Disney vacation question

We bought this book when we took kids to Disney World and it was AMAZING how accurate and helpful it was.
The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World and Disneyland

For example, it gives you daily attendance averages for all Disney parks and Holidays are crazy. We pulled kids out of first week of school and never stood in line over 30 minutes for anything.
It also has tons of tips on everything from parking to "Go immediately to back of park and work your way back to entrance". Most people hop on the first ride of get in line for the first ride they see.

Worth whatever you have to pay. IMO
 
Some thoughts...

1. I'd pick Disney World over Disneyland. It seems like it is newer and you get all of the other parks.

2. I'd really, really recommend going in the weeks after Thanksgiving and before Christmas. We did this and we practically had the park to ourselves. I'd really try and make that happen.

3. I haven't been on the Disney Cruise, but I know people that have. I think if you are looking for a magical type thing for a 6 year old, I'd just go to Disney World. The thing that your kid will enjoy will be the characters and the rides. You get the characters on the boat, but not the rides. I personally, think that 4-7 is the age when the Disney thing is a pretty special thing for a kid.
 
Man, I remember Animal Kingdom being awesome as a kid, like a solid 1B in the park rankings with Magic Kingdom. Of course I was 11...
It's still awesome and a must-see, IMO. I just wouldn't spend an entire day there. I'd hit Everest for sure.
 
My family goes to Disney at least once a year, sometimes twice. We have a Disney Vacation Club (timeshare) membership. My kids are 4 and 1.

I would take Disney World over Disneyland any day of the week. My kids get a ton out of any of the four parks you can go to at Disney World. The favorite is the Magic Kingdom simply because their is a ton you can do (rides, shows, parades, etc..). Epcot is probably our favorite spot because it is the most educational park available. My four year old loves messing with the new tech stuff and other random exhibits you can find there. The world showcase is always fun and a great way to expose him to different cultures.

Whether you go in June or New Years it will be busy. If you don't want to fight crowds, go two weeks before Thanksgiving or end of January/early February.

Your six year old will love the princess atmosphere at the Magic Kingdom. My niece loved going to Cinderella's castle for lunch.
 
My two cents: Wait until your child is ready for roller coasters, a few trial runs at Worlds of Fun, then do Cedar Point instead. Best park I've ever been to and I've been to several.

You don't go to Disney World for the excitement of the rides. You go for the atmosphere. If you're just looking for thrill rides, then you'll hate Disney World and love Cedar Point. If you're looking for immersion and almost being in a different world, then Disney World is the place for you.
 
Took my 7 and 5 year old daughters out of school late January last year for a trip to WDW. My wife is kind of a Disney fanatic and it has rubbed off on my. Don't know if its having 3 daughters or what now but I really agree its the happiest place on earth. A few things (apologize if this gets long)
1) If you can swing it, going that time of year or in Sept/Oct is the best. Both considering some cooler temps and the crowds being very low compared to the rest of the year. Airfare is better too.
2) Stay on the resort. You will get some of the best accomodations you can imagine if you go to the more expensive options but we found out YOU ARE NEVER IN YOUR ROOM except to sleep. Definitely worth staying at one of the value resorts instead and then having their bus service take you wherever you want during the day.
3) They have a meal plan that is very handy and my wife and I have used it when just the 2 of us went, however I think it was just over a year ago they started allowing you to bring outside food into parks. My wife packed one of our suitcases with food and then got a backpack with a cooler compartment and we had lunch each day in the park and breakfast before we went. Kids and adults get same meal plan and there's no way our girls would have got their money's worth from the meal plan there.
4) I've planned a trip by myself and I've used a travel agent at AAA and I will never again NOT use AAA. Prices were better than what I could find on my own and as a member they've got some special (minor) perks when you get there like reserved seating for fireworks or at some times some good discounts or free meal plan.
5) Personally I didn't think the park hopper pass was worth it. Only day would have been the Animal Kingdom day. Just not as much to see that I was interested in. Nemo show is good. Everest is kick-***. They do have a very nice restaurant there. Jungle Cafe if I am remembering right.
6) Probably will need to plan on 2 days with a daughter at magic kingdom. There is so much to see and do there. Find out show times ahead of time so you can be in the right place. The first day we were there we saw a lot of the shows and did some rides and then the 2nd day we took advantage of 0 lines during the parades and shows and fireworks and got to get way more than our fill of rides in. Riding Big THunder Mountain railroad and running back to get there before they started again was a fun way to end our trip and we were right under the fireworks as we rode it. First day there I got in the park ahead of family and was around the corner for when they first laid eyes on Main Street and CInderellas castly and the pic I got of their faces was priceless.
7) Hollywood Studios is my favorite
8) Kids probably didn't need a full day at EPCOT
9) There are Apps and websites out now that will help you plan your trip down to the time of day to show up on each ride to minimize waiting time (app updated line wait in real time). Take advantage of those
10) Don't expect a relaxing vacation but it is very worth it. Reasonable cost too. We totaled everything up at end and did the whole trip for right at 3 grand wed-tues
 
You don't go to Disney World for the excitement of the rides. You go for the atmosphere. If you're just looking for thrill rides, then you'll hate Disney World and love Cedar Point. If you're looking for immersion and almost being in a different world, then Disney World is the place for you.

