Of course -- I ended up adding on 25 more direct points at BCV so I could have longer stays...and then added on 150 at RIV...but we will ignore those costs.
This is the way.
So say we all
Of course -- I ended up adding on 25 more direct points at BCV so I could have longer stays...and then added on 150 at RIV...but we will ignore those costs.
This is the way.
BCV and BWV resale prices will drop. Mathematical certainty. But might not really start to happen for a few more years.
Imagine it's 2041 -- BCV contract expires Jan 31, 2042. You want to stay at BVC in late 2041.... Why would you pay $120 per point, for points you're only going to use one time? (plus 1 year of annual fees). At current prices, you can just rent those points for $20.
And same keeps working backwards... in 2040... no semi-rational person would pay more than $40 per point, since you can only use them twice.. Throw in annual dues, and you'd be losing even more money.
Continuing backwards, we can see that approximately 2030-2032 would be the last chance to buy BCV/BWV points and "break even."
But of course, a big incentive of DVC is to "save" money on future vacations. So probably not enough demand solely for "break even." So I'd suspect prices to start dropping by the mid to late 2020's, and by the mid 2030's, for those contracts to have very low resale value.
I'd only buy BCV/BWV right now if I planned to just keep it for the next 22 years. If I was eying, "own it for 10 years and then sell..." then BCV/BWV could be very risky.
it will also depend on how much a cash reservation costs at beach club in 22 years.
More than likely though -- an owner would be better off just renting out the final couple years of points or transferring them to someone else rather than go through the hassle of selling the contract and taking the additional 8-10% hit from the listing agent.
I’d argue it’s already priced in. Boardwalk has way too good of a location and point chart to be priced in the $110s - except that it has 20 fewer years remaining than most of the other resorts it’s comparable to. Beach Club is expensive but I’d bet it would be $150-$160 instead of $135-$145 if it expired in 2060. Those resorts if you discount future years for inflation etc should be losing about 2-3% of their value each year (relative to, say, the MK area resorts). It’s been hard to see them lose value as the entire program has gotten more expensive in the last 5 years, but on a relative basis, they have, particularly BWV (and for that matter BRV). To your point, they will be losing value in far larger chunks by 2030.BCV and BWV resale prices will drop. Mathematical certainty. But might not really start to happen for a few more years.
Imagine it's 2041 -- BCV contract expires Jan 31, 2042. You want to stay at BVC in late 2041.... Why would you pay $120 per point, for points you're only going to use one time? (plus 1 year of annual fees). At current prices, you can just rent those points for $20.
And same keeps working backwards... in 2040... no semi-rational person would pay more than $40 per point, since you can only use them twice.. Throw in annual dues, and you'd be losing even more money.
Continuing backwards, we can see that approximately 2030-2032 would be the last chance to buy BCV/BWV points and "break even."
But of course, a big incentive of DVC is to "save" money on future vacations. So probably not enough demand solely for "break even." So I'd suspect prices to start dropping by the mid to late 2020's, and by the mid 2030's, for those contracts to have very low resale value.
I'd only buy BCV/BWV right now if I planned to just keep it for the next 22 years. If I was eying, "own it for 10 years and then sell..." then BCV/BWV could be very risky.
Beach Club Villas pricing is completely disconnected from Beach Club cash reservation costs. Beach Club and Yacht Club are the middle tier of Deluxe prices, more than AKL and WL but less than everything else. But in DVC would BCV is one of the most expensive.it will also depend on how much a cash reservation costs at beach club in 22 years.
I’d argue it’s already priced in. Boardwalk has way too good of a location and point chart to be priced in the $110s - except that it has 20 fewer years remaining than most of the other resorts it’s comparable to. Beach Club is expensive but I’d bet it would be $150-$160 instead of $135-$145 if it expired in 2060. Those resorts if you discount future years for inflation etc should be losing about 2-3% of their value each year (relative to, say, the MK area resorts). It’s been hard to see them lose value as the entire program has gotten more expensive in the last 5 years, but on a relative basis, they have, particularly BWV (and for that matter BRV). To your point, they will be losing value in far larger chunks by 2030.
I think 4-5 years from now though when a family leaving Disney World after their first trip with their 5 year old and their 3 Year old Looks at the 2042 resorts and realizes they won’t get all of their kids through High School, that’s when you might see a drop.
Beach Club Villas pricing is completely disconnected from Beach Club cash reservation costs. Beach Club and Yacht Club are the middle tier of Deluxe prices, more than AKL and WL but less than everything else. But in DVC would BCV is one of the most expensive.
