Guide to Discount Disney World Tickets (2024)
Our guide to discount Disney World tickets offers money-saving info, pros & cons of Park Hoppers, tips for the best deals on tickets for now through October 2025 at Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Hollywood Studios & Animal Kingdom. Plus, price increase predictions, which is likely to happen this fall or holiday season. (Updated March 20, 2024.)
If you’re wondering the best place to safely buy the discounted Walt Disney World multi-day tickets from an authorized reseller, we recommend Get Away Today, which offers an exclusive discount to readers of this site–enter promo code DTB23 at checkout for an extra $8 to $30 off per ticket! They have excellent deals on Central Florida theme parks, including Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, and SeaWorld Orlando in addition to Disney’s theme and water parks.
This is one authorized sellers we recommend (see info about the other below), with the highlighted one changing based upon which currently has the best pricing. All three offer exceptional customer service and added flexibility, even superior to what Disney offers directly (call centers are currently short-staffed, making speaking with a person at Disney “challenging” to say the least). These low prices coupled with Get Away Today’s “Best Price Guarantee” makes them our recommended ticket seller.
Before we get going, let’s start with the latest Walt Disney World ticket news–there are several ticket deals currently available. First up, there’s the Discounted Florida Resident Discover Disney Ticket. This offers Floridians the opportunity to buy a 4-day ticket for just $59 per day. These tickets are valid for use from April 2 to September 28, 2024, with an advance park reservation.
Much more significant is the 4-Park, 4-Day Walt Disney World Magic Ticket. This is available to the general public and offers admission starting at $99 per day admission without requiring reservations from April 2 to September 22, 2024. The big limitation here is that there’s no Park Hopping and you can only visit each park once, which is Walt Disney World’s way of redistributing attendance away from Magic Kingdom and Hollywood Studios (the two busiest parks) and to EPCOT and Animal Kingdom (the least busy parks).
If you can get past those two limitations (our post above explains how to work around them–especially during Party Season), the 4-Park Magic Ticket offers tremendous savings. The exact amount of the discount varies due to date-based pricing, but we’ve found that it averages around $100 per person. You can buy this ticket directly from Walt Disney World, or available for an even deeper discount via Get Away Today!
Rounding out the deals, there’s a new offer for Universal Orlando that’s very similar to Walt Disney World’s 4-Park Magic Ticket. Enjoy four days of thrills at Universal Studios Florida and Islands of Adventure when you purchase Universal Orlando’s 2-Park Play 4 Days Promo Base Ticket, starting at $74 per day. With this, you can visit one park per day, upgrade to Park-to-Park tickets to visit multiple parks in the same day, or even upgrade to a 3-Park ticket to visit Volcano Bay.
You should also be aware that free FastPass+ has been replaced by paid line-skipping at Walt Disney World. We cover everything you need to know in our Guide to Genie+ at Walt Disney World & Lightning Lane FAQ. This system is totally different from its predecessor and can be overwhelming. Once you get past that rather steep and sometimes counterintuitive learning curve, it can be leveraged to your advantage.
You can only purchase Genie+ on a day-by-day basis during your Walt Disney World vacation. The latest wrinkle is that Genie+ now has per-park pricing, which is more expensive at Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Not-so-coincidentally, we only recommend buying Genie+ for Magic Kingdom (almost always), Disney’s Hollywood Studios (usually), and EPCOT (sometimes). We seldom recommend purchasing Genie+ at Animal Kingdom–there’s a reason why it’s cheapest there; it’s usually unnecessary.
With so many different park ticket options, this might already seem overwhelming. In this WDW park ticket guide, we present the pros and cons of different tickets so you can make an informed decision about which options are best for your family. We’ll break down everything you need to know about the complexities of Walt Disney World tickets.
We sort through the different options and give you recommendations on what types of tickets are best for you, plus where you can save money on Walt Disney World tickets. (If you’ve come looking for info on discount Disneyland tickets, you’ve come to the wrong place–but we do have an article with Tips for Saving Money on Disneyland Tickets, too.) By the end of this post, you’ll know way more than you ever thought there was to know about park tickets!
