Guide to Disney World Annual Passes: Price Increases, Tiers, Reservations & Blockouts
Walt Disney World has resumed Annual Pass sales, with big changes to the APs. This guide covers price increases, blockout dates, discounts, reservations, perks, and more. Plus, commentary about the new-look Annual Passholder program and everything you need to know. (Updated September 8, 2021.)
There’s a ton of ground to cover here, so let’s quickly recap what has happened in the last year with Annual Passes. Unlike Disneyland, the Annual Pass program at Walt Disney World did not end when the parks reopened nor were outstanding APs terminated. Many, many now ex-APs proactively cancelled their passes and requested refunds. (That was a whole debacle beyond the scope of this post.)
Basically, sales of new Annual Passes were “paused” while renewals were allowed. New pass purchases for ex-Annual Passholders who cancelled during the closure (not before or after reopening) and children who “aged into” Annual Passes were also allowed. Much of this was done on a case-by-case basis, with the Guest Services ‘Welcome Center’ in Disney Springs having a ton of discretion over sales. This is all relevant going forward and the underlying point is that Walt Disney World is not starting from scratch here…
September 8, 2021 Update: After only a year-plus of only renewals and select ‘extenuating circumstances’ purchases, new Walt Disney World Annual Passes are once again for sale online and at the parks. This means you can walk right up to a ticket window at the TTC, Epcot, Animal Kingdom, etc. and make a purchase, or buy via DisneyWorld.com.
Unlike when Disneyland launched its new Magic Key Pass program, there is no wait to purchase passes online. This is simply because there aren’t nearly as many Floridian fans as Los Angeles and Orange County, California residents who are diehard Disneyland fans. Another difference between the coasts is the aforementioned ticket booth sales, which still aren’t happening at Disneyland Resort. Otherwise, a fairly uneventful first day of AP sales–at least, online and in person.
However, the phone lines are a totally different story. Walt Disney World’s call centers have been short-staffed for the last year (arguably longer), leading to lengthy hold times on even normal days. Whenever anything new is released, those waits get exponentially worse–it’s pretty common to be on hold for 3-4 hours on days like today.
Unfortunately, some people won’t be able to upgrade or purchase new Annual Passes online for a variety of reasons, and will have no choice but to call. Unless you have extreme “special circumstances” that require dealing with this immediately, we’d highly recommend waiting at least a day or two. Hold times will drop precipitously by Thursday or Friday. For the most part, Disney Park Pass reservations are not going to book up due to an influx of new APs, so there’s really no compelling reason to purchase today. Unless you really like waiting on the phone.
Here are some highlights of Walt Disney World’s new-look Annual Pass program:
- Hold More Park Reservations: Depending on the pass type, Annual Passholders may now hold up to five Disney Park Pass reservations at a time. Disney is adding “bonus reservations” to the calendar from time to time, so Passholders can make an additional park reservation without it counting against their applicable reservation hold limit. Plus, when Passholders stay at Disney Resort hotels or other select hotels, they will also be eligible to make theme park reservations for each day of their stay–in addition to the reservations you can hold based on your pass type.
- Customize Your Pass: Choose different add-on options based on your preferences — from the Water Park and Sports option to Disney PhotoPass downloads. These add-on options are available for purchase with any of the four new passes.
- Access a New Integrated Calendar: Planning will be easier with enhancements to our reservation system, including a new integrated calendar that lets Passholders quickly see blockout dates for each pass type, view available days and make, modify or cancel a reservation all in one place.
- Enjoy Passholder Perks: Annual Passes will continue to offer benefits including the Park Hopper option, standard theme park parking and discounts on merchandise and dining. There will also be some surprises throughout Walt Disney World’s 50th Anniversary.
Please note as Walt Disney World continues to manage attendance, at any time, Annual Passes may be unavailable for purchase. Annual Passholders will also still be required to make park reservations for each day of their visit.
Here’s a visual comparison:
Blockout Calendars
Here’s a look at the blockout calendars for each tier of the new Walt Disney World APs:
Current Passholders
If you are a current WDW Annual Passholder, you may continue to use your Annual Pass as you do today — when it is time for you to renew, you will be able to renew into one of the new passes (at a discounted renewal rate). Plus, Silver, Gold, Platinum and Platinum Plus Annual Passholders now can hold more reservations at a time.
