Has anyone done the Candlelight Processional at Epcot during Christmas? I don't know that I understand the pricing, but it seems like you get free admission to the concert if you eat (app, entree, desert, drink) at one of the restaurants.
We did it last year but just to be clear there is a narrated show/concert called the Candelight Processional (CP) and then there is something to give you priority seating for the CP called the Candelight Processional Dinner Package. With the dinner package you get the meal you listed for a set price or 2 dining plan credits. We did NOT do the dinner package because to me, the price (I think it was ~$75-80pp) or using 2 credits was not worth it. We just got in line about 30-45 minutes before the show started and had no problem getting really good, center seats. The Candelight Processional show is free so you can still eat dinner before the show and then go get in line, you just don't get "priority" seating. I loved the CP so I would highly recommend checking it out at least once. If you don't want to wait in line and get a seat, there is standing room outside of the seating to stand and watch it. We actually did that another night while we were there.
As you mentioned in a follow-up post, the MC alters demand for prime seats. When Neil Patrick Harris narrated last year, the standby line started queuing hours in advance. On Susan Lucci night, not so much. The lines also get more competitive the closer the calendar gets to December 25. If you're trying to decide if the price tag is worth it... the seats themselves aren't worth a premium, but not the full extra cost. But you're also buying time to do other stuff at the park instead of waiting in line for a couple hours. Time at Disney is finite.
Other Christmas stuff to check out:***Epcot-I loved the Christmas stories at each country in World Showcase. Took me 2 days to get every country. Don't forget to watch Illuminations as it has an extra Christmas ending with more fireworks.
All of the Christmas stories are good, some are better than others,agree it probably takes 2 days to catch all of them and also experience other things in Epcot. IMO the standout stories are Norway, Germany, and England. Some of these stories will pull kids up on stage to participate, so if you have grade-school age kids who want to be part of the show, get to the showplace a little early, have the kids sit close, smile, and look alive and attentive.
***Gingerbread houses and Christmas trees. Take the time to check out all the deluxe resorts just to see the amazing Christmas trees. We did dinners at most of them so we would have a reason to check them out (stayed at Animal Kingdom Lodge so saw that one daily). Grand Floridian gingerbread house is amazing and Yacht & Beach club have a gingerbread carousel that is really neat.
These exceeded my expectations. A monorail tour to see the gingerbread houses and trees at Grand Floridian, Polynesian, and Contemporary is a couple hours well spent if you need a break from the parks. If you make dining reservations at the deluxe resorts, make time to check out the decorations before or after the meal.
***Osbourne Lights at Hollywood Studios. There were extra magic hours one night until midnight so we decided to go over at 11pm to check them out and the streets were empty. There were probably a total of 20 people so we got some amazing pictures then hit Toy Story Mania with a 10min wait at 11:55pm. Perfect way to end the night!
The key here is avoiding an onslaught of people. The lights are breathtaking and worth checking out. However, the cast members won't take Photopass photos during the "show" songs, which clogs up the area a little. Hitting it a little early in the season or late at night after the families with little kids clear out helps a lot. Last year we went once during Extra Magic Hours earlier in December and it was one of the highlights of the entire trip. We went back again with the gen pop on Dec 22/23 and it was a bit less pleasant.
***Mickey's Very Merry Christmas Party. Loved it. Loved the parade, the snow, the fireworks...can't wait to do it again sometime.
Worth. Every. Penny. Got to see all seven dwarfs together, walked right on to Space Mountain twice, Phineas and Ferb made a rare Magic Kingdom appearance, did the Running Man with Woody to "Party Rock Anthem" at the Woody's Roundup Dance Party, hot chocolate stands all over the park, snowfall on Main Street.If you have a MVMCP ticket and the party starts at 8:00pm, don't wait until 8:00 to enter the park. You can get into Magic Kingdom a few hours before the Party starts - just make sure you get the Party wristband, because the cast clears out people without the Party wristband once the Party starts.
***Animal Kingdom-the afternoon parade gets a Christmas makeover that is really cute. Camp Minnie-Mickey has a bunch of decorated themed Christmas trees that are fun to check out. Not sure if that will still be there this fall as they are preparing for Avatarland.
I hope they find a new home for those trees. They are great. Thanks to my daughter committing to an Animal Kingdom Christmas theme with an animal-print outfit, Santa hat, scarf, and sunglasses while waiting to meet AK Mickey, a cast member invited us to ride on one of the Donald floats in the AK parade. That was a big thrill, and I enjoyed getting backstage for a glimpse of how some of the Disney sausage is made.
ETA...regarding the CP dinner package they still tell you to get in line about 30 min early so you really aren't saving much time depending on how busy it is when you go.
If there's an argument for going to Disney in a large group and/or with grandparents, it's the extra FastPass options and extra bodies for time-consuming immobile acts like staking out prime parade viewing space or establishing an early line position for things like the CP.