With that out of the way, let’s start with the latest ticket news & rumors…
2024 Ticket Price Increases
Typically, Walt Disney World raises ticket prices in February or October–sometimes both. Thus far in 2024, ticket prices have not increased, nor did they go up last October for regular tickets. Instead, the company raised rates on just about everything else, and also introduced per-park and date-based pricing for Genie+ and Individual Lightning Lanes, which effectively amounted to an indirect increase to the normal price of admission.
The good news is that prices for current tickets haven’t increased since December 2022, which is the first time in the 15 years we’ve been tracking prices when there was not an annual increase. The bad news is that Walt Disney World has already increased ticket prices for 2025. But the good-within-bad news is that, unlike normal, this did not apply to tickets for 2024. It was a really weird move, as ticket price increases normally take effect immediately.
There’s a chance that Walt Disney World raises prices in October 2024, but we’re skeptical. Annual Pass prices will probably increase then, but not regular admission. It would defy logic to increase prices for 2025 in Winter 2024…and then wait until only 3 months are left in the year to increase prices on the remainder of 2024 dates. Not only that, but the big ‘price increase day’ always results in a wave of negative headlines, and Disney usually does everything at once to avoid dragging out the bad press.
What’s more likely is that prices go up again in early 2025. Walt Disney World is once again tweaking things with Lightning Lane pre-booking, and our guess is that will require changes to admission options. With that, price increases seem likely, which might be why Walt Disney World has not been nearly as aggressive in increasing prices.
If the last three years have taught us anything, it’s to expect the unexpected. Subscribe to our free email newsletter for all of the latest updates as we hear more rumors or official announcements about ticket prices.
Regardless, if you have a Walt Disney World trip planned for now through October 2025, we recommend buying tickets sooner rather than later to lock-in current prices (beyond the scope of this post, but we’d advise doing the same with your hotel room). There will likely be one price increase between now and the end of 2025, with 2 price increases in that timeframe being a possibility.
With that said, this is not as imperative as it used to be. A couple of years ago, Walt Disney World was raising price twice annually, meaning that you could ‘beat’ as many as 3 price increases by buying tickets early. That amounted to locking-in huge savings, but Disney has since (thankfully) slowed down on its price increases. There’s still zero downside to purchasing tickets in advance–but there’s also not as much upside.
Where to Buy the Cheapest Disney Tickets
As we mentioned at the beginning, to save money on multi-day Walt Disney World tickets, we recommend buying from Get Away Today, which is an authorized discount Disney ticket broker that typically has the lowest prices on legitimate park tickets. You can order tickets for use now through October 2025.
Another excellent ticket seller we recommend is Undercover Tourist. These two typically compete with each other on prices, and are usually within a few dollars of one another. Which is better often depends upon the ticket type and when you’re searching. (Like airfare, ticket prices fluctuate, especially as the various reputable sellers try to beat one another on pricing.)
After purchasing, you’ll receive confirmation codes for My Disney Experience via email, which enables you to easily link the tickets to your My Disney Experience account. This also means that the tickets are compatible with MagicBands, which you’ll receive with your Walt Disney World hotel reservation; you can also purchase special edition MagicBands in the parks.
There aren’t many Disney ticket sellers that are actually legitimate, so be careful if you find a deal elsewhere. The sellers we mention in this article are the ones that have the best reputations and offer the biggest discounts. If you find a better deal somewhere else, well…you know what they say about when something sounds too good to be true!
Authorized discount Disney ticket brokers are great ways to save money on park tickets over gate prices, but not every third party ticket broker is reliable and trust-worthy. Most places selling discount Disney tickets are scams. Buying tickets on eBay or Craigslist is about as good of an idea as buying Louis Vuitton purses on a street corner.