Now let’s discuss these changes…
OUR COMMENTARY
Your opinion on the changes to Walt Disney World’s AP program will likely depend upon your frame of reference. If you’ve been an Annual Passholder in the year-plus since the parks reopened, this all sounds pretty familiar. It’s basically a continuation of what’s currently in place, plus the “ordinary” yearly price increase. (Or potentially not-so-ordinary this year, depending upon the add-ons you choose.)
If you cancelled your AP during the closure (or something along those lines), this probably looks totally different. A lot like the Magic Key Pass program at Disneyland, but with some tweaks. Neither outlook is necessarily wrong. This is a minor or significant change, depending upon your perspective.
Let’s start here by addressing Disney Park Pass reservations. We’ve discussed the “necessity” of this system at length in When Will Disney Park Pass Reservations End? It would now seem like we have an answer to the titular question of that post: not in the next year-plus!
A lot of that analysis remains accurate, including the underlying motivations for Walt Disney World using a theme park reservation system, the benefits it offers, and the inconveniences it poses. However, I don’t expect you to read that whole thing in addition to this, so I’ll cover the salient point here.
Basically, Walt Disney World is nothing like Disneyland when it comes to Annual Passholders. Although some school breaks for Osceola and Orange Counties are now more crowded, it’s still nothing at all like what the California parks have experienced thanks to the millions of local APs in Los Angeles and OC, California.
When it comes to Disneyland, theme park reservations among Annual Passholders will be competitive for many dates as a result of that diehard local population. That was true with the Flex Pass, and it’ll almost certainly be true with the Magic Key Passes.
Our expectation is the same will not hold true at Walt Disney World. To be sure, there will be some days that are not otherwise blocked out and will be difficult to score reservations. This has already happened with October 1, 2021 among existing Annual Passholders, and it’ll undoubtedly occur on a scattering of other dates.
However, our expectation is that Disney Park Pass reservations will be a formality for most dates now that the parks are operating at or near 100% capacity. Personally, I would not purchase on the basis of one Annual Pass offering more simultaneous reservations–I think that’s an illusory perk or distinction among the tiers.
My expectation is that access for the overwhelming majority of dates will be dictated by the blockout calendar, and reservations will be easy to book with little advance notice. Obviously, new AP sales have been suspended, but that’s how it is now. We’ve totally stopped bothering with booking Park Passes way ahead of time. In fact, yesterday when visiting Magic Kingdom, I forgot until arriving at the turnstiles–something that has happened several times. Park Pass availability has become a non-factor since Walt Disney World increased park capacity in early July. It didn’t matter even during peak summer season.
As for the tiers and pricing, there are some comparisons between past Walt Disney World Annual Passes and the new-look AP program. Starting at the higher end of the spectrum, the Incredi-Pass is most comparable to the Platinum Plus AP.
The Platinum Plus AP offered unlimited park access with no blockout dates, plus (get it?) access to the water parks, Disney’s Oak Trail Golf Course, and ESPN’s Wide World of Sports complex.
One month before the park closure, Annual Pass prices increased, and the WDW Platinum Plus Annual Pass went up to $1295 from $1219. Now, its equivalent is $1299, which is “only” $5 more. Not bad over 18 months later, right?
It’s not so simple. Platinum Plus APs included PhotoPass and water park access, not to mention FastPass+ and unlimited access to the parks without making reservations. Now, there are more strings attached, plus none of those add-ons at the base price.
For a more apples to apples comparison, the fully-loaded Incredi-Pass will cost $1497. That’s an increase of roughly 15%, which is a steeper jump than any other year in recent memory. Of course, that assumes you want PhotoPass and water park access. It’s possible many APs would prefer to customize their pricing and access (everyone in a family probably doesn’t need the PhotoPass add-on). Regardless, the point stands.
Next, we have the WDW Platinum Pass, which increased to $1,195 early last year. The nearest counterpart for this AP is also the Incredi-Pass. The Platinum Pass was the same as the top tier (also having no blockout dates), minus the plus stuff–so no water parks, golf, or WWoS.
For this apples to apples comparison, we only add the cost of PhotoPass to the Incredi-Pass. It’s a total of $1,398 versus $1,195–almost 17% more.
Moving down another tier, which was previously occupied by the Gold Pass. This was only available to Florida residents or Disney Vacation Club members, and it was priced at $719. This AP was incredibly popular, as it was only blocked out around Christmas, New Year’s, and Easter/Spring Break. Times many locals avoided the parks, anyway.
The comparison here is to the Sorcerer Pass, which is similarly only for DVC members and Florida residents. The Sorcerer Pass costs $899 (plus $99 for PhotoPass) and is blocked out around the weeks of Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s. That makes it ~39% more expensive than its predecessor with PhotoPass included.