BCV is - by far - the hardest resort to justify a DVC purchase at, and I’d argue a direct BCV purchase is mathematically unjustifiable financially, and can only be purchased the way you’d purchase a $9 chocolate bar or a $150 bottle of bourbon or a $4000 couch or a $70000 car, all of which are also unjustifiable financially, but can be justified emotionally if you have the disposable income.
With all that said -- you could argue that this pricing structure is not smart, b/c if Riviera is supposed to be positioned as the flagship hotel of DHS/Epcot -- then it needs to be priced higher than anything in that area -- but by pricing BWV/BCV higher than RIV via direct (and possibly resale given the restrictions), it might make people perceive it to be less prestigious/nice/luxurious than BCV/BWV.
I’d argue it’s already priced in. Boardwalk has way too good of a location and point chart to be priced in the $110s - except that it has 20 fewer years remaining than most of the other resorts it’s comparable to. Beach Club is expensive but I’d bet it would be $150-$160 instead of $135-$145 if it expired in 2060. Those resorts if you discount future years for inflation etc should be losing about 2-3% of their value each year (relative to, say, the MK area resorts). It’s been hard to see them lose value as the entire program has gotten more expensive in the last 5 years, but on a relative basis, they have, particularly BWV (and for that matter BRV). To your point, they will be losing value in far larger chunks by 2030.
I think 4-5 years from now though when a family leaving Disney World after their first trip with their 5 year old and their 3 Year old Looks at the 2042 resorts and realizes they won’t get all of their kids through High School, that’s when you might see a drop.
Beach Club Villas pricing is completely disconnected from Beach Club cash reservation costs. Beach Club and Yacht Club are the middle tier of Deluxe prices, more than AKL and WL but less than everything else. But in DVC would BCV is one of the most expensive.
BCV is - by far - the hardest resort to justify a DVC purchase at, and I’d argue a direct BCV purchase is mathematically unjustifiable financially, and can only be purchased the way you’d purchase a $9 chocolate bar or a $150 bottle of bourbon or a $4000 couch or a $70000 car, all of which are also unjustifiable financially, but can be justified emotionally if you have the disposable income.
But Havoc I WANT IT. I absolutely HAVE to have it or I’ll die.But here is what makes it unjustifiable, even on emotion:
The ONLY direct purchase benefit of BCV versus buying another resort direct, is the ability to book at BCV at 11 months. All the other benefits you can get with buying at another resort.
But you can just rent points for BCV at 11 months... pay $20 per point. For another 21 years, that would be $420 per point at 2020 dollars.
Buying direct would be $235 per point plus $7.43 per year in dues: $391 total.
A potential 7% savings isn’t enough to justify a 21 year investment.
A potential 7% savings isn’t enough to justify a 21 year investment.
Compare to cash prices with discounts.
It's not fair comparing to rentals where you have zero control.
Expect in 20 years a need to move a reservation or cancel a couple times. Also no clue what long term rental rates would be at BCV as every year more people rent and learn about renting. Overall doesn't impact pricing but could eliminate availability of BCV specific rentals.
If I was 100% okay with rentals long term that absolutely would be the play. There is a negative though with banking on rentals for the next 20+ years.
But Havoc I WANT IT. I absolutely HAVE to have it or I’ll die.
My point is we’ve all bought things that we don’t need just because we want them. That’s the only way to justify a BCV direct purchase, IMO. Would you be better off stashing your money in an investment account and either renting points or getting a 30-35% deal off cash room? Yes. But then you wouldn’t be a Member.![]()
Compare to cash prices with discounts.
It's not fair comparing to rentals where you have zero control.
Expect in 20 years a need to move a reservation or cancel a couple times. Also no clue what long term rental rates would be at BCV as every year more people rent and learn about renting. Overall doesn't impact pricing but could eliminate availability of BCV specific rentals.
If I was 100% okay with rentals long term that absolutely would be the play. There is a negative though with banking on rentals for the next 20+ years.
So for BCV— paying cash is CHEAPER
Not my experience at all. Speaking for myself and other owners I know personally, 1 BR is the preferred unit.
Wrong. Read the post. The whole discussion is whether DIRECT purchase is economical. That’s $225 per point, not $159.
But the difference between 30% and 35% isn’t huge.