Disney tickets are non-transferrable–they are tied to your fingerprint once partially used. If you get burned by these sellers with a partially-used or counterfeit ticket, Disney won’t have sympathy. You’ll have to pay full price for tickets at the park gates. Not exactly the best way to start the day on a Disney vacation!
The good news is that there are several legitimate, authorized Walt Disney World ticket sellers that can be trusted. In addition to Get Away Today, we also recommend Undercover Tourist. Both are highly reputable and offer great customer service. (Beyond this trio, there are other trustworthy third party sellers, but we can’t vouch for any of them.)
If you’re comparing prices, remember to compare apples to apples: Disney prices don’t include the Florida 6.5% tax, whereas prices from the sellers we recommend do include tax into the final price you pay. Sorry bold that all, but we get so many comments from people who miss that, and wonder why the discounts aren’t as good as promised. Also make sure you’re comparing Park Hopper tickets to regular tickets or not. Lots of people make mistakes in not comparing the same tickets to one another.
Additionally, you might be eligible for discount tickets through your employer or a membership program like TicketsAtWork that can save even more than the alternatives. The only downsides are that some of these tickets require more advance notice for processing, and that what you receive is a ticket voucher (it still can be linked to My Disney Experience); you will need to pick up the actual ticket when you arrive at Walt Disney World.
Moving on, let’s take a look at which type of ticket options are best for you…
Which Tickets to Buy?
Sometimes people ask which ticket is our favorite for first-time visitors to Walt Disney World, and it really depends upon how long you’re visiting. In our Walt Disney World Vacation Planning Guide, we recommend most first-time visitors take a 6-8 trip.
Assuming you are going this route, you probably won’t spend every moment in the park. You’ll want a rest day in the middle to spend recovering poolside, and maybe a shopping day (or morning) at Disney Springs. With that said, we recommend buying a ticket that is 1-2 days shorter than the duration of your vacation–unless you’re visiting for 4 days or fewer, in which case you should purchase a ticket for every day. Always get at least a 4-day ticket. Ideally, get nothing less than a 5-day ticket.
Meaning, if your vacation is 8 days, we recommend the 6-day or 7-day ticket. If you are visiting for 6 days, get the 5-day ticket. In our experience, a 6-day Walt Disney World vacation is about the sweet spot for first-timers. That means either a 4-day or 5-day ticket is going to be a smart bet for most people reading this. (If you have more time, that’s excellent!)
Are Park Hopper Tickets Worth it?
The Park Hopper add-on allows you to visit multiple parks in the same day. You can bounce around the parks and maximize your time in the parks. Some guests can skip the Park Hopper option: particularly those with small children and those who won’t stay out late.
On the other hand, Park Hopping can be really beneficial if you want to revisit favorite attractions or head over to a certain park for the evening for dinner. With the exception of Magic Kingdom, you won’t need to spend multiple full days in any park, and the ability to bounce around is a great solution allowing you to spend additional partial days in the other parks.
Another benefit of the Park Hopper option is spending more hours per day in the theme parks. Since each park has different opening and closing hours, getting a Park Hopper is a good way to extend your day (particularly in the off-season when parks close earlier) or spend more time in Magic Kingdom. Magic Kingdom often closes later than the other parks, so you squeeze a couple more hours out of day by starting your day in Animal Kingdom (for example) and heading to Magic Kingdom once Animal Kingdom closes.
If you’re staying in an eligible on-site Walt Disney World resort, you’ll also potentially need the Park Hopper option to take advantage of Extended Evening Hours. This perk is incredibly advantageous, as crowds are usually low during these nighttime hours. If you don’t buy the Park Hopper option, you’ll need to start your day in the park offering Extended Evening Hours in order to take advantage. See our Guide to Extended Evening Hours at Walt Disney World for taking advantage of this perk, eligibility, and more.
