Lightning Lane Premier Pass

tissandtully

Well-Known Member
If the price is low because of low crowds, then why do I need a Premier Pass if crowds are low? 🤔
Because it's purely for FOMO families, which if this is something you are doing once every 10 years and want to do everything and fit things in without waiting in line, it's an appealing option.
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
Disney's Premier Pass - Starting as low as $119*

*Only at DAK where the PP is more or less useless.
*Price featured for the PP is on very rare select days, every other day it will co$t you much much more.
*Per Person PP Price.
*No refunds for the PP if you find that you've been misled about actual wait times that are so low as to not justify purchasing the PP.
 

JMcMahonEsq

Well-Known Member
To feel special. To wait in a 5 minutes line instead of a 15 minute line.

Seriously even a low crowd day might have some attractions with a 45 minute line.
This.

Lets say your at MK on an insanely low crowd day, where every ride had only a 10min wait. If you want to ride 10-12 things that still between an hour and forty and two hours of waiting in line. And that's based on wait times that on average just don't exist, absent extreme circumstances we hopefully will never see again. (I will still remember being at MK right before labor day during covid delta. Most kids were back in school, many people were still not traveling, lines were so short i think my family rode BTRR 3 times in a row, they didn't even make them get out of the seats.)

So if you have the cash, why would you not want to save at minimum around 2 hours of your time.
 

DCBaker

Premium Member
Lightning Lane Premier Pass at Magic Kingdom has sold out for Thanksgiving Day (November 28). Magic Kingdom was at the highest price point at $449 for that day.

IMG_872A600E625F-1.jpeg
 

Indy_UK

Well-Known Member
Im actually kind of happy that they are selling out some days. Maybe one day with some pricing adjustments, this will be viable to allow the regular Lightning Lane MultiPass to disappear.
 

co10064

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
I would actually find an offer like this appealing if, for example, I was going to Tokyo Disney, and I knew I would never be returning. So maybe the true is the same in reverse.

But that being said, it’s a shame the price doesn’t include the park hopper, because realistically you could finish either DHS or DAK within a few hours on this model.

I would also never, ever advise this purchase unless a visitor was going at the busiest of times (President’s Day/marathon, Easter/Spring Break, Christmas), and as others have said, never at DAK and rarely for EPCOT.

Still think After Hours is a much better value.
 

Purduevian

Well-Known Member
Lightning Lane Premier Pass at Magic Kingdom has sold out for Thanksgiving Day (November 28). Magic Kingdom was at the highest price point at $449 for that day.

View attachment 826452
I wonder how many of these they sell before being "sold out". I still feel like peter pan's flight is probably the limiting factor here as basically everyone that buys premire pass will ride it and it only has 800pph capacity. Make a ton of assumptions and maybe none of them are right.

Lets assume all LLPP is spread out evenly between 10am-6pm. Durring that time Pan (assuming no breakdowns) gives out 6,400 rides. I don't think disney would want more than 30% of that being LLPP, which would limit the sales to ~2000 people a day?

At $449 per person, Disney would make ~$900,000 from these 2,000 people.

I'm assuming Disney will keep dropping the LLMP availability on these low capacity attractions (Pan, Pooh, JC, ect) during peak LLPP times so they can sell more.
 

co10064

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
I wonder how many of these they sell before being "sold out". I still feel like peter pan's flight is probably the limiting factor here as basically everyone that buys premire pass will ride it and it only has 800pph capacity. Make a ton of assumptions and maybe none of them are right.

Lets assume all LLPP is spread out evenly between 10am-6pm. Durring that time Pan (assuming no breakdowns) gives out 6,400 rides. I don't think disney would want more than 30% of that being LLPP, which would limit the sales to ~2000 people a day?

At $449 per person, Disney would make ~$900,000 from these 2,000 people.

I'm assuming Disney will keep dropping the LLMP availability on these low capacity attractions (Pan, Pooh, JC, ect) during peak LLPP times so they can sell more.
It does make you wonder if they would in turn limit the sales of LLMP. Surely they have some sort of formula built into the programming… a ratio of MP and PP for total sales.
 

Disstevefan1

Well-Known Member
I could not find the right thread to ask this question.

We purchased LLMP and LLSP in advance but one in the party is now sick and cant go.
Does Disney have proper procedures in place to refund LLMP and LLSP?
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
Do we know if Disney is dropping capacity or if guests are starting to cancel unwanted reservations?
I thought the same until Disney moved to a 2 hour cancellation window.

While people's plans shift and that likely has some impact into availability, it is my understanding that the inventory is added to the system the closer you get to day of.

Doing a quick search of ADRs comparing Friday 11/22 to Friday 12/6 (non-holiday weekends) for a party of 2, a place like Citricos only has 1 slot available on 12/6, however the 11/22 date has basically all slots available from 5PM- 9PM. The same can be said about Topolinos, Flying Fish, Jiko, California Grill, Chef Mickeys, and many other TS locations.

To further illustrate this, on 12/6 the app lists 41 locations for a party of 2 that have no availability. On 11/22 it lists 25 locations with no availability.
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
I could not find the right thread to ask this question.

We purchased LLMP and LLSP in advance but one in the party is now sick and cant go.
Does Disney have proper procedures in place to refund LLMP and LLSP?
If you visit guest services in person or call Disney directly and act like a decent human being towards the CM, anything that is "non-refundable" magically can become refundable.
 

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