Next up, there’s the Silver Pass, which was only for Florida residents and was priced at $539. This had the same holiday blockout dates as the Gold Pass, plus pretty much the entirety of summer (June 1 to August 6).
The Silver Pass compares to the Pirate Pass, which is likewise only for Florida residents. The Pirate Pass costs $699 (plus $99 for PhotoPass) and is blocked out about the same number of days, but much more spread out and targeted over the course of the year to coincide with holidays. Including PhotoPass, the Pirate Pass is 48% more expensive than the Silver Pass.
Finally, there’s the Pixie Dust Pass (still can’t believe that’s its real name), which replaces the Weekday Select Annual Pass (and Epcot After 4, I guess?) and is only available to Florida residents. Pre-closure, the Weekday Select AP cost $369, whereas the Pixie Dust Pass costs $399 (plus $99 for PhotoPass). That’s an increase of approximately 35% with PhotoPass factored into the math.
Again, all of these comparisons assume you value PhotoPass. If that’s not true–and we suspect it won’t be for many Walt Disney World regulars–the increases look more standard. Our guess is that more fans will be disappointed about the continued requirement for reservations, and shifted blockout dates for some passes. There’s also the likelihood that Genie+ will be available as an add-on down the road that–if MaxPass plus “Disney inflation” are any indication–will cost around $149 to $199.
In terms of other takeaways, the clearest one is that Walt Disney World values the ability the manage capacity and Annual Passholder attendance. It’s also notable that they’ve made more effort to carefully target blockout dates to reflect current attendance trends, rather than just “all of summer.” (We’ve questioned that for years, saying it reflected outdated crowd patterns.)
Personally, I think this is a savvy move with an eye towards the future. In our post about Annual Passes returning, we discuss Central Florida’s population growth but also note that Walt Disney World could probably “safely kick[] the AP can down the road for a few more years if they so desire” and simply resume sales of the old passes rather than doing a full overhaul. To me, what they’ve instead rolled out seems like a fairly middle ground approach that’ll work smoothly now and keep the AP program sustainable in the years to come, avoiding the pitfalls of Disneyland’s APs, pre-closure.
While Walt Disney World has not released official numbers, the last credible count I heard was that the Florida parks had in the neighborhood of 400,000 active Annual Passes, with a disproportionate number in the top two tiers. Even if that number were to double by October 1, that’s still significantly fewer than Disneyland Resort under its old program–and with twice the number of parks to absorb those Passholders.
Despite significantly higher tourist numbers for most of the year, I still don’t think obtaining Disney Park Pass reservations will be an issue for the vast majority of dates. There might be some pent-up demand at first or, more likely, in the early weeks of the World’s Most Magical Celebration. After that, I suspect reservations will largely be a matter of going through the motions. (I’m still not convinced they’re actually needed or even valuable to Disney in the long-term, but that’s another topic for another day.)
With that said, I can understand the trepidation in dropping hundreds or over one-thousand dollars with no assurances of access. That’s a pretty big leap of faith and I’m not sure Walt Disney World has earned that level of trust or confidence with its reservation system track record. While the Disney Park Pass system works well now, there were a couple of months last fall and again this spring when attendance was capped and things were rough.
One annoyance that probably doesn’t matter to anyone but me is the branding here, which is a continuation of an ongoing issue with Walt Disney World. Sort of like mixing characters from Aladdin and Cars for the paid FastPass replacement (and not giving everything a concise name) or not clearly distinguishing between paid post-closing events and free perks (After Hours v. Extended Hours) with catchy branding.
When it comes to Annual Pass names, Silver, Gold, and Platinum made sense and were intuitive. These tiers do not. It feels like Disney pulled from a grabbag here, with a bunch of random generic-but-Disneyesque concepts represented. Perhaps I’m simply not sufficiently versed in the character hierarchy, but who ranks higher–Pixies or Pirates? And does anyone want a pass named after either?! Perhaps Disney could name APs after jobs Mickey Mouse has held: Little Tailor, Wasteland Painter, Steamboat Captain, and Sorcerer. (No? Not any better? Okay.)
As for the price increases, not a ton of commentary there. The most annoying aspect of this is it’s another instance of Walt Disney World charging more but offering less. It’s the principle of it that bothers me here–in the grand scheme of cuts and increases, these new-look APs don’t crack my personal top 10.