Because of these two things, we generally recommend purchasing the Park Hopper option. While it does cost more, if you’re buying multiple day tickets, you might be surprised to learn that the extra cost is insignificant. Currently, a discounted 7-day Walt Disney World Adult Park Hopper Ticket will cost around $650 after tax, with some dates costing more and some costing less. Obviously, that’s a lot of money.
However, compare it to a 1-day Park Hopper ticket directly from Disney, which can cost over $180 after tax. For less than the price of three 1-day tickets, you can purchase a 7-day discounted Park Hopper. That 7-day ticket works out to being less than $95/day!
Other multi-day tickets offer similar savings, so be sure to look at the prices of other multi-day Walt Disney World tickets and do some comparison shopping to see just how much you can save. Walt Disney World advertises that “the more you play, the less you pay per day” and this is definitely true.
What About Park Hopper Plus Tickets?
The Park Hopper Plus ticket option (formerly “Water Park Fun & More”) offers everything included with Park Hopper Tickets mentioned above, plus access to Typhoon Lagoon or Blizzard Beach water parks, ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex, Disney’s Oak Trail Golf Course, and Winter Summerland or Fantasia Gardens mini golf.
With Park Hopper Plus tickets, you are eligible for the same number of “Plus” admissions as the number of days on your ticket. Meaning that if you have a 7-day Park Hopper Plus ticket, you also have 7 entrances the water parks, mini golf, etc. (Be mindful of operating schedules, as not all of these options are open year-round.)
Whether this ticket is right for you really depends upon whether you want to do any of the parks beyond the 4 main theme parks. If you want to do one of the other things even once or twice, you come out ahead to purchase the Park Hopper Plus Tickets. We love both Typhoon Lagoon and Blizzard Beach, and enjoy both of the mini golf courses (albeit less so than the water parks) and recommend this ticket option to anyone who will be spending 6 days or more at Walt Disney World.
What About the Water Park and Sports Option?
The Water Park and Sports Option is available as an add-on to select Walt Disney World theme park tickets for $70 plus tax. This option allows guests to visit one theme park each day, plus various water park or sports experiences that same number of times.
The Water Park & Sports Option is valid at Disney’s Typhoon Lagoon or Disney’s Blizzard Beach water parks, ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex, Disney’s Oak Trail Golf Course, FootGolf at Disney’s Oak Trail Golf Course, Disney’s Fantasia Gardens Miniature Golf, or Disney’s Winter Summerland Miniature Golf. (Again, pay attention to operating schedules, as not all of these options are open year-round.)
Basically, this ticket is the non-park hopper version of the aforementioned Park Hopper Plus ticket option. The analysis for the Water Park and Sports Ticket Option is identical to the Park Hopper Plus, but for those who only want to do one theme park per day. We generally favor the Park Hopper Plus option as it offers great flexibility and the upgrade cost to that is insignificant, but that’s just us.
Affiliation Discounts
If for some reason you don’t want to buy discounted Disney tickets from Get Away Today or Undercover Tourist, there’s a possibility you qualify for some other form of discount. The most common discounts are: Florida resident, military/department of defense, corporate or “club” discounts, Disney Vacation Club, and sometimes Walt Disney World ticket discounts for Europeans.
Of these discounts, military Disney ticket discounts are typically the best, followed by AAA discounts. AAA discounts are only offered through local offices and tax isn’t included in their price quotes. Note that Disney ended its relationship with AAA, so there are no additional perks for buying Disney tickets through AAA anymore.
AAA discounts typically are not as good as the prices offered by the discount ticket brokers, but military or department of defense discounts are always better. The “Stars and Stripes” promotion (only available to select members of the armed forces and department of defense) will usually annihilate what is offered by third party discount ticket brokers or AAA. This promo isn’t always offered, so call Shades of Green at 888-593-2242 prior to ordering tickets to see whether it’s available for your stay.
Another option available to some people is TicketsAtWork. This is a members-only site that partners with certain corporations to offer company employees exclusive discounts and special offers for theme parks, attractions, Broadway shows, special events, hotels, concerts, and movie tickets. In other words, Tickets at Work is a “perk” that’s available only to employees of certain corporations.
