Anonymous wrote:We spent about $2000.
1. DH is military so we had access to the armed forces salute tickets - 4 day hopper for $160ish each
2. Stayed off site but within the gates at the Wyndham bonnet creek. $785 for 2 bed/bath condo with 5 pools, slides and lazy river. Ate breakfast at condo, took snacks plus lunch for dd into parks with us. Ate a couple of dinners at condo too on non park days. WBC is so close we came back for a lunch break on our MK days. We did EP and AK as 3/4 days. Skipped HS this time because of height restrictions - will do next time.
3. Went in May - warm but not ungodly hot, no rain whole week.
4. Drove - was able to bring whatever we could fit in car: food, souvenirs bought on clearance at disney store for dd - tinker bell brought them when we were out of the room, plus gave us the freedom of a car. Even if you stay on property, consider renting a car.
I would read easywdw and the forums there for touring plan ideas and his crowd calendars are spot on. We did not do any character meals($$$$$ and the food is mediocre at best) and dd still met 23 characters it just takes planning. We rode everything we wanted multiple times. If you go to the Disboards, read everything there like you would dcum - with a filter. Mouse savers and undercover tourist are good sites as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't buy photo pass. Give the photographer your camera and they will take pics using your camera.
Really?
Yes, really. They are very willing to use your own camera.
That being said, we used our camera for most photos, but a couple of the ones taken by the WDW photographers were incredible and we ended up buying digital copies of 3 pictures, which was slightly cheaper than a CD/download of ALL photos.
Yes they will. But they are not always the greatest shots. The one of whole fam with Mickey was blury and jumbled. We had a photo pass card and on the whole the shots they took were just as good as the ones with our camera. ( provided I was the one taking the pics)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't buy photo pass. Give the photographer your camera and they will take pics using your camera.
Really?
Yes, really. They are very willing to use your own camera.
That being said, we used our camera for most photos, but a couple of the ones taken by the WDW photographers were incredible and we ended up buying digital copies of 3 pictures, which was slightly cheaper than a CD/download of ALL photos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't buy photo pass. Give the photographer your camera and they will take pics using your camera.
Really?

Anonymous wrote:Don't buy photo pass. Give the photographer your camera and they will take pics using your camera.
Anonymous wrote:The potential savings of off-site vs on-site are very dependent on how big a room you want. When I go to WDW it's just me and DC, so a single room at a Value (this year I am paying $120/night) is fine, and DC actually prefers the Values to the pricier hotels. That saves us the cost of a rental car/parking at parks and adds a lot of convenience compared to being off-site. I don't need a full kitchen, nor would I want to do actual cooking, but I do bring lots of healthy snacks, both to balance out the treats we will have and to save on food costs. Neither of us are big eaters, so one meal split between us is plenty at many counter-service restaurants.
If you need a room to fit more than 4 people, or if you insist on plusher surroundings than the Values, then off-site starts to be a real savings. We stayed in a fabulous huge 3BR at Wyndham Bonnet Creek for ~$150/night on a trip with grandparents, and I would heartily recommend that... if you need the space. For my two-person trips, totally not worth the added hassle to go off-site.
For toddlers, bring surprise toys from home to head off souvenir demands. Glow bracelets from Michael's ($1/dozen, I think), Mickey shirts from Target, princess stickers, etc.