Disney Responds to Rising Costs Criticism

As we discussed earlier this week in Walt Disney World is Worried About Its High Prices, concerns about Disney pricing out the middle class are no longer just a controversial topic among fans. Now alarms are also being sounded inside the company, as executives fear price increases are alienating fans and souring sentiment.

This was first reported by the Wall Street Journal, which spoke with current and past employees of the Walt Disney Company who were involved with discussions about pricing and corporate strategies for the theme parks. According to WSJ, “some inside Disney worry that the company has become addicted to price hikes and has reached the limits of what middle-class Americans can afford.”

People within the company who are familiar with pricing say that “internal discussions over whether Disney parks may be losing their grip on the hearts and wallets of families with young kids have become more frequent.” And then there’s this: “Starting in late 2023, the company’s own internal surveys of Walt Disney World and Disneyland guests found that the number of them planning return trips had ticked sharply down.”

That’s just the tip of the iceberg. The full piece delves into the average vacation costs and contains much more color commentary from inside the company about pricing. The WSJ article also strikes us as strikingly similar to a previous WSJ piece from November 2022 that was published shortly after the Chapek ouster.

In that, Bob Iger made it clear that he had been “alarmed” by price increases at Walt Disney World and Disneyland, and was concerned that Chapek was “killing the soul” of Disney. That article opened the floodgates for other pieces from the New York Times, CNBC, Hollywood Reporter, and other outlets I’m probably forgetting.

Even more notably, a little over a month later Walt Disney World made 3 big changes to restore value and improve flexibility, including the return of free overnight parking at the hotels. Mere months after that, the company announced 5 major improvements to make your visit easier. More recently, there was the switch from Genie+ to Lightning Lane Multi-Pass along with other queueing changes aimed at better balancing the interests of all guests. Otherwise, not a whole lot has happened to improve the guest experience in the last 365+ days.

Suffice to say, we’re expecting two things as fallout from the WSJ article. The first is similar reporting from the NYT, CNBC, THR, etc. Many of the journalists at those outlets are well-connected, and they’ve undoubtedly already reached out to their sources for fresh angles on this story.

The second is a response from Disney, much in the same vein as they responded in early 2023–with action. Well, the second thing happened before the first, at least on a superficial level. On its corporate website, the Walt Disney Company indirectly responded to concerns and criticism about costs with the following:

“To all who come to this happy place, welcome. Disneyland is your land,” Walt Disney said when he dedicated Disney’s first theme park in 1955. It’s been the company’s motto ever since, and the reason why Disney has remained the leader in family travel for seven decades and counting.

“The number-one thing we hear from the millions of guests who visit our parks each year is how much a Disney vacation means to them, and we intentionally offer a wide variety of ticket, hotel, and dining options to welcome as many families as possible, whatever their budget,” Josh D’Amaro, Chairman of Disney Experiences, said.

“We also know that, in inflationary times, it’s especially important to give families ways to save on their visits. We haven’t increased the lowest-priced ticket to Disneyland since 2019, and we recently introduced a kids’ ticket for as little as $50, just to name a couple of examples.”

Ever since opening day at Disneyland nearly 70 years ago, generations of families have been making memories with Disney that last a lifetime. And through the decades, Disney has always created new ways for guests to save on their vacations.

“We know our parks create life-long memories for families and we’ve worked hard to make a Disney vacation accessible to guests of all income levels,” Hugh Johnston, Chief Financial Officer, The Walt Disney Company, said. “With strong guest satisfaction scores and intent-to-visit ratings, our parks remain the most popular offering in the industry.”

The company went on to explain that it understands the “financial pressures that families face across every part of their spending, including how they travel” and that they listen to guests and “use that feedback to introduce new offers and promotional deals, which provide significant savings.”

Disney went on to list the many special offers currently available at both Walt Disney World and Disneyland, including the usual suspects, such as Florida and California resident discounts on tickets, free water park day at WDW, and various room discounts on both coasts. They also mentioned the popular Free Dining Plan Deal at Walt Disney World and the Kids’ Ticket Deal at Disneyland.

Of those, the only one that’s persuasive as being a good value for the average family is the $50 child’s tickets. That’s the only admission deal for the general public, and still presents the problem of how non-Californian adults are supposed to visit on a budget. It’s not like the kids can go unattended, which is precisely why Disney offers this deal–it’s a promotional hook to get families to visit and spend more on everyone else.

