Disney ParksSyndication
Disney Parks See Attendance Decline: Is COVID Truly the Culprit?
For more than a year, Disneyland’s gates remained closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Walt Disney World Resort was only closed for four months, but Disney’s European and Asian parks stayed closed for much longer and struggled to remain open for prolonged periods. Thankfully, COVID is largely in the rearview mirror, all of Disney’s theme parks are open, and many of the intense COVID restrictions are no longer in place.
Related: With Park Attendance on a MASSIVE Decline, Genie+ Price Hits RECORD Low
As the world really started to open up, the desire to travel and get out hit many people like a ton of bricks. That caused a huge surge in attendance and demand for reservations at Disney parks. As the capacity restrictions were lifted, many guests could tell you that the parks seemed to be more crowded than ever.
Despite an initial uptick in attendance, Disney recently revealed that its crowd numbers have been dropping.
On May 7, during Disney’s second quarter fiscal earnings call, CFO Hugh Johnston and CEO Bob Iger said that attendance had dipped. In addition to that, they expect attendance to dip even more next quarter.
“In terms of attendance, what we’re basically communicating is relative to the post-COVID highs, things are tending to normalize,” said CEO Bob Iger. “We still see in the bookings … as we look ahead … [signs that] indicate healthy growth in the business. So we still certainly feel good about the opportunities.”
However, not everyone believes that the attendance dip has to do solely with the fact that people got the travel bug out of their system.
Visiting a Disney theme park is more expensive than ever, and many guests are now finding themselves unable to afford the magical vacations they love so much. Many wondered when Disney would out-price itself, and it seems that time might have come.
Demand “softened” because Disney chased a LARGE portion of their audience away with price hikes, nickel and diming, needless complication, and a decrease in the overall quality of their domestic theme park product.
Cruise business is BOOMING as families look for value elsewhere
For the last 5-7 years, people have come home from a Disney vacation and shared with their friends and coworkers how expensive, complicated, and sub par the experience was. Disney is starting to see the consequences of combining penny pinching with price gouging.
For the last 5-7 years, people have come home from a Disney vacation and shared with their friends and coworkers how expensive, complicated, and sub par the experience was. Disney is starting to see the consequences of combining penny pinching with price gouging.
— Chris Wakefield (@wakefieldreport) May 7, 2024
Others questioned if COVID was really to blame because Disney’s biggest theme park competition — Universal Studios — is continuing to see a rise in attendance. And that attendance will spike when Epic Universe opens at the Universal Orlando Resort in 2025.
Is Universals impact on Disney starting to show attendance wise? In Disney’s earning CEO Bob Iger noted that “theme park attendance is finally leveling out post-COVID-19 closures and restrictions”. Unlike Disney Universal continues to see growing numbers above Pre Covid levels
Is Universals impact on Disney starting to show attendance wise? In Disney’s earning CEO Bob Iger noted that “theme park attendance is finally leveling out post-COVID-19 closures and restrictions”. Unlike Disney Universal continues to see growing numbers above Pre Covid levels
— Park Mind (@AParkMind) May 7, 2024
During the earnings call, Bob Iger made a big announcement, its streaming business finally made a profit. Unfortunately, that was not enough to offset the negative, and Disney’s stock dropped by more than 10%.
Do you think Disney has finally out-priced itself and that is why attendance is lower? Let us know in the comments!
This post originally appeared on Disney Dining.
Yes, Disney has outpriced itself with all the added pay extra. Then the maintenance is no way the way it was before Covid. The Cast members are not as helpful as before. They need pay increases to afford a wage that keeps up with inflation.
It was 7 years I had not been. Last year we were on a couple of rides that we were stuck for a few minutes. They were not broken.
The renaming of old rides with new names does nothing to update the rides. I have no desire to take my grandchildren or great-grandchildren there. I have been priced out.