Tuesday Disney Tips: The Cost of Free Disney Dining

My family has been blessed to enjoy the Free Disney Dining program for the past two years. If you have decided that the free dining plan is the best deal for you, take note of these budgeting tips. Although it is hard to believe, the free dining plan is just that. The first time we took advantage of this program, I was very skeptical about what the meals would entail. Would we have to choose between two items, neither of which we liked? Would we get the entrée free, but have to pay for the sides? The answer is no. On the free dining plan, you will receive wonderful menu items with sides, desserts, drinks – and all for free.

If you have chosen the Quick Service Dining Plan and you intend to eat only at the quick service restaurants and only get the snacks allowed on the plan as well, then you will not need to budget a cent for any meal expenses whatsoever.  If you have decided that you prefer the Regular Disney Dining Plan or higher, however, you will need to budget gratuities into your spending allowance.

Although you will receive all the food and drinks at your table service meals for free, you are expected to pay gratuities at these restaurants.  Whether the restaurant is an all-you-can-eat buffet, such as the Tusker House breakfast at the Animal Kingdom, or a menu table service restaurant such as Le Cellier in Canada at Epcot, your wait staff should be tipped. You will need to allow for this expense in your budget so I am going to give two quick examples of the amounts you would need to budget for table service dining. These are actual figures charged for my family of five this past November.

The first example is for an all-you-can-eat buffet breakfast at Tusker House in the Animal Kingdom. At Donald’s Safari Breakfast at Tusker House (yes, this is also a character breakfast), we enjoyed an all-you-can-eat buffet loaded with delicious breakfast food choices, pots of coffee and a delicious house fruit juice. The charge for our family of 5 adults, if we had not been on the free dining plan, would have been $143.73. Our server, JW, did a fantastic job taking care of us and so we tipped him $25.87 (18%).

Let’s take a closer look at what this all-you-can-eat buffet meal consisted of: a waffle station, scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, breakfast potatoes, French toast, yam casserole, cereal, biscuits & gravy, veggie frittata, ham & cheese frittata, cheese blintzes, beef Bobotie quiche, Dino hash, carved rotisserie honey ham, oatmeal, cinnamon rolls, croissants, muffins, bagels, assorted breads, turnovers, assorted cream cheeses, jams, jellies and fruit chutneys, yogurt station, fresh fruit, assorted freshly-made donuts and sweet breads, pancakes with assorted toppings, and danish. Plus all the coffee, tea, juice, milk, chocolate milk and soda we wanted.

All the food is delicious at Tusker House and we ate until we were quite full. Remember, we paid only $25.87 for all of this.

The second example is a menu-item dinner at Le Cellier in Canada at Epcot. At Le Cellier, we each ordered steak entrees with accompanying side, dessert and non-alcoholic beverage. The meal would have cost us $236.00. Matt was a great guy and was extremely attentive to our every need so we left him a tip of 20%, or $47.20.

Let’s take a closer look at what we ordered:

Entrees: two New York Strip steaks topped with Bercy butter and served with gryuere yukon gold potato gratin; two Coffee-rubbed Kansas City Strip steaks with hazelnut butter, served with cream cheese mashed potatoes; and one Le Cellier Mushroom Filet Mignon, served with wild mushroom risotto and white truffle-herb butter sauce.  For dessert: three Maple Creme Brulees and two Chocolate on Chocolate Whiskey Cakes finished with honey-thyme anglaise and a chocolate vanilla walnut sauce. Our drinks consisted of two iced teas and three sodas.

Please keep in mind that this is some of the most delicious food Disney has to offer by extraordinary chefs. To reiterate, we paid $47.20.

As you can see, then, the amount you must budget for your meal expense on the Regular Dining Plan during Free Dining is almost laughable considering all that you receive. Still, you do need to budget for the gratuities so you don’t end up short. Over our 10 days and 9 nights at Disney World, for a family of 5 adults, we paid a TOTAL of $248.87 for all of our delicious meals combined. Considering that we began with 45 table service credits, 45 quick service credits, and 45 snack credits and, thus, ate 90 full meals and 45 snack meals during our trip, $248.87 is quite a great deal.

Even as I am typing this, reality is hitting me and I am thinking ‘my goodness, we ate a ridiculous amount of food for $248.87.’ I have only covered two table service meals out of the 9 we consumed; or 10 meal credits out of the 90 we enjoyed during our trip.  The best thing is that these meals are not paper bag meals these are some of the best choices prepared by the best chefs at Disney World and it is an awesome deal.

If you have any questions at all about how to use the dining plan or about specific restaurants, please feel free to contact me at bootskenworthy@aol.com. I will be happy to help you plan for your wonderful Disney trip!

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8 thoughts on “Tuesday Disney Tips: The Cost of Free Disney Dining

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  • December 14, 2010 at 9:44 am
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    I totally agree with your comments. We tried last year to pay for the meals instead of doing the meal plan. Never again, we spent way too much money & didn’t eat at some of the higher priced restaurants that we like.

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    • December 14, 2010 at 11:20 am
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      It’s a lot of money to pay for all the food that you get with the Free Dining Plan. I will say that while we haven’t ever been able to take advantage of Free Dining, for us it’s a savings even to pay for the plan rather than pay out of pocket for everything! Thanks for sharing Susan! ~ Nancy

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  • December 14, 2010 at 7:22 pm
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    I could not agree more! We just love the Disney Dining plan and would even pay for it if we had to. It is a great way to keep your dining all-inclusive. Thank you for breaking down the numbers for us. :0)

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  • December 15, 2010 at 9:51 am
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    You are very welcome and thank you for your comments Kelly and Susan.

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  • May 10, 2011 at 4:46 pm
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    Great post…We used the dining plan for the first time earlier this year, and found it to be a great value. Free is even better!

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    • May 10, 2011 at 5:23 pm
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      Agreed: the dining plan can be great…but free is definitely better! 🙂 Thanks for stopping by!

      Reply

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