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Disney Plan : Deal Drain On Your World Vacation?

By spode. Filed in Vacation and Travel  |  
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disney world Vacation Package.’Twas a time, not many years ago, when we considered Disney’s vacation packages and their add-on options with skepticism. Buy a dining package? Ridiculous! You had to overeat at only the most expensive restaurants to get your money’s worth. But Disney changed all that with the introduction of the Disney Dining Plan package add-on for Magic Your Way vacation packages.

The Disney Dining Plan package has proven so popular that we just had to experience it for ourselves. So, for our recent 10-day research trip at Walt disney world we bought adult-priced dining packages for the two adults and two teens on our team — $37.99 each, per day. You can study and theorize all you wish, but there’s no replacement for actually experiencing things first-hand.

How Does It Work?
The Disney Dining Plan puts guests on a two-meal-and-a-snack per day diet for each night of their stay. There’s great flexibility. Unlike older plans that supplied earmarked coupons for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, the current plans provide “credits” encoded onto a Key to the World card. One card per guest room held all the credits for that room (though I understand that recently Disney began separating adult and child credits). For our ten-night stay we had 40 table service credits, 40 counter service credits, and 40 snack credits that we could use any way we saw fit during our stay. The big challenge is to actually use them all wisely, since unused credits expire without refund at the end of your check-out day (11:59 pm), and some meals are just not quite as good a value as others. Certain Table Service meals “cost” two credits, rather than one. Generally, these reduce the value you receive under the dining plan, sometimes substantially.

We’ve often said that two full meals per day at Walt disney world are plenty of food, and this meal plan was proof-positive. How’d it work for us? Too well (looking at my poor waistline). Each Table Service credit buys appetizer, entree, dessert, soft drink, tax and gratuity, and each Counter Service credit buys entree, dessert, soft drink and tax. This is more than we normally eat — we generally split or skip appetizers and desserts at table service restaurants, and don’t bother with dessert at all at counter service. It takes a bit of will-power to say no to that extra, “free” food. After a big dinner, we sometimes didn’t have an appetite for the next day’s breakfast.

Your dining receipts will list the number of dining credits you have remaining. We found that these numbers were not always accurate. Keep all those receipts! At least once during your vacation, visit the lobby concierge at your resort for a detailed print-out of your dining activities, and compare those with your own records. You don’t want to be caught a meal short on your last day by a computer error!

Is the Dining Plan a Deal?
In one of those, “Wow, I coulda had a V-8″ moments, I realized that the average meal prices that we provide in our guidebook are calculated on exactly the same formula Disney uses for its Table Service and Counter Service meals on the dining plan — an appetizer, entree, dessert, soft drink, tax and 18% gratuity for Table Service, and entree, dessert, soft drink and tax for Counter Service. Do you want to know whether your meal plans deliver good value? Just add up the numbers. You’ll quickly see that an average Table Service dinner at Le Cellier ($53) is worth more than the day’s cost for the dining package. OK, so you usually don’t eat appetizer and dessert? Deduct $7.50 each for the typical cost of a Table Service appetizer/dessert, and you’re still ahead. That means your Counter Service meal (average value $12) and Snack (average value $2.50) are freebies! It also explains why it’s so hard to get a reservation at Le Cellier these days.

We also calculated the average cost of Table Service and Counter Service breakfasts, lunches, and dinners across Disney property to arrive at an average value for each kind of dining credit. A Counter Service lunch/dinner averages $12, Table Service dinners average $41, and that snack credit is worth $2.50. That adds up to a $55.50 value daily. Pay $7.50 cash for a continental-style breakfast, and your daily food budget is $44.99 for meals worth an average of $63.

Before you get too excited, consider the Signature Dining “gotcha.” The value of the average Signature Dinner or Dinner Show (either of which cost 2 Table Service credits) is $61, a value of $30.50 per credit. Signature Dining at lunch drops to a $42 value ($21 per credit), and that coveted 2-credit Breakfast at Cinderella’s Royal Table is worth $40 (you do the math). Those can pull your daily meal average below the cost of the dining package on the day(s) you use them, but you may still come out ahead overall when you consider the savings on other days. You may be tempted to pay cash for some of these meals, to increase the value you obtain from your dining credits, but you still have to find ways to use those extra credits before they turn into pumpkin soup. You may still prefer to use two credits for those special meals, and pay cash for a counter service meal to replace that Table Service credit. Keep your calculator handy to work out the best value for your needs. Find more information about Las Vegas Travel Package here.

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3 Comments

  1. Comment by Crasty:

    I added your blog to bookmarks. And i’ll read your articles more often!

    [Reply]

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