2042 Expiration Resorts - Capital Reserves & End of deed Refurbs? Looking for Insight.. What happens to the money (dues).

gvel

Earning My Ears
Joined
May 2, 2025
Messages
57
Hi everyone,

I was reading through the newly released 2026 BoardWalk Villas budget packet (with the full reserves analysis) and had a few questions about how things work as we approach the 2042 deed expiration.

For the record, I don’t even own a 2042 resort. I’m just curious by how the end of deed mechanics actually play out.

Here’s the PDF directly from Disney:
https://cdn2.parksmedia.wdprapps.di...condo-association/2025-Meeting-Notice-BWV.pdf
My questions for those familiar with DVC and Florida condo/timeshare law:

1) What happens to the capital reserves near the end?

BWV has millions in reserves. As we approach 2042, does the condo board intentionally spend them down? Or must they keep contributing even if a major refurb is no longer logical?

2) Could they skip a scheduled hard-goods refurb close to expiration?

It seems unlikely the association would fund a top-to-bottom refurb in 2040–2041 only to hand it back to Disney a year later.
Is skipping the final cycle actually typical in Florida timeshare practice?

3) Could dues drop in the last 3–5 years?

If the board stops funding a big refurb that won’t happen, wouldn’t capital reserve contributions go down lowering dues?

4) Are owners legally required to give Disney back a fully updated property?

5)Why do some reserve items show useful lives that extend past 2042?

Is that just standard budgeting practice even though the resort won’t exist as a DVC asset?

TLDR
How do reserves get used as a DVC resort nears expiration?

Do they skip major refurb cycles near the end?

Would dues drop?

Does Florida law require returning the property in a certain condition?

Would love to hear from anyone with experience following past HOA minutes, reserve funding logic, or Florida condo law.

Thanks all! I'm super curious how this works behind the scenes!
 
Hi everyone,

I was reading through the newly released 2026 BoardWalk Villas budget packet (with the full reserves analysis) and had a few questions about how things work as we approach the 2042 deed expiration.

For the record, I don’t even own a 2042 resort. I’m just curious by how the end of deed mechanics actually play out.

Here’s the PDF directly from Disney:
https://cdn2.parksmedia.wdprapps.di...condo-association/2025-Meeting-Notice-BWV.pdf
My questions for those familiar with DVC and Florida condo/timeshare law:

1) What happens to the capital reserves near the end?

BWV has millions in reserves. As we approach 2042, does the condo board intentionally spend them down? Or must they keep contributing even if a major refurb is no longer logical?

2) Could they skip a scheduled hard-goods refurb close to expiration?

It seems unlikely the association would fund a top-to-bottom refurb in 2040–2041 only to hand it back to Disney a year later.
Is skipping the final cycle actually typical in Florida timeshare practice?

3) Could dues drop in the last 3–5 years?

If the board stops funding a big refurb that won’t happen, wouldn’t capital reserve contributions go down lowering dues?

4) Are owners legally required to give Disney back a fully updated property?

5)Why do some reserve items show useful lives that extend past 2042?

Is that just standard budgeting practice even though the resort won’t exist as a DVC asset?

TLDR
How do reserves get used as a DVC resort nears expiration?

Do they skip major refurb cycles near the end?

Would dues drop?

Does Florida law require returning the property in a certain condition?

Would love to hear from anyone with experience following past HOA minutes, reserve funding logic, or Florida condo law.

Thanks all! I'm super curious how this works behind the scenes!

This is a great question and I have no idea, but as a BWV owner I have thought about the timing of 2023’s hard refurb. If the hard refurbs happen every ~14 years that puts the last one around 2037.
 
From what I understand, at some point they won’t need to fund capital reserves any longer so owners dues should go down.

At the end of the association, any money left goes back to the owner.

They can not legally update and renovate the building just before it expires.

Now, when the last refurbs will be? I’m not sure but it makes sense it will be so when they turn it over, it would be “due” for one.

Meaning maybe two more soft goods but no more hard goods
 





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