Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
What a weird question. Over a million Americans make over 500K per year.
What a weird statement. 99% of American’s make less than 500k/yr.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
1k a night isn't that much. Most include breakfast. And it is literally on the property...no driving involved.
Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
What a weird question. Over a million Americans make over 500K per year.
Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is probably looking right now, for hotels at Disney for xmas break. That's the busiest time of year, and it's too late in the game. Yes, prices are high.
The trick is to book far in advance, not during peak periods, and get discounts like if you book on disney.com, they have package deals that include park tickets. We neve spend more than $300/night and that's for Contemporary or Grand Floridian, boht on the monorail.
How long ago? I haven’t seen prices that low in at least a decade at those hotels, and I’m eligible for tons of discounts (military, pass holder, chase Disney visa, Florida resident)
Shades of green is $237, which is why we never stay there and do a value or moderate.
https://www.shadesofgreen.org/rooms
Anonymous wrote:They cost like $1000 per night. I can’t believe they are supposed to be for families. Who on earth can afford this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is probably looking right now, for hotels at Disney for xmas break. That's the busiest time of year, and it's too late in the game. Yes, prices are high.
The trick is to book far in advance, not during peak periods, and get discounts like if you book on disney.com, they have package deals that include park tickets. We neve spend more than $300/night and that's for Contemporary or Grand Floridian, boht on the monorail.
How long ago? I haven’t seen prices that low in at least a decade at those hotels, and I’m eligible for tons of discounts (military, pass holder, chase Disney visa, Florida resident)
Anonymous wrote:We are a Disney family. We have stressful jobs and our kids love it. It’s an escape for us.
We go multiple times a year. Sometimes we stay fancy (GF, Cosmopolitan, Poly, Boardwalk, etc) and sometimes we go slightly more budget (AKL, Swan/Dolphin). Only a few resorts are $1k a night; most are under $600; many are under $400.
But yes: a weekend at Disney will run you somewhere between $2-$5k with tickets and accommodations. We can afford it easily. Those who can’t either stay cheaper or go into debt to go. No magical formula.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is probably looking right now, for hotels at Disney for xmas break. That's the busiest time of year, and it's too late in the game. Yes, prices are high.
The trick is to book far in advance, not during peak periods, and get discounts like if you book on disney.com, they have package deals that include park tickets. We neve spend more than $300/night and that's for Contemporary or Grand Floridian, boht on the monorail.
How long ago? I haven’t seen prices that low in at least a decade at those hotels, and I’m eligible for tons of discounts (military, pass holder, chase Disney visa, Florida resident)
I've seen in the $400s for Animal Kingdom Lodge (my personal favorite). With the Armed Forces Salute, you can get 20-25% off, but you have to call and book over the phone. Unsure about other discounts.
pp you quoted here.
Yes, but Animal Kingdom is less expensive than Grand Floridian and Contemporary, and the pp (you?) said she is able to get those for less than $300/night.
Even with military discounts, I've never heard of GF or Contemporary being less than $300--at least not any time in the last several years. We go during non-peak times like end of August, when rates are generally at their cheapest.
No one here is going on the cheap. You stay at Value or Moderate hotels. With the military tickets doing in the fall or spring is cheapest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP is probably looking right now, for hotels at Disney for xmas break. That's the busiest time of year, and it's too late in the game. Yes, prices are high.
The trick is to book far in advance, not during peak periods, and get discounts like if you book on disney.com, they have package deals that include park tickets. We neve spend more than $300/night and that's for Contemporary or Grand Floridian, boht on the monorail.
How long ago? I haven’t seen prices that low in at least a decade at those hotels, and I’m eligible for tons of discounts (military, pass holder, chase Disney visa, Florida resident)
I've seen in the $400s for Animal Kingdom Lodge (my personal favorite). With the Armed Forces Salute, you can get 20-25% off, but you have to call and book over the phone. Unsure about other discounts.
pp you quoted here.
Yes, but Animal Kingdom is less expensive than Grand Floridian and Contemporary, and the pp (you?) said she is able to get those for less than $300/night.
Even with military discounts, I've never heard of GF or Contemporary being less than $300--at least not any time in the last several years. We go during non-peak times like end of August, when rates are generally at their cheapest.