Reasonable minds may differ on this, but paying separately for PhotoPass or water parks (and more) isn’t a huge deal to me and I suspect a majority of Annual Passholders will opt against purchasing those add-ons. While they unquestionably do have value (and thus so does their absence), it’s not as significant for us as the percentage price increases suggest. Assigning those a more moderate value makes the overall increases more palatable.
Out of all Walt Disney World’s types of price increases, the three that bother me least are anything VIP (let the wealthy ‘subsidize’ the parks), merchandise (totally optional/unnecessary), and Annual Passes.
Even though we are Annual Passholders and are thus personally impacted, I would far prefer AP prices increase than regular tickets. I know it’s not an either/or thing, and Disney will absolutely increase both. However, in my ‘pie in the sky’ perfect world scenario, single day tickets would be significantly cheaper, to make a ‘rite of passage visit’ more accessible to more kids of a broader range of economic backgrounds. APs would be more expensive to offset that, since no one “needs” to visit Walt Disney World multiple times per year. But again, that’s just idle idealism. I’m very aware that’s not even close to reality.
Back on Planet Earth, I realize prices are going to keep increasing on Walt Disney World because demographics is destiny. Disney Vacation Club keeps growing, Walt Disney World has a ton of diehard fans all over the world, and Central Florida’s population keeps soaring–Osceola County grew by 45% between 2010 and 2020, while Orange County grew by 25%.
That last point is probably the most relevant–and had been true for several years before “Zoom Towns” entered our collective vernacular. If you’ve seen any of those ‘fleeing to Florida’ stories in the news, you’re undoubtedly aware that this trend has only accelerated in the last year. Many of these new Florida residents are families leaving the Northeast and Midwest who are more enthusiastic about Disney than longtime locals.
If new home prices and construction around Walt Disney World are any indication, these transplants are also on the more affluent end of the spectrum. Behind Magic Kingdom in Windermere and Winter Garden, there’s been a proliferation of subdivisions with no end in sight. Construction on expensive homes has been booming throughout the last year and is still going strong.
Ultimately, probably not very exciting analysis on the changes to Walt Disney World’s Annual Passholder program. With most other recent news, I had a pretty clear expectation as to what would cause confusion, excitement, and anger. Here, I’m truly at a loss.
It’s difficult to gauge how much other regulars value things like PhotoPass and water park access, or how you all will feel about paying a yearly rate for Genie+ once that becomes available. It’s entirely possible the consensus response to this announcement could be one of relief that APs are once again going to be sold and indifference to pricing, anger at the percentage increases once everything else is tallied up, frustration about park reservations, or something different entirely. Really curious to see the reactions to this Walt Disney World news.
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 Walt Disney World’s new Annual Passes? Disappointed by the price increases, blockout dates, or having to make reservations? Thoughts on the new AP names? Do you expect the Disney Park Pass reservation system to be retired at some point, or continue forever? Agree or disagree with our assessments? 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!
This is not the place to comment on what Disney employees feel is important to their lives while living in FL. I hope your post is deleted as it is inappropriate.
Is there any penalty to an annual pass holder no-showing a park reservation?
I know there is in Disneyland and Disneyland Paris, but can’t find any reference to such in WDW. But of course it may be buried deep in the terms!
Thanks!
For those asking about military MYW or the Military Salute type tickets, prior to our trip, customer service told use to bring the unused tickets and we could exchange for the annual pass. On September 18th we went to the new Disney Springs ticket center and got 2 sorcerer passes for $700 – that was the balance due after the exchange.
To all service members and retirees – Thank you for your service!!
I called the 407 number for APs asking if I could upgrade my military MYW tickets (all unused) to APs and was told no by the cast member but on the chat feature on the WDW website the cast member said I could. What is the correct answer? Any suggestions?
While on our trip to WDW last week, we activated our AP renewal vouchers. Our existing passes are due to expire in two weeks. We asked whether to activate now (pre sept 8) or wait until a future time. They explained that activating prior to when the new APs go on sale would keep them as Platinum passes, activating after Sept 8, the would be the new version (without photopass). I am glad we did that and also glad we bought renewal vouchers before prices went up.
I think Pirate pass sounds cool.
I saw a trustworthy (to my knowledge) Disney Twitter account say that she was able to bridge a completely unused DLR 5-day ticket into a Magic Key without losing her eligible reservations, as in the days she already had reserved did not fall within her blockout dates and her magic key allows up to 4 reservations, so she only her 5th park pass day was removed from her account. Is this true, so that if someone already has 10/1 reserved and upgraded to an AP that does not exclude 10/1 and they don’t have too many reservations before then, the reservations will hold? Also, what if you’re a resort guest? Will all reservations stay put then?
