$146.20
$146.20 a month is what my Disney annual passes cost (me, my wife, and my son). It's actually more, if you count the initial upfront cost from several years ago. I forget what it was, because my wife paid it.
$4.81 a day. If I spent $4.81 a day at Starbucks, you would think I was crazy and blowing my retirement. Sure, it works out to $11-$12 a week, per person. That's like going to the movies each weekend! Except that we wouldn't go to the movies each weekend. It costs too darn much. I only go the the movies when we have at least one ticket free from donating blood. Actually, I prefer to wait until I have two free tickets and we leave the kid at home and make it an adult's night. It's true, I can sometimes be a little cheap.
I hate the tickets. I don't hate Disney. It can be fun. But, those tickets represent a huge, burning, pile of money to me. When my wife and I started dating, she already had annual passes for her and her son. I refused to get my own. When things got serious, and she moved in, she insisted on getting me an annual pass. I fought it. I didn't want to pay for it. She got it for me anyway, because I wouldn't be able to go on the family trips to Disney without it. Now that we're married, it's part of our household budget. There are no plans for it to go away. It's important to her, it's "affordable" with our income. We could be retired sooner, without it, but it's worth it to my wife.
Disney is a dangerous money trap, though. Even with free parking and 10-20% off at all the stores, it is easy to waste inordinate amounts of money at Disney. I've never waited two hours in line to buy a plastic cup, but I have a fair amount of Disney cups in the cupboard. We try and do it cheap. We bring our own food, or eat outside the park. We don't buy things, on most trips. It can be good exercise. I won't get the boy out hiking 8+ miles on a normal Saturday. But, we can get that distance in at Disney.