Tickets at Work most definitely is legitimate. Unfortunately, we cannot offer a price comparison to Tickets at Work because we don’t work for companies partnered with Tickets at Work, nor do we know anyone who does. Anecdotally, we’ve heard that in some cases, Tickets at Work offers prices that are slightly better. In other cases, their prices are worse. We’ve also been told that shipping can take 2-3 weeks with Tickets at Work, which could be a deal-breaker if you’re trying to make reservations in a hurry. Check with your company’s HR department to see if your company is a Tickets at Work partner.
Now, let’s cover one other possible Walt Disney World park ticket options…
Florida Resident Ticket Discounts
If you live in Florida (and have proof of residence–DVC membership does not count), there are occasionally discount 2-day to 4-day Walt Disney World ticket offers from January until April and Summer through September each year during times when attendance is historically light. For Floridians, these are the best deals of the year–better than anything else on this list.
The current Florida resident ticket deal is discussed at the top of this post. The downside of this deal is that it’s only valid Mondays through Fridays, but the upside is that there’s a discount at all during the popular Christmas season. Many years, there’s nothing at all this time of year!
What About An Annual Pass?
Walt Disney World resumed new Annual Pass sales late last month. Everything you need to know about buying an AP is covered in our Walt Disney World Annual Pass FAQ. All tiers of APs (Incredi-Pass, Sorcerer Pass, and Pirate Pass, and Pixie Dust Pass) are still available for purchase. However, Walt Disney World has already warned that tiers are likely to sell out soon. Note that unless you’re a Floridian or DVC member, you’re only eligible to purchase the Incredi-Pass.
This AP can make sense if you’re taking at least two trips to Walt Disney World in the span of 365 days. Some fans use APs for this specific purpose, taking week-long trips during the Halloween or Christmas season each year, and essentially putting one of those trips at the beginning of the window and another at the end of the window. (For example, doing the second week of December 2024 and the first week of December 2025.)
If you’re doing two week-long trips, the Incredi-Pass will work out in your favor. You’re looking at 7-day tickets that will be over $700 each, adding up to more than the cost of the Incredi-Pass on their own. The story is similar if you’re taking 3 shorter trips in a 365-day stretch. Let’s say you’re doing three long-weekend trips of 3-days each. Individually, those tickets would cost you over $460 each, totaling more than the cost of the Incredi-Pass.
Where the math gets complicated is for those planning two trips in a 365-day stretch with a combined total of 10 or fewer days. In this scenario, the cost of your tickets will actually end up being around $75 less than an Incredi-Pass. However, the AP also offers discounts on merchandise & dining, which alone will easily add up to $75 saved over 10 days in the parks. Beyond that, it opens up access to the aforementioned superior resort discounts or, if you won’t use those because you’re staying off-site, free parking at the theme parks.
So either way you slice it, two trips totaling at least 10 days over the course of 365 days is the likely breakeven point for the Incredi-Pass. That’s going to vary from person-to-person, though. We’ve heard from people who could make less work and others who couldn’t justify APs until 11 days.
However, that’s more or less the general rule. If you’re traveling more than that, it’s easy to justify Walt Disney World APs. Less than that, and it becomes much more difficult. If it’s a close call, we’d recommend purchasing passes. The money-saved via discounts and other perks, such as freebies and access to exclusive events like ride previews, does add up and is difficult to account for in your initial calculation.
Conclusion
Hopefully the above info helped you determine which Walt Disney World park ticket you should buy and how to save money on those tickets. If you still have some questions, here are some general rules:
- Thanks to very good discounts, our top recommendation for Walt Disney World is the 5-day to 7-day Park Hopper ticket, all of which provide excellent savings.
- We recommend the Park Hopper option for most people, but if you definitely won’t visit more than one park per day, you can save additional money by skipping the Park Hopper option.
