Home » 6 Things You MUST Know about Staying at Disney’s Beach Club Villas

    6 Things You MUST Know about Staying at Disney’s Beach Club Villas

    Image © Disney

    If you’re considering where to stay on your next trip to Walt Disney World, location is a primary factor. The Disney-owned resorts offer proximity that distinguishes them from the enterprising hotel competitors in the area. One of the most intriguing options is Disney’s Beach Club, a property right behind Epcot and relatively close to Hollywood Studios. Last year, I wrote an article in which I declared that Disney’s Beach Club resort is the finest Disney Vacation Club property, but it’s available for regular Disney guests as well. If you’re considering a stay at this hotel, read on to learn everything you need to know in preparation for your visit.

    1. General Resort Appearance

    Cape May, New Jersey by the Atlantic Ocean earned a reputation among early 20th century travelers for its scenic views of the water. While nearby Ocean City is the name that travelers know better, Cape May is the style honored at Beach Club Villas. To wit, one of the restaurants is even named Cape May Café. The exterior design features architectural traits from Newport Beach, Rhode Island, and a light blue color scheme. The blue distinguishes Beach Club from the adjoining Yacht Club, its sister location that is a popular destination for business trips. To wit, the Major League Baseball Winter Meetings were held at the Yacht Club in 2013. The two resorts share one of the largest meeting facilities in the region, 6,800 square meters in size.

    Beach Club Villas is technically its own entity, but while you’re wandering the labyrinthine hallways, you may accidentally wander into an entirely different hotel. They’re both Disney-owned properties, so it’s no big deal if you do. The staff will quickly direct you back to the proper location. The Beach Club portion includes 583 rooms, 282 of which are villas, across six acres of lands, with a gorgeous view of Crescent Lake. This body of water separates it from the Boardwalk area across the way, but it’s only a few hundred steps of walking if you take the nearby bridge.

    The genius of Beach Club Villas is that Disney has created a beachfront area in a land-locked city in the middle of the state. The moment you reach the resort, you’ll forget that everything is man-made. It has all the look and feel of a waterfront destination despite its proximity to Epcot. And that is the true selling point for Beach Club Villas. People staying at this hotel are literally a few hundred steps away from the back entrance to the World Showcase at Epcot. It claims the closest proximity of any Walt Disney World resort to a theme park.

    2. Hotel Rooms

    Image © Disney

    The average studio at Beach Club Villas is either 356 or 381 square feet. It features two queen beds, a day bed, a desk and a chair. These rooms are on the smaller side with regards to Disney’s finest resorts. The one-bedroom villa provides almost double the space at 726 square feet, and it adds a kitchen with dining area. You can prepare your meals in the room, thereby saving yourself some money if you don’t mind cooking while on vacation. Note that the studio and one-bedroom villas only sleep four per room, though. The two-bedroom villa can sleep up to nine (including one child under three), but with 1,083 square feet, they wouldn’t be that comfortable unless many of them are children. It’s a wonderful solution for larger traveling parties, though.

    Beach Club Villas is currently in the middle of a much needed renovation. It’s been overdue for one for several years now. Guests who’ve stayed onsite recently have noticed malfunctioning lights and power switches, carpet stains, and mold in certain areas of rooms. Disney is addressing these issues while also updating the amenities during an exhaustive 16-month process.

    Guests staying on the fifth floor will already enjoy the refreshed amenities. The interior hallways and room doors are repainted, furniture is replaced, and numerous USB outlets are present now. You’ll enjoy the view while walking to your room, you won’t worry about the pull-out bed being gross, and you’ll have no problem keeping all your electronic devices charged if you’re lucky enough to get a room on the fifth floor. This redesign is so exhaustive that even the bathroom tiles in the shower and sink are being replaced with higher end materials.

    Some of the fourth floor is already finished already, and the entire project should be completed by the end of the summer of 2016. Depending on your intended travel dates, you may either need to scheme to get an upper floor room or push back your dates a bit if the outdated rooms trouble you.

    Even factoring in the renovation needs, walking the halls of Beach Club Villas is a delight. The sunny areas reinforce the beachfront themes, and there is a decidedly upscale feel to the entire environment. It’s also the smallest resort at Disney, so if you’re a bit claustrophobic, this property presents a rare opportunity at Walt Disney World to escape the crowds for a bit.

    3. Dining Options

    Image © Disney

    Among the best located Walt Disney World resorts, Beach Club features fewer restaurant options in comparison to properties such as Polynesian and Grand Floridian. The two table service locations it offers, however, are wonderful.  Beaches & Cream is an intimate throwback restaurant to the malt shops of the 1950s. If you want a retro-meal experience featuring burgers and ice cream, this is the place. Note that due to its size, it doesn’t service anywhere near as many customers as most Disney restaurants, though. This is a place where you should angle to get an Advance Dinner Reservation if possible.

    The other restaurant onsite is the popular Cape May Café. In the morning, there is a breakfast character meal featuring Minnie, Donald, and Goofy in their beach attire. It’s a real crowd pleaser, and the buffet food options are quite solid. In the evening, this establishment is all about fish, something you’ll notice every time you walk by it on the way to the pool. Technically a “seafood and more” dinner buffet, it’s called Clam Bake for a reason. If you’re like me and don’t enjoy fish, however, there’s a strip loin station as well as numerous chicken and salad options. Note that lunch is not served at Cape May Café.

