I still say DVC makes absoutely no sense.
DVC makes perfect sense, if you typically stay in a Deluxe resort at WDW year after year. I've run the numbers, and it makes sense for me.
I still say DVC makes absoutely no sense.
I am not trying to insult anyone. But I would hope that everyone on the forum is entitled to an opinion. We did run the numbers. We stay at all levels of rooms at the resorts at WDW. We have never paid more than $235 at the Animal Kingdom Lodge (Deluxe hotel according to WDW) and that rate was for a Savanah view. The charge for the room through DVC came out to about $272 for the same room at the same time. Considering the cost of buying into the DVC, the incredibly high yearly dues, and for most people, the finance charges for financing over 10 years, you end up paying about $366 for the room. So, how do you make up for that over time? Granted Disney raises their room rates far too often, but it would take at least 8 years just to balance out and that assumes that the DVC wouldn't raise their rates in kind.
You can easily beat DVC rates almost anywhere. Further, given that with DVC you would have to book at least 10 months in advance to get their rates and you don't have to book that far if you are booking on your own, why would DVC make sense? As far as bigger rooms for DVC members, I am not sure what that means particularly at the resorts. DVC members don't get the suites unless you pay a lot more for it which you would do if you were a DVC member or not. Also, if you read the fine print in the DVC membership booklet, you will notice that only a MAXIMUM of 22% of the rooms at DVC resorts are reserved for DVC members. That makes popular destinations very difficult to get. Many of us with families can't book a year or more in advance and therefore don't stand a chance in getting popular spots during peak seasons.
I am not being rude, but I am stating that every resort we checked and every destination we checked, we were able to beat the DVC pricing and didn't have to make a large investment up front and a continuing infusion of funds to go to those destinations. I still say DVC makes absoutely no sense. You can save money by staying at places without using your DVC membership and without giving DVC $100,000+ to get enough points to go to the really nice places. Bu the way, you can go on "The World" cruise for $15k a week. That is considered the nicest cruise ship in the world. The $100,000+ would allow you to go on that cruise for almost 7 consecutive years and no yearly dues are needed either.
DVC is like the Costco of timeshares. You can take the time, whenever you want a vacation, to go out and explore all your options to find the best possible deals for your trip. Or, pay in, lock into a low deal for the length of your membership and not get a decent value without the time & effort involved in the hunt.I am not trying to insult anyone. But I would hope that everyone on the forum is entitled to an opinion. We did run the numbers. We stay at all levels of rooms at the resorts at WDW. We have never paid more than $235 at the Animal Kingdom Lodge (Deluxe hotel according to WDW) and that rate was for a Savanah view. The charge for the room through DVC came out to about $272 for the same room at the same time. Considering the cost of buying into the DVC, the incredibly high yearly dues, and for most people, the finance charges for financing over 10 years, you end up paying about $366 for the room. So, how do you make up for that over time? Granted Disney raises their room rates far too often, but it would take at least 8 years just to balance out and that assumes that the DVC wouldn't raise their rates in kind.
You can easily beat DVC rates almost anywhere. Further, given that with DVC you would have to book at least 10 months in advance to get their rates and you don't have to book that far if you are booking on your own, why would DVC make sense? As far as bigger rooms for DVC members, I am not sure what that means particularly at the resorts. DVC members don't get the suites unless you pay a lot more for it which you would do if you were a DVC member or not. Also, if you read the fine print in the DVC membership booklet, you will notice that only a MAXIMUM of 22% of the rooms at DVC resorts are reserved for DVC members. That makes popular destinations very difficult to get. Many of us with families can't boo
Also, if you read the fine print in the DVC membership booklet, you will notice that only a MAXIMUM of 22% of the rooms at DVC resorts are reserved for DVC members. That makes popular destinations very difficult to get.
We looked into the DVC last year. We could not figure out how to make it make sense. We live in the Disney area anyway and have enjoyed WDW since the park opened. But when we ran the numbers, it was cheaper to use our Annual Passholder discounts and stay in the deluxe hotels than it was to use the DVC. We also have 4 kids and pretty much have to have 2 rooms. The points required would have cost so much, I could have rented a suite for a week at WDW and still had change left over compared to the cost of usind the DVC.
Run the numbers for yourself. By the time you finance the $$$$ and then pay their high yearly dues, you could have taken the whole family on a 1st class vacation yourself without using the DVC and for less money than DVC. We actually figured it the cost of a Disney cruise on DVC every year vs. paying for a Disney Cruise every year on our own without DVC and it would cost us about $1200 a year less to not use DVC that to use DVC. Talk about a rip off.
The DVC is a total scam. You can do almost any trip cheaper than DVC and you can control the dates, etc. more than you can with DVC. Stay away. It doesn't even make sense if you stay at disney properties. They don't cut you any breaks. Stay away from DVC.:brick:
I do hope to at least make people that are thinking about it really evaluate the program and throw real numbers at it and not "out of thin air" numbers. DVC just seems like bad news.
For us, we would have had to spend over $100k to get enough points to make anything work. Then with the yearly dues, it would be like having a mortgage payment each month just to get a week's vacation somewhere.
You'd need almost 1000 points to make a stay worth your while? Yikes.
We currently have 175 points. Last year, we stayed 10 nights on property, 7 in a WL studio, and 3 nights in a BWV 1 BR unit. Rack for those rooms would have been around 3 grand. Even with an annual pass discount, it still would've been over 2 thou. We pay about a thousand a year in dues, so I consider that a thousand towards the principal. Do I have a ways to go before a break even point? Sure, but I'll get there, especially as room rates go up, and as I said before, it's not about this being an investment, it's about it being a luxury I wanted.
To stay at a studio savannah unit at AK Villas on Xmas week would cost you 180 points. Rack rate for the same period for a savannah room (and I'd suspect even annual passholders wouldn't get much of a discount THAT week) would run over $2800. Even paying high interest on the mortgage, that sort of vacationing schedule would pay for itself rapidly owning DVC.
Considering the facts that you're ignoring Mike's spreadsheet, you're pointing out discrepancies in the fine print that apprently don't exist, and you're looking at DVC as an investment and not a luxury, maybe you're not the best person to represent why DVC isn't for everyone. Just saying...
Actually, I think I represent a lot of people. I think the numbers in the excel spreadsheet are incorrect and use book value that most people don't and shouldn't pay. We stay in deluxe hotels frequently and I don't think I have ever paid as much as he quotes. You can make the numbers say anything you want, but I suggest you look at what the local papers even say about DVC. The Orlando Sentinel in October of 2007 called DVC the biggest Disney mirage or all time. I think you are so caught up in being a member, you have decided that all of us who think DVC is senseless must be wrong. Funny how I can't find any timeshare including luxury ones that cost even 1/2 of the DVC, yet somehow you tell me that DVC is such a great deal. Dribble!
Go Slaappeee!!!:sohappy::sohappy::sohappy:Slappy you summed that up quite nicely!
And club memberships rarely, if ever, turn a profit in and of themselves. So again, you're being disingenuous and misleading. But based on your prior posts n this thread, hey, it's how you roll
And with that, I’m done with this, and you, on this thread. Feel free to send e a PM if you really want to spew more nonsense, but as a rule, in PM’s I’m usually not THIS polite.
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