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Home » Disney » Disneyland California Discontinues Annual Passes
Disney

Disneyland California Discontinues Annual Passes

Kyle Stewart Posted onJanuary 15, 2021September 12, 2021 4 Comments
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Disneyland ended year-long speculation regarding whether the theme park will continue offering annual passes. They have answered that question with a solid “no.”


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Disney’s Annual Passholder Program

Disney offers annual passes to its resorts in some markets. Each market is treated as independent of the others, meaning that the rules, prices, and guidelines may be different from other parks, and also that entry is limited to just that geographic area’s parks. The lone exception to this is the Premier Passport that gives access to both US parks.

The southern California annual passport program provided discounts at Downtown Disney, as well as varying levels of access based on which southern California annual pass was purchased.

Disney's Magic Kingdom
Disney’s Magic Kingdom

Disneyland California Ends Annual Passholder Program

Earlier this year, both California and Florida properties were closed due to COVID-19 protocols. However, Walt Disney World Florida re-opened with reduced capacity, Disneyland in California has never re-opened. As the parks approach nearly one full year closed (306 days as of publication), the collection and retention of funds for Disneyland Resort Annual Passports have become a nuissance for both guests and Disney.

Disney has decided to cancel the annual pass holder program in California.

This affects all California pass holders, not solely southern California resident passes. Disneyland introduced Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge within the last two years, and it also features Pixar Pier.

Galaxy's Edge at Disney's Holloywood Studios
Galaxy’s Edge at Disney’s Holloywood Studios

Speculation has grown for some time that new park management would end the annual pass programs in the US, in favor of higher per-visit yield customers who visit less often.

Disneyland Resort Annual Passport holders can get a full refund for unused portions of their passes. There’s no word on whether the passes will return once California is able to return to business as usual.

At the time of publication,  California has the highest COVID-19 infection rate and the highest mortality per million residents of any state in the US. These troubling figures are despite the state’s prolonged and extensive lockdown measures. Disney can’t be sure when they will be able to return to operations, and even when they do, it will be a phased rollout which could take months or years before full recovery.

Why This Doesn’t Necessarily Mean Anything For Disney World

For those concerned about the inability to renew or obtain annual passes at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida, they may be unrelated. Disney World has been able to not only reopen but increase from 25-35% capacity. Florida’s Governor DiSantis has cleared theme parks to return to occupancy levels of their choosing and at their discretion.

Disneyland parks in California don’t have a reopening on the horizon. Florida is generally more open than most other US states, and by all accounts Disney can not only see their path, but control it.

One concerning point of similarity is that Disney initially tried to swap annual passholders who spend less per visit but more per annum for visitors that come less frequently by diminishing the value and availability for pass holders. They have since reversed that trend and began reaching out to former pass holders.

Conclusion

Disney might be doing their California pass holders a favor by ending the program temporarily and returning fees as the parks are not open. It may fortell the future for the parks as management has been clear they don’t favor the model. That said, management tried that plan and it backfired so this might be simply because California reopening is not an option in the near future.

What do you think? Was this inevitable? Should Disney have simply extended annual passports as they did in Florida? Is this part of a larger plan by management? 

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About Author

Kyle Stewart

Kyle is a freelance travel writer with contributions to Time, the Washington Post, MSNBC, Yahoo!, Reuters, Huffington Post, MapHappy, Live And Lets Fly and many other media outlets. He is also co-founder of Scottandthomas.com, a travel agency that delivers "Travel Personalized." He focuses on using miles and points to provide a premium experience for his wife and daughter. Email: sherpa@thetripsherpa.com

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4 Comments

  1. Shaun Reply
    January 15, 2021 at 10:50 am

    Disney World still has not allowed the general public to purchase new passes. They only allowed some current passholders to renew. There were also reports of some passholders whom had passes, cancelled them last summer, but have future reservations booked to buy a pass at the NEW price, non-renewal.

    I think WDW & DL will be handled differently due to the sheer size difference of the two properties. I think DL’s AP changes will be much “worse” than WDW’s. I expect DL’s SoCal ability to pay monthly will not return. A pretty in-the-know poster on a DL board said he was told something like >75% of SoCal passholders that had the option paid monthly. Eliminating that benefit will help thin the heard. I also think Disney will do more to stop the passholders who go daily or several times a week. I predict WDW will be better to their Florida locals, but will still try to make it more restrictive.

    The post Iger management has made it abundantly clear they want less frequent, higher spending guests. This will anger many loyal customers. But they will have to decide if they want to pay up. As a die hard Disney nerd who is pretty price insensitive, even I am starting to lose the Disney felling. I think Disney needs to tread carefully.

  2. Jan Reply
    January 15, 2021 at 1:40 pm

    Oh no!
    Anyway

  3. Tracy Reply
    January 16, 2021 at 7:11 pm

    “California has the highest COVID-19 infection rate and the highest mortality per million residents of any state in the US. These troubling figures are despite the state’s prolonged and extensive lockdown measures.”

    Being a resident of NorCal, and watching endless lines of weekend and holiday traffic in and out of Lake Tahoe, subjectively, I’d have to conclude that the reason that California has the highest Covid-19 infection rate is because citizens of California have a strong desire to resist any attempt at governance that would negatively effect their desired lifestyle, and therefore consider the “prolonged and extensive lockdown measures” irrelevant.

    There is minimal compliance with ‘stay at home’ orders’. And there is no attempt at enforcement.
    In California, inconvenient rules apply to every one else. Just ask Nancy Pelosi and Gavin Newsome.

  4. Tracy Reply
    January 16, 2021 at 7:32 pm

    Yeah, I suspected I should have left Nancy Pelosi and Gavin Newsome out of it.

    Oh well.

Leave a Reply to Jan Cancel reply

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