Hope this doesn't derail into tribal warfare but trying to get a handle on due diligence before I try again to purchase a DVC contract.
Quick background, last spring, had a contract accepted and pass ROFR only to hit a wall when the owners failed to mention to the broker that they had a IRS tax lien. That put them in default due to timing to release the lien so I backed out. It had points that were approaching the expiration to roll and I had planned a trip that would have been iffy availability waiting another month. Broker was good about it, no complaints and they let me know as soon as they knew. Would use them and title company again. No hard feelings.
I'm not hardcore Disney but I have family members that are and I have two young grandchildren that I can't wait to share their Disney memories. But, being recently retired, my plans are to travel and not just to Orlando. Not a beach person, neither is my partner but we are quite active and enjoy exploring wherever we end up. Not sure how long it would take for the DVC resorts to get old but certainly longer than the same Villa in Costa Rica.
Did Hawaii about 10 years ago and absolutely loved it but the 11 hour plane ride makes it an anomaly. I don't mind the pre-planning that timeshares and DVC require within reason but need some flexibility. Not a fixed week or even time of year.
I've noticed a number of members both here and on TUG that own both DVC and some other conventional timeshares or Vacation Clubs and they find value in both. I haven't sat through a timeshare hard sell in 15 years but I have a knee jerk reaction to conventional ones based on a number of things.
Apparently there are companies just as shady that will help a timeshare owner get rid of their obligation at the cost of thousands of dollars. Is it really that difficult to just sell your timeshare when you've decided you want out? This is even after the contract has been paid in full so it's just trying to avoid future MF's.
I've also read that if you can unload a timeshare, it's for free or next to nothing. It has no residual value after 10-20 years? Whereas, based on my rudimentary number crunching using past performance (not indicative of future yada, yada, yada) metrics, on average, DVC contracts bought resale can be worth 6.3% more/year. As an example, a CCV 200 point contract for $160pp today could be worth $52k in 10 years. The net gains of ~$20k would negate the MF's even accounting for 4% inflation ($7.60 amortized over 10 years =$16,800). So even if the cost of the DVC contract only matched inflation, you could almost argue the vacations were free (discounting the time value of the initial purchase).
This isn't about number of resorts or quality or flexibility, that's it's own topic. I'm mostly baffled by the seemingly disparate operational differences and how they affect the owners.
TIA
Quick background, last spring, had a contract accepted and pass ROFR only to hit a wall when the owners failed to mention to the broker that they had a IRS tax lien. That put them in default due to timing to release the lien so I backed out. It had points that were approaching the expiration to roll and I had planned a trip that would have been iffy availability waiting another month. Broker was good about it, no complaints and they let me know as soon as they knew. Would use them and title company again. No hard feelings.
I'm not hardcore Disney but I have family members that are and I have two young grandchildren that I can't wait to share their Disney memories. But, being recently retired, my plans are to travel and not just to Orlando. Not a beach person, neither is my partner but we are quite active and enjoy exploring wherever we end up. Not sure how long it would take for the DVC resorts to get old but certainly longer than the same Villa in Costa Rica.
Did Hawaii about 10 years ago and absolutely loved it but the 11 hour plane ride makes it an anomaly. I don't mind the pre-planning that timeshares and DVC require within reason but need some flexibility. Not a fixed week or even time of year.
I've noticed a number of members both here and on TUG that own both DVC and some other conventional timeshares or Vacation Clubs and they find value in both. I haven't sat through a timeshare hard sell in 15 years but I have a knee jerk reaction to conventional ones based on a number of things.
- Relentless sales tactics at every opportunity requiring bribes to just survive one
- Painful and sometimes difficult if not impossible exit strategy
- Lifetime contract
- Depreciation
Apparently there are companies just as shady that will help a timeshare owner get rid of their obligation at the cost of thousands of dollars. Is it really that difficult to just sell your timeshare when you've decided you want out? This is even after the contract has been paid in full so it's just trying to avoid future MF's.
I've also read that if you can unload a timeshare, it's for free or next to nothing. It has no residual value after 10-20 years? Whereas, based on my rudimentary number crunching using past performance (not indicative of future yada, yada, yada) metrics, on average, DVC contracts bought resale can be worth 6.3% more/year. As an example, a CCV 200 point contract for $160pp today could be worth $52k in 10 years. The net gains of ~$20k would negate the MF's even accounting for 4% inflation ($7.60 amortized over 10 years =$16,800). So even if the cost of the DVC contract only matched inflation, you could almost argue the vacations were free (discounting the time value of the initial purchase).
Historical price per point - DVCinfo
History of DVC direct sales price: the prices DVC has charged over the years. Listed are the base prices - exclusive of any incentives being offered
dvcinfo.com
This isn't about number of resorts or quality or flexibility, that's it's own topic. I'm mostly baffled by the seemingly disparate operational differences and how they affect the owners.
- Is it purely just that the Disney ecosystem doesn't need those gimmicks?
- Is there an alternate Vacation Club that mimics how DVC works and holds their value? E.g., do they have a similar ROFR that ensures the values stay up?
- If I can transfer points into the II network and still access the same resorts as the traditional timeshare resorts, what would be the reasoning to buy into them?
- What do they do better than DVC or vice-versa?
TIA