All of the other discounts for the general public require large financial outlays. No one is staying on-site at Disneyland to save money. Both Free Dining and the up to $200 off rooms promos lock guests into pricier packages, so that’s not a good example if you want to underscore bottom dollar prices to visit Disney.

Ironically, the best deal of all to feature would’ve been the room-only discounts at Walt Disney World, highlighting how inexpensive Value Resorts can be and what they offer versus comparable off-site accommodations. Disney could’ve boasted about how, after currently-available general public discounts offering up to 30%, you can “stay in the magic” for rates starting at only $125 per night this spring and summer (at All Star Sports).

That’s precisely what I discuss in my analysis of these discounts when encouraging those on a tight budget to consider the Value Resorts because their inclusive offerings can make them less costly in the long run. You’re going to be hard-pressed to do better than the rates Walt Disney World is offering at Value Resorts. For instance, ~$125 per night for the All Stars–with the new rooms, Early Entry, transportation, and free parking–is inexpensive enough that we don’t even recommend readers consider staying off-site to save money (peak season when rates explode is a different story).

If I were Disney, I probably also would’ve used that press release to tease the return of the 4-Day, 4-Park Magic Ticket at Walt Disney World. That’s an exceptional general public admission deal, and it’s almost assuredly returning within the next month or so. (Last year, it was announced on March 12 and valid for use from April 2 through September 22.)

Following that last point in the press release, Disney continues by explaining that offers like a child’s ticket for as low as $50 at Disneyland “can make that first trip to Disney possible for many young families. And the memories they make are one-of-a-kind.”

Disney went on to cite a recent survey of 3,531 U.S. adults by Morning Consult, commissioned by the Walt Disney Company, revealed that a strong majority of families with children under five:

  • Said nothing compares to a Disney vacation…
  • Said that a visit to a Disney park gives memories that last a lifetime and can’t be replaced…
  • …And those that had visited Disneyland or Walt Disney World felt the vacation was worth the expense

The “commissioned by the Walt Disney Company” part is probably all you needed to read. Even so, we’re not particularly concerned with surveys–just as we weren’t in the previous article. Word questions the right way and you can use them to make whatever point you set out to “prove.” Disney is masterful at this, and many of its surveys are less fact-finding missions and more supporting a preordained conclusion.

My reaction to the press release is mostly confusion. I’m surprised that Disney opted to “refute” the article, even if indirectly. I’m even more surprised that they did so in such a superficial manner, not by making any meaningful changes but by pointing to things that already exist. I suspect they’re going to have to do that as well, at some point soon.

If the status quo were a compelling argument, Americans wouldn’t have concerns and criticism about costs and Disney pricing out the middle class. People would simply be taking advantage of the existing special offers, attendance and occupancy would be booming, there would be no concerns about guest goodwill or brand damage, etc.

The very existence of this press release is proof of the problem, not the other way around, and it will allay zero concerns about high costs and Disney. Since it’s on the corporate website, I can only assume the intended audience is Wall Street. Will concerned analysts and investors find this a persuasive rebuttal? I assume not. In general, Disney’s responses–both here and to WSJ–have felt a bit Bluthian.

This response reminds me a lot of the infamous “Nahtazu” campaign–if you have to make a concerted effort to explain why Animal Kingdom was not like a zoo…it was too much like a zoo. Here, if Disney needs to explain how the parks are accessible to guests of all income levels…they actually are not.

There’s a fancy phrase that I like, res ipsa loquitur, which means “the thing speaks for itself.” It’s normally used in other contexts, but I’ve taken to it when debating Disney. I like the saying because fans have a tendency to get too in the weeds with all things Disney; we can forget that the regular park going public doesn’t put as much thought or have as extensive knowledge as we do, ability to work the system, etc.

My favorite example is using it to argue that Dino-Rama sucks (because it does), despite fan claims to the contrary about backstory and other assorted nonsense. The thing, a rundown roadside carnival, speaks for itself. Or at least, it did before it met its demise. Which is why it met its demise. (Rest in pieces, Dino-Rama.)

