Marionnette
Children see magic because they look for it
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2009
I don't see anything illegal about two divorced parents registering their kids in each of their separate hotel rooms. To me, this is a lot less murky than those people who used to book phantom children during *free* dining so that they got extra dining credits. Just because Disney's computer systems cannot handle someone being registered in two resorts at the same time, that doesn't make it morally wrong (or even contrary to Disney written policy) to do so. In the past I've booked an extra night at the beginning of a split stay trip just so that we were not "homeless" on the day of the split. And yes, I've used the alternate names for each guest (Tom was also Thomas, Bill was also William, etc). If I'm paying for both rooms, I don't understand why Disney would even care. The room is "occupied" and paid for. And they got double the money for one day from a single family. I'd call that a win for Disney.
Now, I will point out to the OP that the girls' tickets and dining credits would only be on their father's reservation and there would be two separate sets of MBs to keep track of. It could get confusing as to which MBs are to be used for park admission and food vs. which MBs are only for SAB and entering Mom's room.
Now, I will point out to the OP that the girls' tickets and dining credits would only be on their father's reservation and there would be two separate sets of MBs to keep track of. It could get confusing as to which MBs are to be used for park admission and food vs. which MBs are only for SAB and entering Mom's room.