    There is also a quick service restaurant onsite called Hurricane Hanna’s Grill. It’s by Stormalong Bay, which allows you to sit by the water while enjoying a meal. It’s also a swim-up bar. If you’re in a hurry and don’t want to sit down for a meal, note that Beach Club Marketplace has a lot of refrigerated sandwich options that will work in a pinch. Also, while Yachtsman Steakhouse is technically not at the hotel, it’s right beside the property at the Yacht Club. It’s one of the classiest restaurants at Walt Disney World, so it’s another great option right down the road.

    A good strategy for Beach Club Villas is to eat breakfast at Cape May Café, head to the park for a while, take a lunch break at Beaches & Cream only a few hundred feet away from Epcot, and then dine at the World Showcase in the evening. You’ll escape the lunch crowd at the theme park while enjoying a good meal in an energetic atmosphere. If you would prefer a different option rather than the World Showcase for dinner, remember that the Boardwalk is right across the water.

    4. Recreation

    Image © Disney

    Since Beach Club Villas is right by Crescent Lake, there are a lot of watersports activities available. You’re also only a walk across the bridge away from all the entertainment at the Boardwalk. Discussing other entertainment options at Beach Club Villas is a bit silly, though. If you’re staying there, you’re going to spend most of your recreational time at Stormalong Bay, the mini-water park located at the property.

    Stormalong Bay is technically one of three pools onsite, but it’s the undeniable alpha of the trio. Thematically, its backdrop is that of a shipwreck, which explains the land-locked ship on the beach. Stormalong Bay is a massive area complete with a beloved water slide and a few sandy areas that enhance the beach atmosphere, even in the pool itself. You’ll experience the strange sensation of walking on a standard underwater pool surface for a time only to notice that sand is suddenly betwixt your toes.

    Due to the sheer size of the pool, it’s divided into several others. The one closest to the entrance is designed for swimming, the waterfall area is for people like me who like to get bombed with a constant deluge of water, and the most popular area is the lazy river. Yes, Stormalong Bay is so vast that it has a lazy river area, and it’s wildly popular, too. You may struggle to find an open raft during peak hours.

    While Disney does have a pair of wonderful water parks in Orlando, Blizzard Beach and Typhoon Lagoon, Beach Club Villas provides an advantage to its guests. There is no travel required to enjoy a few hours of fun in the sun. You simply leave the theme park, throw on your swimsuit at the hotel, and enjoy splashing around only a few steps away from your room. When we stay at Beach Club Villas, we always wind up spending a couple of hours at Stormalong Bay, because it provides a wonderful respite from the craziness and congestion of the theme parks.

    5. Logistics

    Image © Disney

    Getting to Epcot is as simple as putting on your tennis shoes, turning left, and walking for about two hundred steps. You can take a boat to Hollywood Studios; it runs every 20 minutes. If you’re not worried about too much walking during your vacation, however, simply head across the bridge past Boardwalk Villas and you’ll reach the park in a short time. The walk is a bit longer than the one from Bay Lake Tower and Contemporary to Magic Kingdom, but it’s certainly manageable. You also won’t be beholden to the bus system.

    This brings us to the chief problem with Beach Club Villas. Since it’s not on the monorail, your options for getting to the other two parks are a bit trickier. If you’re up for it, you can walk all the way across Epcot to reach the monorail at the front of the park. After a transfer at the Ticket and Transportation Center and a few stops, you’ll eventually reach Magic Kingdom. If that sounds like too much trouble – and it can be aggravating during busy park days – the other option is the bus. That’s what you’ll have to take to reach Animal Kingdom and Downtown Disney as well as the water parks. It’s also the most viable option for Magic Kingdom unless you want the extra exercise.

    Much has been said about the aggravation of Disney’s bus transportation. I won’t pile on any further other than to note that some of our experiences in getting buses from Beach Club Villas to theme parks have proven comical. This is the foremost area of aggravation at the hotel other than its design, which can be a bit confusing the first few days you’re a guest. It’s easy to get turned around at Beach Club Villas, which can be problematic when you’re trying to find either the bus or the boat. 

    6. Pricing

    Image © Disney

    Presuming you aren’t staying by using Disney Vacation Club points, the pricing here is about the standard for Disney’s finest resorts. You should expect to pay between $350 and $500 a night, and it’ll tend toward the high end during Walt Disney World’s most popular visitation periods. For villas, the price isn’t that much higher, with prices starting at $500 and topping out at $750 for a one-bedroom. Two-bedroom villas range from $750 to $1,250.

    With regards to DVC points, a night’s stay at a studio ranges from 15 to 18 points on weekdays during most of the year, but it spikes to 25 points during Premier Season, March 20th – April 2nd and Christmas week. On weekends, you’ll probably spend four points more. A week’s stay in a studio costs between 107 and 134 points save for Premier Season, when it increases to 181. For a one-bedroom studio, one week is between 200 and 250 points. For a two-bedroom, it’s 271 to 350.