I’m not totally following all of your post, but the savings you note at the end for a 2BR (10-25%) doesn’t seem as worth it to me for the risk posed by the program, and we know 1BR paybacks are worse, and in any case, we were talking direct, which if I’m reading your post correctly, you were using resale pricing. So I think we can probably all agree that BCV is worth it resale for a studio if you get a good deal on the contract. But it’s certainly, as I think was the point way back at the beginning, the hardest resort to make the math work on.A couple points which change things:
Not saying this is all correct but just basing it on your simplistic math breakdown. I think many will say a 1BR is one of the worse values as well and if you do book 1BRs typically many will say SSR is fine since they are the last rooms to fill up.
- 35% discount on BCV is not a standard discount and typically you will be at 25%-30% for Beach or Yacht (per www.mousesavers.com)
- Dates will change things
- 1BR in February (11-18) was $865.90/night w/ Tax vs 1BR in February (1-8) was $605.17/night w/ tax
- You can see a huge shift in cash pricing based on rate seasons
- It would only be 2 more points or 0.7% more expensive vs 30% more if paying cash
- Most people are buying for studios or 2BRs when buying for home resort points
Your math of $382.50 per point is incorrect it would be $156.24 for 21 years of MFs + $159 avg resale price = $315.24
- You can not account for MF increases and not account for what will be a larger increase on cash rates
- Cash rates will always outpace MFs long term since MFs are simply about costs of running the resort while Cash rates account for increases of running the resort plus increased profitability for Disney
- Most people are buying for studios or 2BRs when buying for home resort points
- Basic math per night
- Using the cheaper cash range of February 1-8 you would be at
- 17 Points for Studio / 45 points for 2BR
- $406.41/night Studio / $909.05/night 2BR
- Using your $382.50/point total for 21 years for the cheaper cash rate dates of February 1-8
- 17 Points for Studio / 45 points for 2BR
- $406.41/night Studio / $909.05/night 2BR
- $6,502.50 DVC Studio 21 Years / $17,212.50 DVC Studio 21 Years
- $8,534.61 Cash Studio 21 Years / $19,090.05 Cash 2BR 21 Years
- DVC Studio saves 24% / DVC 2BR saves 10%
Using the $315.24/point total for 21 years
$5,359.08 DVC Studio 21 Years / $14,185.80 DVC Studio 21 Years$8,534.61 Cash Studio 21 Years / $19,090.05 Cash 2BR 21 YearsDVC Studio saves 37% / DVC 2BR saves 25%
I might have typo'd the quick pricing workup so let me know if something doesn't come out correctly. My math also doesn't account for things like inflation or the "cost" of the initial cash outlay.
we were talking direct
But it’s certainly, as I think was the point way back at the beginning, the hardest resort to make the math work on.
Its...
I'll call "point leakage." Your math assumes never wasting a point over 21 years. No points allowed to expire. No points rented out, bringing back less than full value.
Cash rooms include daily housekeeping, which is not included with points
Fourth, when looking at cash values, you immediately dismissed the 35% discount as outside the norm
Fifth, I wouldn't factor AP discounts heavily into the equation.
Add it all up, what do you get?
I'd compare it to this -- Would you buy your 2041 groceries now, if offered a 5-10% discount?
Because I won't lose points? I would also say the few points I might end up losing would also be offset by not being able to get a 35% discount (which is not normal) and by changes in when you travel (like I said you are comparing the Value Cash rate vs the mid-tier DVC point rate.
Which when I travel (and I travel a ton for work just not currently) I put the DND sign on the door day 1 and don't take it off until I leave. Its assumed you know the difference between DVC and Cash rooms.
Housekeeping should be a personal account not a overarching cost built in to baseline math.
Because its NOT normal. You can easily go back in time at www.mousesavers.com find discounts offered and then crosscheck if they were offered and at what rate for BCV.
Except that is the primary and only reason people suggest direct membership. So you can't say "well direct membership makes no sense" when removing the primary cost savings benefit.
Again not building it in to the baseline math but each family should run those numbers to get an idea of savings. That is $900 to $1400/yr if buying APs every other year for a family of 4-6 based on current prices.
You mean if ignoring the primary benefits of DVC which are locked in room rates as opposed to fluctuating discounts that might not be offered at certain times and not accounting for the primary cost savings benefit of direct membership?
Except you are not getting 5-10% as outlined it can be 24% on Studios (which is the primary driver for home resort purchasing). Its also again not even the math showed by you in what is basically one of the worst DVC vs Cash comparisons because its Value Cash Season vs Mid Tier Point Season. I can easily find other seasons where its drastically flipped.