Anyway, same applies here with Disney Parks’ pricing. I would take that a step further and argue against their specific example of young families. The whole reason Disneyland is offering that $50 kids ticket deal, or that Walt Disney World lowered the price of the Disney Dining Plans for children last year, or any number of other offers targeted at kids, is because fewer families with small children can afford to visit the parks.

This isn’t just me theorizing. One of the reasons Disney has been building more bars & lounges, adding adult-centric attractions & entertainment, and otherwise chasing the convention-goer and childless millennial demographics is because they’re making up an ever-increasing slice of the pie for Walt Disney World and Disneyland.

We first heard this explanation back in 2017 or 2018, and if I recall correctly, one of those years was the first time ever that guests without children surpassed those with. Although I haven’t heard much since, I highly doubt the trend has reversed itself. It makes sense, at least for the short-term. Twenty and thirty-something DINKs have more disposable income than their cohorts with children.

It should go without saying, but there are negative long-term consequences of this approach.

One of the key points we buried towards the end of the very lengthy ‘Disney is Worried About Its High Prices’ article is that “intent to recommend” metric is very important–on par with guest satisfaction and intent to revisit. We have heard from more and more fans who, even though they’re still going to Walt Disney World for emotional or sentimental reasons, have stopped recommending it to friends. This was reinforced in the reader comments to the high prices post, where several people said this describes them perfectly. Some admitted to hiding their trips from friends or being embarrassed about them.

It used to be the case that current Disney fans were excellent, unpaid brand ambassadors for the company–introducing Walt Disney World to others, making new fans in the process. What we’ve heard is that–due to higher prices, greater complexity of visiting, less value for money, and more–fewer readers of this site are recommending Disney Parks to others. This is really significant, and under-discussed. People trust the word of one person in their own social circles more than that of one-thousand social media influencers.

As a retired Childless Disney Millennial and current Disney Dad, I’d take this a step further and say there are a couple of unique ways this ‘intent to recommend’ angle applies to families.

The first is that, as a general matter, I would hazard a guess that childless adults are less of brand advocates for Disney in their real life social circles. When we were in that position, we weren’t proactively extolling the virtues of the Disney Parks to our normie friends. People knew us as Disney Adults, but it just didn’t come up. Separately, in our Disney friend circle, it came up constantly. But no one in that group needed a sales pitch in the first place. They were in just as deep as us.

Now that we have a daughter, we’re in parents groups and that sort of thing. We have a new social circle that is, unsurprisingly, families with children our daughter’s age. In these groups, Disney and other family-friendly activities come up constantly, with people soliciting advice and feedback from one another about things to do and products to purchase. (This constitutes a surprising amount of conversations!) I can only speak to our own anecdotal experiences, but I’d imagine that an enthusiastic recommendation of Disneyland or Walt Disney World in these groups would go much further than in a social circle without kids.

While I suppose that angle is arguable and anecdotal, there’s also the more obvious and undeniable one. Parents take their kids to Disney, those kids form emotional bonds, grow up visiting, and take their own kids to Disney. Rinse and repeat. This is ‘intent to recommend’ in its most organic and unadulterated form. Countless multi-generational ‘Disney Families’ exist due to this dynamic, including both of us–and probably many of you!

Pricing out families with small children is the surest way to break the cycle, resulting in future generations that have no emotional connection to Walt Disney World or Disneyland. There are hugely negative long-term ramifications to pricing out families, and it seems like there’s some degree of concern about this internally.

However, it’s not a problem that will play out in the short-term. So Wall Street, with its quarterly myopia, may not care. And given the average life cycle of corporate leadership, current Disney management may be long gone before those particular chickens come home to roost. Accordingly, there may not be much of an incentive for anyone to reverse this.

For what it’s worth, all of this is not to cast aspersions on Disney Adults or suggest the company should turn its back on them in favor of families. Absolutely not. DINKs are incredibly lucrative and U.S. demographics trends alone suggest they will be increasingly instrumental in the future. If anything, Disney should be doing even more to cater to these adults with disposable income. But at the same time, the company needs to figure out how to maintain accessibility for families, as they are Disney’s bread & butter, and will ensure generational nostalgia continues to drive future visits.

