Since I’m bored at work, and I recently noticed that Hong Kong Disney have just put their prices up, I thought I’d kill some time by comparing a few parks.
Disney’s prices have been compared before, in terms of actual cost, but I thought I’d look it in terms of value for money. I’ve taken the on-the-gate price of some parks and looked at the opening hours to give a per-hour price.
Obviously, this is problematic since it doesn’t take into account any multi-day tickets, the parks aren’t equal in terms of number of attractions, prebooking/selected dates can make a difference, and park opening hours can vary depending on the time of year, though not really by a lot in the case of most of the Disney parks. With that in mind though, this is what you’d get if you showed up at the gate today, arriving at opening time and staying until closing, meaning that the price you see is a best-case scenario.
Disney (Magic Kingdom parks)
Paris - £60 for 10 hours = £6 per hour
Florida - £69 for 15 hours = £4.60 per hour
Hong Kong - £45 for 10 hours = £4.50 per hour
California - £65 for 16 hours = £4.10 per hour
Tokyo - £37 for 14 hours = £2.60 per hour
Tokyo is clearly the best value of the Disney parks. The actual ticket price is the lowest, pretty much half of the most expensive (Florida’s), for a very, very similar park. Taking into account the long opening hours, the per-hour price is incredible value.
Although it looks like Paris offers the worst deal, I’d argue that Hong Kong, despite a reasonable gate price, is actually the worst value given that the park is a lot smaller, with a lot less to do. People are less likely to actually need the whole 10 hours, whereas in Paris, they probably would. Paris also has cheaper tickets for online booking, and longer opening hours depending on the season, whereas Hong Kong doesn’t.
Another big chain then:
Universal
This gets more difficult since there are big difference in opening hours depending on the day. For the sake of this argument, I’m going to look at the shortest operating hours for each park, which would basically mean, again, showing up today rather than at a weekend.
Hollywood - £63 for 7 hours = £9 per hour (best would be 12 hours at £5.30)
Florida - £67 for 10 hours = £6.70 per hour (best would be 15 hours at £4.50)
Osaka - £36 for 10 hours - £3.60 per hour (best would be 12 hours at £3)
Singapore - £35 for 11 hours - £3.20 per hour (same every day)
So yeah, on top of being, in my opinion, the ginger stepchild of the Universal family, California is also the worst value by a considerable margin.
Happy Valley and Fantawild
The Happy Valley parks are priced between £20 and £23 each, so let’s use £22 as a figure. Fantawild are priced at about the same.
Although the Happy Valley parks are open for around 12 hours a day, a lot of the major rides close around 3-4 hours before park closing. So, looking at both of these chains as having a realistic 8-hour day, they come in at £2.75 an hour.
Merlin
I’m not going to look at every park, but let’s look at the two major UK ones.
Thorpe Park - £50 for 8 hours = £6.25 per hour
Alton Towers - £47 for 8.5 hours = £5.50 per hour
Realistically, unlike the parks listed above, most people would be paying a lot less due to online prices begin a lot lower than the gate prices. Also, a large number of people use two-for-one offers, which then actually brings the hourly rate down to Happy Valley levels.
The biggest piss-take I could think of, again imagining that I rocked up at the gate today, was this:
Legoland Florida - £58 for 7 hours = £8.30 an hour (best would be 10 hours at £5.80)
Considering what an absolute s**thole the park is, that’s absolutely obscene.
Anyway, I’ve rambled on enough. Which parks do you consider to be the best, and worst, value for money, taking into consideration an hourly rate as well as what you actually get for your money?
Disney’s prices have been compared before, in terms of actual cost, but I thought I’d look it in terms of value for money. I’ve taken the on-the-gate price of some parks and looked at the opening hours to give a per-hour price.
Obviously, this is problematic since it doesn’t take into account any multi-day tickets, the parks aren’t equal in terms of number of attractions, prebooking/selected dates can make a difference, and park opening hours can vary depending on the time of year, though not really by a lot in the case of most of the Disney parks. With that in mind though, this is what you’d get if you showed up at the gate today, arriving at opening time and staying until closing, meaning that the price you see is a best-case scenario.
Disney (Magic Kingdom parks)
Paris - £60 for 10 hours = £6 per hour
Florida - £69 for 15 hours = £4.60 per hour
Hong Kong - £45 for 10 hours = £4.50 per hour
California - £65 for 16 hours = £4.10 per hour
Tokyo - £37 for 14 hours = £2.60 per hour
Tokyo is clearly the best value of the Disney parks. The actual ticket price is the lowest, pretty much half of the most expensive (Florida’s), for a very, very similar park. Taking into account the long opening hours, the per-hour price is incredible value.
Although it looks like Paris offers the worst deal, I’d argue that Hong Kong, despite a reasonable gate price, is actually the worst value given that the park is a lot smaller, with a lot less to do. People are less likely to actually need the whole 10 hours, whereas in Paris, they probably would. Paris also has cheaper tickets for online booking, and longer opening hours depending on the season, whereas Hong Kong doesn’t.
Another big chain then:
Universal
This gets more difficult since there are big difference in opening hours depending on the day. For the sake of this argument, I’m going to look at the shortest operating hours for each park, which would basically mean, again, showing up today rather than at a weekend.
Hollywood - £63 for 7 hours = £9 per hour (best would be 12 hours at £5.30)
Florida - £67 for 10 hours = £6.70 per hour (best would be 15 hours at £4.50)
Osaka - £36 for 10 hours - £3.60 per hour (best would be 12 hours at £3)
Singapore - £35 for 11 hours - £3.20 per hour (same every day)
So yeah, on top of being, in my opinion, the ginger stepchild of the Universal family, California is also the worst value by a considerable margin.
Happy Valley and Fantawild
The Happy Valley parks are priced between £20 and £23 each, so let’s use £22 as a figure. Fantawild are priced at about the same.
Although the Happy Valley parks are open for around 12 hours a day, a lot of the major rides close around 3-4 hours before park closing. So, looking at both of these chains as having a realistic 8-hour day, they come in at £2.75 an hour.
Merlin
I’m not going to look at every park, but let’s look at the two major UK ones.
Thorpe Park - £50 for 8 hours = £6.25 per hour
Alton Towers - £47 for 8.5 hours = £5.50 per hour
Realistically, unlike the parks listed above, most people would be paying a lot less due to online prices begin a lot lower than the gate prices. Also, a large number of people use two-for-one offers, which then actually brings the hourly rate down to Happy Valley levels.
The biggest piss-take I could think of, again imagining that I rocked up at the gate today, was this:
Legoland Florida - £58 for 7 hours = £8.30 an hour (best would be 10 hours at £5.80)
Considering what an absolute s**thole the park is, that’s absolutely obscene.
Anyway, I’ve rambled on enough. Which parks do you consider to be the best, and worst, value for money, taking into consideration an hourly rate as well as what you actually get for your money?