We are current Platinum passholders with an expiration date of June of 2022. Is the photo pass grandfathered into our current passes until the time that we have to renew to the IncrediPass?
I’m not a local, but often buy a platinum annual pass to cover two trips within a 12-month range. There hasn’t often been a direct, ticket-based savings represented in these purchases, but the two “free” memory makers. along with them park parking and restaurant discounts have made it worthwile. There goes what was, perhaps, my very last Disney price hack. Womp, womp.
@Dee Yes, the weekly pass requires you to be a FL resident based on what I read in Tom’s posting.
Platinum Plus Passholder for several years now. Renewed on August 17th before tis all came out. Thought I was renewing for another year at Platinum Plus level only to find out (yesterday) that water parks are not included. Maybe I missed something when renewing but I don’t remember seeing anything about this or any other benefits not being available. I’ll pay closer attention in the future. I doubt I’ll be purchasing Annual passes moving forward since we are not Florida residents and the new cost does not justify it.
Could ‘Pirate’ mean Disney is making out like bandits while holding guests hostage; ‘Pixie’ and ‘Sorcerer’ refer to it all being smoke and mirrors; and ‘Incredi’ infer anyone who purchases it has made an ‘Incredibly’ poor decision?
I wouldn’t say the park pass reservations system works well. I had to call and wait on hold to get the damn thing to let me reserve MK for Oct 1 AFTER I bought a single day ticket on top of having my AP. I had recently renewed my AP to make ressies for the trip (well, 3 anyway) so I have another year of Photopass included. IF I renew next year I guess I would drop to the Sorcerer pass and plan on not going at Thanksgiving or Christmas, which are insanely busy anyway.
The big problem I see is them keeping separate park pass buckets for std tickets, resort guests, and AP. With that, they can effectively screw AP over even more by claiming they are trying to balance attendance. I think they are going to use it as an incentive to try and entice folks to stay onsite by keeping more availability for them.
FL resident, previous Silver AP holder for years here.
Wow – WDW, you are really showing how you don’t appreciate your loyal local fan base with this new set of AP offerings.
Having worked out if we wanted to get the nearest “equivalent” pass, we would need to get the Pirate pass (take note: the change to twee, childish names are not going to coat the passes in any kind of magic & distract us from the disappointment of what you’re offering Disney).
The brazen price hike for zero extra offering with the pass is terrible. The previous Silver pass did not include the photo pass so that is not a factor here. However, having previously paid a down payment of $125 & paying $28.55 p/m the very 1st time I got an AP = just shy of $470 annually. Got to go weekends & after work, & the block out dates were fine – I would never go to a theme park during peak holiday periods or July & August when its 100 degrees in FL and you cant move in the park as its so busy & have to queue for about 2 hours to get on anything.
We appreciated living within a close enough proximity to the parks allowed us the privilege of being able to go on a whim or after work – that was 1 of the reasons we got AP’s.
Even during the pandemic when the parks re-opened & you had to make a reservation, lets face it, it wasn’t bad – in the grand scheme of things going on.
. . . Roll on the new equivalent Pirate pass. Ok still no photo pass included – never had that so doesn’t factor into my disappointment. But to have to put a down payment of nearly $100 more ($205) & the monthly payments are still $45 p/m – totaling nearly $750 inc tax for what extra? (That is nearly $300 more than the last time I had my Silver pass – less than a year ago)
No free fast passes anymore (that’s the biggest thing for me). I get that’s going to be the same for everyone, but when you then have to pay hundreds more for your actual pass to get in . . . it starts running into crazy money territory.
I don’t really see any added benefits at all of the nearly $300 price hike??
Due to working Mon-Fri, a pixie dust pass doesn’t work, so Disney are basically cashing in on knowing that people who rely on going weekends, will have to pay a substantial amount more for the next tier pass up – the Pirate one.
Was so looking forward to WDW releasing their AP’s & realized there was bound to be some changes etc, but so disappointed to see this.
The change to all of the annual passes is just asinine! There are days that people have enough trouble booking because passholder options are not available. It is almost as if Disney is saying, okay we have your money so now we are going to take the perks away.