Bringing things full circle, all of this is also why it’s worse for Disney to lose fans on an emotional level than a financial one. Many people from both cohorts–the Childless Disney Millennials and the Disney Families–are there because we grew up hooked on Disney, forming that sentimentality and nostalgia as kids. If costs were all that mattered, the damage would be easy to undo. Disney could turn its big pricing dial down, or pull that giant discount lever and entice people to return in greater numbers. But when you lose fans emotionally, the likelihood of that damage being undone is far lower–and it can become generational.

Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, 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 clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!

YOUR THOUGHTS

What do you think of Disney’s (indirect) response to the criticism of price increases pricing out the middle class? What would you like to see done to improve the guest experience and satisfaction at Walt Disney World? Think that runaway price increases are the big concern, or is the value proposition an equally or more significant matter? Do you agree or disagree with our assessment? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

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118 Comments

  1. Last night I saw a Disney World commercial in Indiana. The tag line at the end was “start saving now”. Unbelievable with this conversation going on!

  2. Although prices are terrible, what finally broke our habit was the ride downtime. We want to go back, eventually. Under the Sea stopping 4-5 times during one ride is crazy. Paying for an after hours event with 4 rides down at one time doesn’t work for us. My daughter actually said, “Maybe we need to wait for them to fix this stuff before we come back.”

    Tom – do you ever see any metrics on ride downtime? It seems worse every time me go (about 2x/year, most recently Dec. 2024).

  3. I have had a near 50 year obsession with Disney parks – starting nearly at birth – and I find it harder to maintain interest and fascination. My core memories are the first 10 years of EPCOT which was a place like no other. It is still my favorite park but today it leans so heavily on food and drink (with a bit of current IP here and there) that I can’t see how it would capture the imagination of a 10 year old like it did for me. What exactly is there about Disney that would capture someone’s heart and attention creating a lifelong, lasting impression? My kids could take it or leave it and I can’t really blame them based on what is offered today. It’s just a very transactional place, and I think they are counting on those transactions to keep coming from newcomers as a rite of passage rather than build lifelong fans. It’s all really quite sad.

  4. We are a family of 5 and in the past have taken our kids every 2-3 years, as we do other vacations on the “off” years. We have so many amazing memories and our kids have stated they want to go back next school year instead of other trips. We are stuck traveling during busy times due to our jobs, the heat, school, and kids’ activities. I am aware that makes prices rise, as it does with all inclusive resorts, cruises, and flights to anywhere. But, I just priced out a vacation for right after Thanksgiving and I’m not sure I can wrap my head around that cost this time. Moderate resorts costing almost $400 a night for a very basic room. But, I think for me, the cost of doing individual lightning lane (our kids grew up on fast pass and if I’m paying for that trip I don’t want to spend too much time in line) for 5 people daily, cost of food, and paying for transportation to and from the airport (we loved magical express) make it hard to want to book the trip. I want to justify the trip, but this time I’m not very eager to click “book.”

    1. We agree with you. Price are borderline obscene and a turn off considering what they offer and the present conditions of the park. We are retired Florida residents, have visited WDW since it’s inception and believe what you get for these prices is not worth the money.

  5. Thank you for the family picture, it’s awesome.

    This is a great article. I have been reading your blog since you started. I have been a life long Disney fan. I live in Canada, with the exchange rate and the Disney pricing I can’t see making it back any time soon. Keep up the good work.

    Thanks,
    Joe

  6. As a child I remember being glued to my seat for Disney on Sun. When Tink splashed on the colors, I wondered why our .T. V. remained black and white! Now, having a family, we have been to WDW 3 times and stayed happily @ Saratoga Springs. We are going to Northern Wi this summer . More bang for our buck!!! Rose Gebhart

  7. WOW!!!!
    So many great comments.
    Love it.
    People coming from all angles of every persuasion and everyone of them correct in their personal observations and suggestions.
    Disney are you reading this? I hope so.
    Bring it all back. Change your ways. You say you can’t because you think you can’t. I would remind you….
    “It’s kind of fun to do the impossible.”
    Sign of hope?
    I am surprised how many folks say they’ve stopped going, won’t be going back or are headed to Universal instead yet they are obviously reading the Disney Tourist blog. So unlike Pinocchio maybe not all the strings have been cut.