COmpletely agree. Adventureland has more rides that will make you puke than all of the Orlando Disney parks. Doesn't mean I didn't have a blast on them
 
10) Don't expect a relaxing vacation but it is very worth it. Reasonable cost too. We totaled everything up at end and did the whole trip for right at 3 grand wed-tues

I was honestly expecting somewhere around $4000-$5000 for a week, but I usually try to over-estimate so I don't freak out when reality sits in.

Good info on DW though. Appreciate it
 
Just got back from Disney World and all 4 parks on Sunday of last week. It was a blast. I would make sure you pay to stay at Disney.
 
We did a Disney cruise last year (plus Disney world but that's been covered). Don't remember which ship we were on but it was one of the newer ones. The ship itself was very cool and lots of stuff for kids to do. You can send them to 'clubs' at night so you and the wife can have some alone time. Their private island was my favorite part. But, it was just too crowded on the ship for me. Very small pool. Huge line for the water slide all the time. Motion sickness didn't help. I'd stick with WDW or DL or Mexico
 
Going on a cruise and being stuck with that many people sounds like the exact opposite of a good idea for a vacation to me.
 
Took my 7 and 5 year old daughters out of school late January last year for a trip to WDW. My wife is kind of a Disney fanatic and it has rubbed off on my. Don't know if its having 3 daughters or what now but I really agree its the happiest place on earth. A few things (apologize if this gets long)
1) If you can swing it, going that time of year or in Sept/Oct is the best. Both considering some cooler temps and the crowds being very low compared to the rest of the year. Airfare is better too.
2) Stay on the resort. You will get some of the best accomodations you can imagine if you go to the more expensive options but we found out YOU ARE NEVER IN YOUR ROOM except to sleep. Definitely worth staying at one of the value resorts instead and then having their bus service take you wherever you want during the day.
3) They have a meal plan that is very handy and my wife and I have used it when just the 2 of us went, however I think it was just over a year ago they started allowing you to bring outside food into parks. My wife packed one of our suitcases with food and then got a backpack with a cooler compartment and we had lunch each day in the park and breakfast before we went. Kids and adults get same meal plan and there's no way our girls would have got their money's worth from the meal plan there.
4) I've planned a trip by myself and I've used a travel agent at AAA and I will never again NOT use AAA. Prices were better than what I could find on my own and as a member they've got some special (minor) perks when you get there like reserved seating for fireworks or at some times some good discounts or free meal plan.
5) Personally I didn't think the park hopper pass was worth it. Only day would have been the Animal Kingdom day. Just not as much to see that I was interested in. Nemo show is good. Everest is kick-***. They do have a very nice restaurant there. Jungle Cafe if I am remembering right.
6) Probably will need to plan on 2 days with a daughter at magic kingdom. There is so much to see and do there. Find out show times ahead of time so you can be in the right place. The first day we were there we saw a lot of the shows and did some rides and then the 2nd day we took advantage of 0 lines during the parades and shows and fireworks and got to get way more than our fill of rides in. Riding Big THunder Mountain railroad and running back to get there before they started again was a fun way to end our trip and we were right under the fireworks as we rode it. First day there I got in the park ahead of family and was around the corner for when they first laid eyes on Main Street and CInderellas castly and the pic I got of their faces was priceless.
7) Hollywood Studios is my favorite
8) Kids probably didn't need a full day at EPCOT
9) There are Apps and websites out now that will help you plan your trip down to the time of day to show up on each ride to minimize waiting time (app updated line wait in real time). Take advantage of those
10) Don't expect a relaxing vacation but it is very worth it. Reasonable cost too. We totaled everything up at end and did the whole trip for right at 3 grand wed-tues

Some good advice there ..... I would go DW and not DL. Been to both and there is no comparison. I think a week there is perfect and we do the park-hoppers so we can go wherever we want, when we want.

* Plan one day at one of the water parks, but get there EARLY or you won't get in.
* Stay on the DW property and there are some nice perks..... like one park opens early every day (rotates) and another stays open an extra hour for on-site guests only.
* Plan a character meal for the kids.
* DO NOT rent a car, but use the Disney Express buses instead.
* If you arrive early or stay late, the resort will store your bags so you can hit the parks on that day.
* Master the fast-pass system for ride tickets and it helps alot.
* Go to the magic kingdom early and get into the front of the line..... when people from the park start prowling around ask them if your kids can "open the park." My kids did it and it was fun and got treated extra nice for the day.

We always get up early, hit the early open park until around 1, then back to the hotel for a dip in the pool and possibly a nap, then back to the late open park until close.

