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Disneyland Paris/EuroDisney - Questions & Answers
Comments
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Thank you so much for reply, think we would have two rooms but connecting doors would be lovely. I thought the baby and my other daughter with me then he can have the boys. I will get looking.
Kim
I've just re-read your reply, so really I will have to have my 11 year old son with me.0 -
Sorry meant to say haven't decided yet about travelling, just the cheapest option really.
Kim0 -
Thank you so much for reply, think we would have two rooms but connecting doors would be lovely. I thought the baby and my other daughter with me then he can have the boys. I will get looking.
Kim
I've just re-read your reply, so really I will have to have my 11 year old son with me.
no - you can actually have whoever you like in each of the 2 rooms, you would just book one in one adult's name, the other in the other adult's name.
Driving (if your current car takes all of you comfortably) will be by far the cheapest way of travel for 7 of you - ferry or Eurotunnel.0 -
Thank you so much you've given plenty to think about.
Kim0 -
Thank you for your reply, it definitely looks like the annual pass might be the way to go. I've just been looking, is it possible to buy tickets from the French site, I could get 5 annual Franciliene passes for 103 euros each which is considerably less in the UK.
It says that for 5 passes it can be done either in the Disney office which would be an issue as i can't be used for 2 days from the date of issue as far as I understand, or by post.
Is this OK, I believe the Franciliene passes were originally only available to residents in France but that doesn't seem to be the case now.
What do you think? Can i get tickets this way?0 -
Greenbeanie wrote: »Thank you for your reply, it definitely looks like the annual pass might be the way to go. I've just been looking, is it possible to buy tickets from the French site, I could get 5 annual Franciliene passes for 103 euros each which is considerably less in the UK.
It says that for 5 passes it can be done either in the Disney office which would be an issue as i can't be used for 2 days from the date of issue as far as I understand, or by post.
Is this OK, I believe the Franciliene passes were originally only available to residents in France but that doesn't seem to be the case now.
What do you think? Can i get tickets this way?
Pretty sure that if you buy in advance they start from the day payment is taken, not the day you first go to the parks. Don't know if that's an issue for you.Trying to be a man is a waste of a woman0 -
I think the saving would still make it more than worth while and the current price is valid until the 31st March so I might book a little closer to that date.
We're only planning to go for 3 days but it's still much cheaper doing it that way than buying day tickets.:)0 -
Greenbeanie wrote: »Thank you for your reply, it definitely looks like the annual pass might be the way to go. I've just been looking, is it possible to buy tickets from the French site, I could get 5 annual Franciliene passes for 103 euros each which is considerably less in the UK.
It says that for 5 passes it can be done either in the Disney office which would be an issue as i can't be used for 2 days from the date of issue as far as I understand, or by post.
Is this OK, I believe the Franciliene passes were originally only available to residents in France but that doesn't seem to be the case now.
What do you think? Can i get tickets this way?
if you order your Francillien annual passes through the post from DLP themselves, you will receive activated Francillien annual passes through the post to your UK address.This means that by the time you arrive at DLP, the 2nd and 3rd days of the Francillien passes will have already passed, so you won't have to serve them again when you arrive at DLP. You should apply by post at least 6 weeks before your check-in date at DLP, to give the AP office time to process your postal application.
eta - make sure its Francillien annual passes you are buying, not Francillien tickets (these are different).0 -
balletshoes wrote: »if you order your Francillien annual passes through the post from DLP themselves, you will receive activated Francillien annual passes through the post to your UK address.This means that by the time you arrive at DLP, the 2nd and 3rd days of the Francillien passes will have already passed, so you won't have to serve them again when you arrive at DLP. You should apply by post at least 6 weeks before your check-in date at DLP, to give the AP office time to process your postal application.
eta - make sure its Francillien annual passes you are buying, not Francillien tickets (these are different).
That's brilliant thank you, I think that's the route I shall take as it seems to be so much cheaper. DH is a secondary school teacher so he's going to take the forms in to the French teacher for translation tomorrow:j0 -
also check the blackout dates for your trip -
https://wdpromedia.disney.go.com/media/wdpro-dlp-assets/prod/fr-fr/system/images/PA-calendrierBO-Francilien.pdf0
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