  8. I think Disney needs to find a good balance. But every time they add a new attraction, its a state of the art attraction that, while great, only goes after one demographic. I think they need to start building more of those slow moving dark rides that kids and families can enjoy, along with the big time rides. It will keep the families with young kids happy and at the same time eat up crowds that won’t be other places in the park by adding capacity. Too often building a new land that attracts fans, but only has one big ride to it does nothing for the lines and waits in the other areas of the park. If they add more capacity, then people will think the value for their money is more worth it and be willing to spend the money to go. Right now with the longer waits and huge crowds, people feel they aren’t getting value for their money.

  9. This is all just jumping to conclusions. Guessing that there will be long term consequences. When do these so called consequences kick in? Disney has been raising prices for years and will continue to do so until people can’t afford it. The parks have exploded in visitors during all of this. This isn’t rocket science. Disney ticket prices were priced too low before and now they are getting to where they should be. Wall street does not care if families go to the parks they just care that people are going, any people, and spending lots of money.

  10. Regards perks for folks staying on property, this is coming up in my mind yet again. I have written to WDW management about it. Why they removed the delivery of purchases to your hotel seems like a very poor decision and loss of revenue for the company. I get that it may be a staffing issue, but Disney must have lost a lot of sales due to the removal of this perk. There are many who just won’t bother to go and purchase their items on the way out of the parks, and they were unable make those impulse purchases and have them delivered to their resort.

  11. A lot of great comments here.
    Tom, I totally get your point of view about the families and think it is spot on!
    Thank you. I sure hope Disney gets it.

  12. All of this resonates with us. We are in the boat of having priced ourselves out of Disney with how our family has grown. We started a tradition of taking our kids just before their 3rd birthday, while they still qualify for free entry and don’t get charged for certain meals. For our first two boys we would do several extra splurges like character meals, Spirit of Aloha (RIP), mcikey bars everyday and Lightning Lanes (Free Fast Pass for our first couple of trips (also RIP)). We have our final pre-3 trip for our (surprise) baby girl the end of February. To do any kind of character meal, now that we have a 10 and 4 yr old on our bill it’s a minimum of $200 with tax and tip. $200 for a breakfast buffet for an average sized family, with our youngest still being free. With all the other increases, we just can’t justify that. So we will be drastically decreasing our normal in park spending. No Character meals, packing lunches and snacks for the kids, ($14 for mickey bars for 3 kids adds up quick over 5 days, but we’ll still get at least one for nostalgia sake)using all your fabulous tips to not have to buy LL. And we don’t plan to do another trip for probably 5+ years. I grew up in Orlando, and we regularly went to Disney on school trips, and resident discounts etc, It was a big part of my childhood that ai have loved sharing with my own family. Trying to afford it for an average sized family of 5 is going to be off the table for a while. We’re going to take a look at Universal in a couple years and try that route. We love our Disney trips, and I got my husband hooked after our 1st “once in a lifetime trip” (he’s been back 3 times already), but all the increases don’t just add up, they multiply when your family grows, and it’s really left a bad taste on our over priced ice cream bars.

  13. Let me introduce myself, I’m a DVC owner since 2009, Disney + and Hulu subscriber, D23 gold member, Disney Reward credit card user, and my license plate is DIZNEY. So I guess you can say I’ve been a Disney fanatic for over 60 years. Even though we live in Hawaii, going to Orlando was our primary yearly vacation destination. Staying onsite and purchasing annual passes was a given. But we have not been back to WDW since 2019.
    Reason? It became evident that Disney was more interested in one and done money, than return customer money. The nickel and diming was consistent. No Magical Express, no free fast pass, none or limited late nights, pay resort parking (now rescinded), more hard ticket events limiting park time, and the most consistent Disney policy? The annual increase in ticket prices, annual passes, food, and merchandise. Disney was not taking care of their most prized asset – the family that returns and builds relationships that last generations.
    And thanks to Tom’s recommendation, I rent out my DVC points which help pay for our vacations. So where has my yearly family vacation gone? We have been to France, Portugal, Japan, New York City, and San Francisco. And we have yet to spend more than a WDW vacation.
    And Disney just has a way of frustrating you. Even with my Disney pedigree, I was unable to secure Moonlight Magic tickets at Disney’s California Adventure last week, even after following all the directions. I still think there were tech issues, but no surprise there. Anyway I took the family to Knott’s Berry Farm and they had a blast! I enjoyed the $65 admission and for $20 more you could get food for the day (an entree and side every 90 minutes).
    As far as building generational relationships, my 8 year old granddaughter just asked me to go to Universal Studios so she could play Nintendo and see the dragon. Out of the mouth of babes . . . .