Less Disney for me, or possibly none at all. There is no reason to even be a passholder when platinum has basically dropped 2 levels but stays the same price. Ridiculous!
this new structure is really awful. as a florida resident and DVC member, my family had the annual passes that just had the black out dates for Christmas, and we would get our holiday fix during thanksgiving and go for the week. now thanksgiving is blocked out except for the RIDICULOUSLY expensive Incredi-Pass which no longer includes the photopass which was a HUGE bonus for us. So what they’ve now accomplished is that they priced us out of a thanksgiving trip because we’re not going to spend $1600 MORE for a family of 4 to upgrade to the Incredi-Pass. Now without that block of Thanksgiving, the sorcerer pass seems less palatable, and the pirate pass seems like a waste of money because of the weekend black out dates. SO in sum, we will probably just cut down our disney trips and just pay a few days here and a few days there. very angry
@FloridaJoeykon YESSSSS this x1000000000. What Tom says makes sense for some of the passes that are most comparable to the new ones, including the price points with a slight increase, but the virtual elimination of the Platinum pass (and theme park select, EPCOT after 4, etc) is unpalatable. There are a lot of people stuck between tiers now who either have to step down or pay substantially more, so I don’t think this is just about losing photo pass. Not all FL residents live right next door to the park and can make it there after work or on the weekends. Three day holiday weekends, spring break, and major holiday weeks (so the times when non Orlando FL residents can come hang at Disney for a few days) are blocked out until that crazy expensive Incredi-pass. I’ve been desperately waiting for passes to come back and was 100% on board with getting the platinum ASAP. After this announcement, I’m reconsidering getting a pass at all and am thinking I’ll just continue to do WDW for Christmas only each year and get my theme park fix at Universal (where I have the top tier pass that has paid for itself multiple times over already, and I haven’t even used my included HHN ticket yet!). And because the demographics of FL are different than DLR, in-state guests are more spread out and come from further away and spend like crazy. I always stay on-site, we load up on merch, and we book at least one table service per day. We’re not stopping by for an hour to get a dole whip. We’ll see how much Universal prices creep up when they get their third gate open in a few years, but for now I think Disney has gone off the deep end.
I’m done. Here’s why.
No mention has been made of the TOTAL ELIMINATION of the “Theme Park Select” annual pass, which offered different blockout dates for each of the four major Disney theme parks. This was the best pass for my needs, and I purchased one just before the pandemic hit. The renewal price for this pass would have been just under $400.
The closest pass NOW available from a price standpoint is the “Pixie Dust” pass, which also clocks in at just under $400… BUT NOT A SINGLE WEEKEND DAY (SATURDAY OR SUNDAY) IS INCLUDED WITH THIS PASS.
To get (some) weekends, you would have to move up to the “Pirate” pass, which costs $700.
In other words, to get a pass with (somewhat) comparable access, THE PRICE INCREASE IS A WHOPPING 75%!!!
Which is why I laughed out loud when I read your statement that, taking PhotoPass out of the equation, the price increases looked “more standard”.
Yeah, if you consider ALMOST DOUBLING IN PRICE (at least, for me) “standard”.
BTW, while I kept aware of when my own pass was running out, Disney sent me NO NOTICE WHATSOEVER before or after my pass expiration date. With the news today (about annual passes), and the last several days (about fastpass), the reason now couldn’t be more clear:
Disney no longer wants me as an annual pass customer.
For this (and a variety of other) reasons, I decided to let my annual pass expire.
Mission accomplished, Disney.
Tom, I think you missed something bigger for us Florida Resident Platinum Pass holders. So I have Platinum Pass without the water parks and no blackout dates for years. I am a FL Resident so I also pay monthly. My most recent renewal just occurred a few days ago. Lucky me. Because I had the pass for years, my most recent renewal cost each for my pass and my wife’s pass were $764 plus tax for each pass. Of course, this pass still included the free Photo Pass. Now under these new passes, for an IncrediPass, it will now be for renewals at a price of $1104 before tax. That’s an increase for each pass for us of $340 per pass or $680 for the two of us, again before tax. And that is without adding on PhotoPass. So around a $440 per pass increase for us before tax with PhotoPass. See most of us never got charged the increases over the years. So this one will really sting for us FL residents. We will go from monthly payments including tax of $68 to a monthly payment to in the future now well over $100 a month or more if we add in PhotoPass. So for us long-term AP Florida Resident Platinum pass holders this price increase is HUGE.
No pass comparable to the Theme Park Select pass?
Someone from the studios division named these:
DTV Franchise (Pixie) < Old Movie Franchise (Pirates) < One Current Franchise (Darth Vader is clearly a Sorcerer) < "Two" Current Franchises (Pixar & Super Heroes)
Ranking Magic, Dreams, and Wonder would have been harder than figuring out how come Disneyland Paris tickets are still so relatively cheap.