- By purchasing via an authorized ticket broker, you can make park reservations ahead of time. If you buy tickets once you arrive to Walt Disney World, you’re at a disadvantage in two ways: you pay more for tickets and you cannot make park reservations in advance.
- Do not consider an Annual Pass unless you will visit Walt Disney World for roughly 15+ days in a 365 day window, or will take multiple shorter trips.
- If you are planning a vacation and definitely going to Walt Disney World before October 2025, it’s always best to buy tickets as far in advance as possible to lock-in current prices and avoid future increases.
It’s important to know that my suggestions are based on our preferences, and they may not work for you. It’s really best to read through this and then apply it to your own circumstances by looking at your own schedule and preferences, and determining what type of tickets are best for you. Finally, head to Get Away Today and buy the appropriate tickets at the best discount (using promo code DTB23 at checkout).
For where to eat, try out our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews page. If you want to save money on tickets or determine which type you should get, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at unconventional things you should take on your trip. For overviews of all of these topics and so much more, the best place to start is our comprehensive Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide to make the most of your experience!
Your Thoughts
Have any questions about which tickets might be best for you? Which Walt Disney World tickets do you think are best, and why? Hopefully this guide to Disney discount tickets has provided you with some valuable tips & tricks to help you save money on Walt Disney World tickets, and has helped you figure out which kind of Disney tickets are right for you. If you still have any questions, please leave them in the comments and we will try to help!
Tickets At Work looks to be SLIGHTLY cheaper for some tickets. For a 4-day Park Hopper with 4 adults and 1 child, it was a total of $100 cheaper…BUT I believe they send you a Will Call certificate. Personally, I’ll pay $100 more not to have to deal with Will Call.
Ah. Very sneaky. Tickets at Work doesn’t include taxes AND fees in their initial price they quote…if you follow the process all the way to the final payment step, then you see the real price, which actually isn’t quite as good as the other sites listed here. On the bright side, will call tickets can be linked to your magic band, so you never physically have to go to will call.
Such helpful info!! I will only have two days at Disney World… December 29th and 30th. Not ideal, but it’s when I had off of work. I have free 1 Park per day tickets from a relative who works at Disney, and we were going to buy park hopper tickets for the other day. My question is… which ticket should we use which day? And should we get fast passes for one or both days? I’ve heard the horror stories of parks closing on the 30th due to capacity, so should we use our one park per day for magic kingdom so we don’t miss the New Years fireworks? Any help would be so appreciated… I’ve never been to Disney world before! Thanks 🙂
Hi Tom,
I follow your blog and really find all of your posts very helpful – I’ve come across a problem with Undercover Tourist selling expired Disney Tickets to us for our January 21st vacation. Due to Thanksgiving Holiday they are not available to fix the date of expiration until Monday and we are losing fast-pass booking time until they get it sorted out. Nowhere on any of my confirmation emails or on the ticket package itself is any expiration date listed and I purchased them six months ago specifically for the January vacation and advised them of it at that time. Very disappointed and would caution others about using Undercover Tourist.
so we are planning a 10 day visit for about 3rd week of Aug of 2019. We are hoping to cash in on the dining plan as it works best for our family size for value. My question is this: If we buy the theme park tickets ahead of time can we still take advantage of the “free dining” plan? or do we have to purchase the theme park tickets at same time as booking the free dining plan? I know we need tickets that are park hoppers to get the free dining, but unsure if we could purchase ahead to save money? Also you mention that late august is cheaper rates? So would the time we are planning on going be actually cheaper anyways? Bottom line: Do we wait or purchase ahead? lol Thc
I believe you are understating the value of an annual pass. With the annual pass, you get free parking at the on-site hotels. You get the photopass for free. Some dining locations are also 20% off along with souvenirs. Annual passholders get room discounts. When you consider the price increases coming in 2019, this becomes a bargain when comparing to standard passes. We will be traveling to WDW in Nov. 2018, March 2019, October 2019 for a total of 26 days.