  14. The only way Disney will get me back, is to drastically lower the the price of park tickets (UK 14 day tickets). and bring back the free 3 daily fast passes. No way would I pay the extortionate current prices for the equivalent style of skip the queue.

  15. I am afraid Disney has robbed the bank of nostalgia. If you rob a bank, have a change of heart and give the money back, some of it or all of it, you still robbed the bank. There is no going back. Disney has penny-by-penny stolen most of what was great and replaced it with a barrel of IOUs which I don’t think it ever intends to replace or is capable of replacing, even if it wanted to. What a shame, there are times when we miss Disney, but we don’t want to go back.

  16. BLUF: Fading magic might not be enough to overcome nostalgia.

    If it was not for the discount Disney gives military I am not sure we would have done as many trips as we have. We are now at probably ten trips since 2010. Why 2010? I had returned from my first deployment and was determined to take my entire family. We stayed at Coronado Springs. Not only did we have a great time, but Disney and its cast members treated us so well. If there was a problem (not many) Disney took care of it no questions asked. Three or Four trips later, we bought DVC. Cast Members were great, The entertainment was great. Then Covid happened. Coming around Covid was not bad in light of things. The parks were low key but everyone seemed just happy to be out. However, the world ramped back up. Society started humming. Disney could have rebooted. Instead, shows stayed dark. Perks disappeared. Cast members were either less empowered or worse less interested in spreading pixie dust (addressing issues). We just took a trip over MLK weekend. We stayed at Copper Creek. Room and the view was great. But something was missing. My last daughter is 16 and graduating next year. Is it just the law of diminishing returns? IDK. I do hope one day I can bring my grandkids just like when my grandparents brought me on my first trip around 1980. DVC might make that possible. But until then, I am not sure how many more trips I have in me. Our F/B for 4.5 days was about equal to the cost of our park hopper passes. We spent about 400 dollars at O’Hanas. Granted my wife and I had a few drinks. But still, O’Hana’s used to be great but hardly seems worth it anymore. Food is not quite there and the atmosphere just isn’t the same. I typically avoid buffets now. Just not gonna eat enough to justify the cost. But not all was bad. Crowds were manageable even with cheer/dance squads and South Americans. Had a few nice snacks. Visited the Cantina for the first time. Enjoyed a few drinks and the atmosphere. Got a late night ronto wrap. Rode GotG (always great) and for the first time Tiana’s Bayou (okay) and Ratatouille (the set is nice). Sorry losing focus.

    In short: Disney needs to raise the bar on guest experience.
    1. Train, empower, and encourage staff to make Magic happen. It starts with them.
    2. Bring back more entertainment to include shows and street performers. Those indoor shows like Muppet Vision and the Little Mermaid were a great respite from the weather and walking. Lightsaber classes.
    3. It’s the little things that made things feel special. Towel animals, extra fast passes (even if it was for PhilharMagic), the radio station playing Disney Music. Movies while in the pool not the lawn.

    Extra Credit. Bring back the spicy chicken waffle wrap in Liberty Square.

  17. It’s the lack of street entertainment at WDW.

    We went to DL last summer and had an AMAZING time. The most memorable moments were happening upon characters and entertainment.

    This year, we’re going to US for 3 days. We’re doing the MK Halloween party but nothing else at WDW. We considering buying tickets to spend that day at MK because lines will be shorter, but we just don’t want to only ride 10 rides. We want the ambience. And it’s not there anymore. But I bet it’ll be there at the party!

  18. I think the children’s prices should be from infant to the age of five should be free, 6 to 12 should be 50% off and I also think that senior citizens may be after the age of 70 should also be free.
    I usually bring my 98 year old mother with me, but she has to stay in the room because it is too expensive for her to just sit in a wheelchair and go around. She cannot do any of the rides however she does spend a lot of money on drinks and food so therefore, I think she should be free so she could enjoy the parks with the family instead of being left in the hotel room

  19. I’m a Disney addict so l can’t quit I just do less. I’ve been watching Moana every week. Donald Duck cartoons never get old either. wDW not nearly as often.

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