+ 1. And if your budget allows for a longer hotel stay (like 6-7 days) then you can get the longer tickets and the marginal cost of tickets goes way down - especially if you would need park hopper for the shorter stay (like we would). |
It actually is not - IF you have been active in the DC summer. In DC we are out and about a lot in the summer walking, but exercising and biking and acclimate. I routinely compare the weather in Orlando to the weather in DC in the summer and they are almost always very close. Orlando is a tad more humid but essentially the same. We did an August trip to Disney last year and it was totally doable - we didn’t have any fancy gear, just hats and water and the same clothes we wear in DC on hot days outdoors. Orlando is actually more different from DC in other seasons. Like you may go to Orlando in January and have 80+ degrees or in May and have 90 degrees. |
I like theme park trips because I know where we will be all day, what we will eat, where the parking is etc. When I price out a day of meals and activities from other vacations Disney isn’t always more expensive either |
If you don’t enjoy rides and theming then sure I can see this! If you do, then it is worth it. My kid loved it so that makes it worth it to me. |
Yup. We always go in August exactly because it’s so similar to DC August. |
Right. I don’t necessarily spend $250/day on entertainment on other types of trips, but I generally spend more on fights and hotels. The difference in daily spending is probably around $150/day for me. So that means a 4 day Disney trip costs $600 more than a different 4 day trip which is likely offset by cheaper flights and hotels. |
Ugh.
Disney is something I feel I should do with my kids but I can’t bring myself to go. It’s such a miserable experience of being cramped and stuffed with too many people in a concrete jungle. Every year when we talk about vacations they’ve always been more excited about other options. Hopefully my luck doesn’t run out and the kids can go to Disney in a school trip or something. |
That's really sad. The people who most need the escape from reality it offers can afford it the least, and when they do splurge the actual experience is objectively miserable given the costs involved. |
Why "should" ? It's just insanely over the top. It was once nice and special but it just kept growing to ridiculous levels. |
The movies are cheap as free at home though. And there are affordable alternatives like Dutch Wonderland and Hershey. |
I think you can still do this. Disneyland is more manageable because it is so much smaller. Disney world in Orlando is the real nightmare that requires a degree in trip planning to manage your Lightning Lanes and wake up at 7 to make reservations. Anecdotally I went to Tokyo Disney on New Years Eve (i.e. one of the most crowded days of the year) with zero pre-planning, just waiting in line, and it was fine! The longest line was 45 minutes for the Pooh ride. Popcorn and ice cream were like 3 dollars! I don't know why Orlando has to be so awful and expensive. I told the kids this was their childhood Disney trip so enjoy. |
Exactly and when we went to Europe this summer all the tickets and tours I had to buy for sightseeing really added up! And the hotel prices were outrageous because I needed two rooms for 4 people. It easily cost as much as Disney. |
One thing I hate about trying to plan a trip to Disney World or Universal Studios Orlando is how pricing is not transparent at all and they make it hard to understand what makes the most sense. The whole thing is designed to try and upsell you on more days and staying on property and paying for extras to skip lines and have other experiences. On the website, there's no obvious "basic experience" package that is clearly labeled and tells you exactly what is in it that would make sense for the average middle class family. They expect you to read a million blog posts or hire a Disney trip planner. It's ridiculous.
Same with Universal Studios. My kid is really into Harry Potter so I was looking into doing two days at Universal Studios this winter. I knew from other people telling me that Harry Potter is of course spread across multiple parks so I'd need a multi-park ticket. But then I went on the website and HP is actually at THREE parks. But the multi-park ticket only covers two of them. So you need to buy a separate ticket to the third park for the second day. It's idiotic to me that they don't just have a "HP Package" that will get you access to everything HP over two days. I'm not even expecting a deal on it, I just want it to be packaged in a way that is easy for me to understand and so I know where to go and don't miss something obvious until we get there and realize, like, the thing my kid is most into is in a park we don't have passes to, or we're doing them in the wrong order or whatever. Like why make it so hard and confusing. I'm not dumb, I plan lots of vacations that involve difficult logistics. But I look at these theme park websites and just feel like I'm missing something because nothing makes sense. |
Oh, a trip for four people to another continent cost as much as going to a theme park in Florida? Crazy ![]() |
I’m not sure if this was sarcasm or not, but I do think that’s where American society is headed. Back to the Gilded Age. The years after World War II really were the outlier, not the other way around. The financially smart thing is not to go. It’s getting easier and easier for companies to exploit the consumer because of the technology access they have. I opt out of most vacations. We do day trips. Sometimes I feel bad for it, but that’s pretty silly. If you really think about it. |