has Premier Pass?
I haven’t been following this thread so ignore if it’s not a valid question.
You absolutely don’t, and I’d fully expect it to be a very small allotment, otherwise it risks messing with their very expensive and thorough crowd management schemes that work because of Genie+.

DAS was basically this, but DAS is slightly reigned in by high wait attractions taking longer to provide a return time.

If you have 50,000 people in MK on a busy day, and 1,000 people have this, that’s 2% of people.

You’re already dealing with an income group that’s probably weighted mostly towards the top half of incomes, so top 2% of that is about the top 1% of earners, and that group takes in close to a million a year.

This doesn’t account for the foreign guests (who also tend to be very wealthy).

If you’re making a million a year, dropping $20,000 on a week long Disney trip ($6000 in Premier, $2400 on tickets, $7000 on concierge hotel, $4,600 on transport, food, souvenirs, etc) isn’t that crazy.

That’s a much smaller fraction than most of us pay of our annual income on vacations.

Anyway, this isn’t designed for the average person, or anyone close to that, so complaining about prices being unreasonable for the average person is silly.

Is $20,000 for a week at Disney worth it? For me? No. But I value a dollar very differently from someone making a million a year. It’s all relative
 

erstwo

Well-Known Member
Did anyone else check wait times today?
I checked at 2pm eastern and MK and Epcot seemed calm/ no insane wait times. R& R seemed to be down at HS - Rise was 130 minutes standby and ToT nearing 120. AK was high waits but nothing insane in any of the parks.
It will be interesting to check in later this week. Maybe today was the calm before the storm.
 

SplashJacket

Well-Known Member
Disney is not going to suddenly stop being a corporation, so I actually prefer for them to do stuff like this (and the Star cruiser) where they try to drive revenue increases by charging way more for those who can afford it.

Better than just raising tickets by x percent each year.
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
Did anyone else check wait times today?
I checked at 2pm eastern and MK and Epcot seemed calm/ no insane wait times. R& R seemed to be down at HS - Rise was 130 minutes standby and ToT nearing 120. AK was high waits but nothing insane in any of the parks.
It will be interesting to check in later this week. Maybe today was the calm before the storm.
My niece is arriving tomorrow for her first visit- with her 1 year old. She assured me it wouldn't be crowded, after I told her how slammed it was going to be. 😂 She also assured me she was seeing Harry Potter, but didn't need different tickets. 🤷🏻‍♀️🤪
 

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