It is fairly easy, as they can call Disney and quote the serial number, and Disney will confirm what days are left on. The problem is, for each person that sells them the ticket, the re-sellers do not bother to call Disney so take it on trust. They then re-sell the ticket to some other vacationer who then also has to buy on trust.

I'm not saying all tickets purchased are going to be invalid, but just that there is a very high (and real) risk that out of a batch of tickets bought, some are going to be invalid.

<blockquote id="quote" class="ffs">quote:Originally posted by Father
<blockquote id="quote" class="ffs">quote:Originally posted by roger
Although these are not timeshare, they are remaining days from other customers tickets who have finished their vacation with days left. Not only is this not allowed, it is very risky. You will be asked to provide a finger print on entry to the park and if it doesn't match the original ticket holders, you will be asked to give details of your previous visits to see if it matches their records. Other than a lot of embarrasement at the gate you could lose the ticket then still have to pay full price to get in.

Also, the people selling these tickets do not really know if there are any remaining days left on the tickets, so they are relying on the guests that have sold them the ticket to tell the truth. You could in fact be buying park days that do not exist.


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I don't disagree with your point Roger but it is fairly easy for them to check the remaining days on the tickets.
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