If you want an off-the-charts adult meal experience, make a ressie for Victoria and Albert's and hire a Disney sitter for the kids, but prepare for sticker shock. (and you'll need a coat and tie)

Meal plans work OK, but don't buy the biggest ones ..... you'll eat way less than you think. Take water with you to the park in a backpack (if they still allow them) along with some light snacks. Also buy the refillable mug at the cheaper restaurant in the hotel (cafeteria style place) and then you can refill it all week for free (at least they used to do that).
 
we are annual passholders at Disney World. We have been there too many times to count; three times last year. I've been to Disney Land too. It just doesn't compare in my book but it might be fine if you've never been to DW. DO NOT GO to either over new years. the crowd can be absolutely ridiculous to the point the Disney has stopped allowing walk up guests in the Magic Kingdom so you have to be a passholder or staying on property to get in. I was in Pasadena for the rose bowl last year and given our Disney history inquired about DL and were told it would be a madhouse so we skipped it.

If you can swing it stay on property at a value or moderate resort. the transportation service alone makes it worth it too me. I cannot emphasize enough how nice it is as the primary driver/organizer to just walk out and jump on the bus rather than have to load up everyone in the car and drive, fight traffic, park, ride the tram, then the boat or monorail, and then walk to the front gate of the park. we've stayed at the fancier resorts and like one poster said you simply aren't in your room enough to matter. we've stayed off property many times too. if that's the only way you can do it it's still worth the trip.

There are three times of year that I have been there that were great in terms of small crowds. after thanksgiving through the first couple weeks of xmas (before kids get out of school); last week of april through first two weeks of may; and the first week of November. There's no great time to go if kids are out of school, but last year we picked up and went right away last week of may once school was out and the crowds were reasonable. we went at xmas this past year right away when school got out (flew out Friday and on what was to be the last day of school). we had four days of great crowds and then xmas hit and it was a madhouse the rest of the week.

It will be a stressful trip if you let it and I've seen many people let the experience overwhelm them. My advice to everyone is decide today that you are not going to see it all in one short trip, and you will enjoy the parts that you do see so much more.

I know several people who Disney cruise and everyone speaks incredibly highly of it.
 
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Oh one other thing ...... if you are going at a peak time, ask about any special park times.
We went one year over the 4th of July and they kept the MK open all night on the 4th, but only to on-site guests. We rode more rides in that one night, then the rest of the week combined.
 
We tend to go every other year. For us we have started staying off property, typically getting a condo. It is hard for us to justify the prices of staying on property when we can get a two bedroom condo with full kitchen and laundry for less than the price of the cheapest hotel room at Disney. We rent a car, and I haven't found driving and parking to be much of an issue at all.

When we take our 5 year old niece, we do park hoppers. Last trip we did 6 days. 2 full days at Magic Kingdom, 1 full day at Epcot, and then we did half days at Epcot, Animal Kingdom, and Hollywood before hopping over to Magic Kingdom in the evening. It was by far her favorite, and it is always open later than the other parks. When it is just the wife and I, we don't do the hoppers.

Finally, as far as the extra hours you can get staying on resort, we really can't get up early enough on vacation to take advantage of the morning hours, and with a young kid the late hours can be a stretch too. Also, the parks with the extra hours may tend to draw a heavier crowd for the day.

Even with a bunch of trips under my belt I've learned a lot on www.easywdw.com. The crowd calendars and the suggestions on which parks to visit on which days are great. Beyond that, the reviews of restaurants and attractions can be helpful, and if you really want to get hardcore he also breaks down different touring strategies to best avoid the crowds. Maybe it is total overkill, but the engineer in me finds it informative.
 
I would go for the Cruise option. My family did one last year and are doing one this year as well. Did the Magic last year and it's one of the older ones and it was great. The whole experience was great. Not waiting in line for the characters nearly as long as you would at the parks. The kids clubs are great to drop the kids off at so you can have some adult time and it's free as long as the kids are potty trained. Plus you can bring your own alcohol on board for your own mixed drinks. Trust me you'll need a few mixed drinks after 4-5 character lines. We loved it and still got a day at DW too in the bargain.
 
While I think some of the info in the books is good to get before you go, I wouldn't feel too obliged to follow them too closely. The one we got recommended making sure you put the kids down for a nap in the afternoon. Ours were just toddlers and we tried it and it was a failure. Too excited up for it. They were good to go until about 10:00 at night and then wanted to go to the pool. I would follow your daughter's lead instead of feeling like you have to be on a schedule or do everything. If your kid thinks the monorail is the best ride ever and gets to go sit up front for a while and wants to ride again, make her happy
 
My tip is you can bring your own food into the park. We rented a locker and put our 'cooler' of food and snacks in there. IIRC, i calculated a savings of over $150 per day on food and drink.
 
My tip is you can bring your own food into the park. We rented a locker and put our 'cooler' of food and snacks in there. IIRC, i calculated a savings of over $150 per day on food and drink.
That's a really great idea, didn't know you could do that. The cost of food really sneaks up on you I think.
 

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