Disney Just Told Its Mid-Tier Resort Guests They're Second Class. Every Hotel Operator Should Be Watching.
Walt Disney World made its tiered park access permanent, reserving the best perks for guests paying Deluxe rates. If you think this is just a theme park story, you're not paying attention to where the entire lodging industry is headed.
I worked with a GM years ago who ran a 400-key resort near a major attraction market. One day corporate told him to pull the complimentary shuttle service for guests in the standard rooms. Keep it for the suites and club-level floors. He pushed back hard. "You're telling a family who's spending $189 a night that the family spending $349 gets the bus and they don't?" Corporate said it was about "aligning value with tier." He said it was about looking a dad in the eye at the front desk and explaining why his kid couldn't ride the bus. He lost that argument. Within six months, his standard-room guest satisfaction scores dropped 11 points. Not because the shuttle was gone. Because the FEELING changed. The property told half its guests they mattered less.
That's exactly what Disney just made permanent. The old Extra Magic Hours gave every resort guest... Value, Moderate, Deluxe... the same shot at early and late park access. It disappeared during the 2020 shutdown, and what came back was a two-tier system. Everybody gets 30 minutes of early entry. But Extended Evening Hours? That's Deluxe only. And as of this month, Disney confirmed this structure runs through at least 2027. This isn't a test. This isn't pandemic-era triage. This is the business model now.
Look... Disney isn't dumb. They're running $10 billion in operating income from their Parks segment. They've got $60 billion earmarked for experiences over the next decade. They know exactly what they're doing. They're training their customer base to accept that access is a function of spend, not loyalty. You want the full experience? Pay the Deluxe rate. You want to save money? Fine, but you're getting a lesser version of the same vacation. And the brilliant part (or the ruthless part, depending on where you sit) is they're not taking anything away from the Deluxe guest. They're just making sure the gap between tiers is wide enough that the upsell becomes irresistible. That's not a theme park strategy. That's a revenue management philosophy. And it's coming to a hotel near you if it hasn't already.
Here's what nobody in our industry wants to say out loud. We've been creeping toward this for years. Resort fees were the opening act... a way to charge more without raising the posted rate. Then came tiered loyalty benefits, early check-in for a fee, guaranteed room type for a fee, pool access for a fee at some properties. Every single one of those decisions is a hotel telling a segment of its guests that the base rate doesn't buy the full experience anymore. Disney just did it louder and more transparently than most of us have the guts to. The question for every operator isn't whether tiered access is coming to your property. It's whether you're doing it intentionally with a strategy, or whether it's happening by accident through a patchwork of fees and restrictions that confuse your guests and depress your scores.
The family paying $189 a night at your hotel is the same family paying Value rates at Disney. They're not stupid. They know when they're being sorted. The ones who can afford to trade up will... and some of them will trade up to your competitor who makes them feel like the rate they're paying buys the whole experience. The ones who can't afford it will stay, feel the sting, and write about it online. Disney can absorb that friction because they're Disney. The 200-key branded select-service on International Drive cannot. If you're going to tier your experience, you better make absolutely sure the base tier still feels complete. Because the moment "standard" starts to feel like "lesser," you've got a perception problem that no amount of revenue optimization is going to fix.
If you're running a property with any kind of tiered access... club floors, premium rooms with exclusive amenities, paid early check-in... audit the gap right now. Not the rate gap. The experience gap. Walk the property as a guest paying your lowest rate and then walk it as a guest paying your highest rate. If "standard" feels like a punishment instead of a product, you've got a problem that's showing up in your reviews even if you haven't connected the dots yet. Disney can build a moat around Deluxe because they have $60 billion and no real competitor for what they sell. You don't. Your base-tier guest has 14 other options within three miles. Make sure they still feel like they bought something worth the price... because the moment they don't, they're not upgrading. They're leaving.