This is a little late info, but, I wanted to give a correction on the pricing for tickets from the Undercover Tourists web site.
On October 15th, I was able to get tickets at the old price and no start date requirement. On October 16th, you could still get tickets on Undercover Tourist without a start date but the price went up. I did a check on the same ticket types today at Undercover and Park Savers (I purchased 8-day Park Hoppers, price includes tax and e-mail shipping[free]) and a start date of June 8, 2019:
Purchase on Oct 15 (Undercover) = $420.17
Price on Oct 16 and Oct 20 (Undercover) = $485.34 ($65.17 increase)
Price on Oct 20 (ParkSavers) = $524.43 Plus need start date of June 8
Price on Disney Web site (gate price plus tax) on Oct 20: $570.49
So, you still can save the best amount with Undercover Tourist and not have dated tickets. Thanks for the heads-up on this last increase as it saved me $65 from a price increase and buying through a discounter saves $150 over the gate price. Since I’ll be traveling with 7 people, that is a wopping $455 (discounted) and $1050 (gate).
You are right that Undercover Tourist has the best deal. It doesn’t look like their prices went up, it looks like you confused the 8 day price with the 8 day hopper price as the 8 day is the price you mentioned.
Maybe I read to fast, but what are the ‘expiration’ of these tickets and ‘days to use’? I.e. if I buy a 7 day ticket, once I use it on day 1, when does day 7 of the ticket expire?
I was trying to figure this out too. It looks like there is some algorithm being used with the new system. The disclaimer at the bottom of the Disney Web Site states “the first day of use must be on or before December 31, 2019, and the tickets and any other options purchased must be used within 14 days of first use”. But, when I look at the specific purchase information given when I booked an 8-day park hopper in June, it only gave me 11 days after the first date. I wonder what’s up with that?
Helpful info!
Will Parksaver or other authorized seller sell disneyworld tickets in a new way after Oct. 16 ?
If I’m staying at Disney resorts but bought my tickets through park savers, can I still link the tickets to the free magic bands? Thank you
Jackie,
You can absolutely still link tickets purchased from Park Savers (or any other authorized reseller) to your My Disney Experience account and use your MagicBand to gain entry to the parks, make purchases, etc. Your MagicBand, along with your fingerprint, is essentially the ‘key’ to access the information stored in your My Disney Experience account.
Hope that helps!
Rob
Very helpful information, thank you Rob!
As to the Annual Pass, remember that (aside from including park hopper, 20% merch discount, and 10% off at table service restaurants) it also includes Photopass. So if you tend to want to buy the pictures and are going solo or in a twosome, the $199 savings ($169 advance purchase) can make a difference on annual vs. multi-day. Particularly if you are thinking you might do two short trips in a year (avoiding the Photopass price a second time, plus two separate 4-day Park hoppers are as much as an annual pass anyway). Or, with a bigger group, consider buying one annual pass and the rest multi-day tickets if the math works out for the expected savings on souvenirs, food, and Photopass to do so.
Plus, if you plan to go twice the first year, annual pass could make sense even if you just plan to go once a year after (bonus if you end up back more!). For renewals, current prices drop from $849 to $721. So if you save close to $200 on the free Photopass and then another $50-100 on discounts between food and merchandise, you’re basically at the equivalent of the of a 4-5 day park hopper in year two anyway. Plus, you may get additional room discounts not available to the general public and discounts to tours, experiences, and special event tickets (like Halloween).
Yes! For my family of 9, the 10% discount on food plus the free parking for our giant van, and 20% off souvenirs will make having 1 annual pass totally worth it!
HI Tom, thanks for the great article.
We are planning on going first week of Feb 2019. I can currently buy tickets through my union for a 7 day park hopper for $455, which appears to be a good discount.
I’m wondering though, as the new prices go into effect Oct 16th and prices will be based on busier times of the year, is there any chance that tickets for Feb of 2019 will actually be cheaper? I’m doubting it, but thought it couldn’t hurt to get your insight before buying the tickets.
Thanks for any help.
Tom, I’ve seen where Disney has extended the Military Salute Tickets to include DoD civilians until Dec 19, 2018. I don’t think this has been done before. Disney is saying it’s a “test.” Do you think there’s any chance that this could be extended into 2019?
I want to purchase from a third party vendor and bridge to annual passes for my family to receive the third party vendor discount and have those days credited to the annual pass price as you suggested. If I’m reading you correctly, Disney will honor the face value of the ticket, meaning purchasing a larger number of days will offer a deeper discount toward the annual pass. For example, a 10 day park hopper pass purchased from Parksavers for $454 before Oct 16, 2018 price changes may be worth more to bridge in November when we’re taking our trip? At the very least it would be worth the 454 we paid for it?
While you await your answer, where do you see a 10-day park hopper for $454 at ParkSavers? I only see it at $524.
It looks like it’s the 10 day non hopper ticket that is $454.
As of right now, everything you’re asking/suggesting is correct.
The big question is how the tickets will be valued after October 16–will the new system recognize the maximum *current* face value then, the minimum, or what you paid for the ticket? Worst case scenario: it’s worth what you paid. Best case: they credit the highest possible date-based price for the ticket. No one will know for sure until that date.
Interesting, but actually I find tickets at official WDW site to be cheaper than any of other options from this article. Also I don’t see any tax added in the end of the booking, the price stays the same. But I’m coming from Europe (I even see the prices in EUR). Is it possible that they have different prices (and tax policies) for those coming from abroad?
I love Getaway Today Vacations!! They are my favorite way to book.
“Do not consider an Annual Pass unless you will visit Walt Disney World for roughly 15+ days in a 365 day window. Tom, you should make it clear that may not apply to those who make multiple trips in a 12-month period. We live in NYC and used to visit Disney twice a year spending $372 for 3-day PH tickets each time; that’s $744. One time we decided last minute to add one more day at Magic Kingdom for another $105 or so. The past few years, we’ve gone three times a year, so just keep multiplying. We discovered buying an Annual Pass cost only $85 more than 2 trips at 3 days each. Essentially, even just a minute more than that is gravy with an Annual Pass. And then we got the 20% shopping discount and the 10-15% dining discounts. And PhotoPass (which we love!). When we renew (which is a lower price than a new AP), we will be way ahead of the game, doncha think?
Hi! We just purchased 11 tickets from ParkSavers, various days and our total price listed was $5,008.00. Last week we received our tickets and the invoice included with the tickets has a tax total of approximately $350.00. In your blog you state: “If you’re comparing prices, remember to compare apples to apples: Disney prices don’t include the Florida 6.5% tax, whereas prices from the sellers we recommend do include tax into the final price you pay.” So, I’m curious as to WHY we were charged taxes when you commented differently?
Did you pay a total of $5,008.00 or a total of $5,350.00? If the former, the tax was included in the final price, but for bookkeeping purposes, they show the 350 as tax on the invoice. If the latter, then indeed, they have quit including the tax in the price.
1,000 comment! Woo!!! I am special! 😉
Thanks for the great write up! Pricing as of today (8/20/18) has Undercover Tourist lower than Park Savers, Get Away Today or Tickets at Work (my company participates) for my ticket needs. From reading other comments here, it seems like it may be worth noting that a reader should check all sites on any given day rather than promoting any one of the sites.
Not sure why undercovertourist is not listed as the lowest as it is cheaper and a better website
6 Day Hopper Tickets for 6 Adults + 1 Child:
WDW: $3631.65
Undercover Tourist: $3339.24
Park Savers: $3332.00
Any one go through costcotravel.com? It is a really great discount (not many onsite choices) but it is so easy to add disney and universal tickets. I haven’t booked anything yet, just wondering if there are good or bad experiences with booking through them.