Any regrets?

familia

Earning My Ears
Joined
Feb 2, 2011
Messages
7
Just curious as to whether anyone has any regrets buying into the Vacation Club. I've been toying with the idea of purchasing and yet a part of me just wants to 'stay and pay as I go' kind of thing.

Any regrets for those of you who have purchased? Has it cost more than what you expected?
 
Just curious as to whether anyone has any regrets buying into the Vacation Club. I've been toying with the idea of purchasing and yet a part of me just wants to 'stay and pay as I go' kind of thing.

Any regrets for those of you who have purchased? Has it cost more than what you expected?

Almost 17 years and we have no regrets. The annual fees aren't more than we expected and we paid cash, so I'd say there there were no hidden or unexpected costs.

I should probably disclose that we're currently selling our points at OKW and buying at BWV. That issue is about having more points than we need since moving from Chicago and being too lazy to rent them.

There's a lot to be said for "stay and pay as you go." I worry about some folks not knowing the difference between want and need and the current societal trend towards instant gratification. I realize that we're living in a different world than the one I was raised in, but I think some of the low resale prices speak volumes about people who may have gotten in over their heads or have had a change in circumstances.

Whatever you decide, good luck!!
 
well I go back and forth on if I regret it or am glad so time will tell. Part of me says why did I do this the other part says I'm glad we did but the prices even with the DVC are crazy for the dining in Disney but we love the dining and its not a trip without it. We probably would have been fine in a regular Disney moderate or value hotel as there's only 4 of us and most of the people we know cant even afford the dining part to go with us. Not to mention everyone who goes with you has to be on the same dining plan its an all or nothing situation
 
Absolutely NO regrets about buying, except for not buying in sooner :). The memories with our kids are priceless, and the annual dues are not bad considering that we get to stay in such nice accommodations. We are very pleased with our BCV home resort. Booking in advance is easy and painless if you can plan ahead.

Good luck with your decision. The more we go to WDW, the more points we want to buy. It is addictive!
 

:cloud9: :worship:......When I was downsized I thought I would regret .........REGRETS none. My only regret is that I did not finance sooner. The kids only stay young once and they now take for granted what I thought was impossible to do when I was their age.
 
For many years I have inquired about DVC. actually this past week I have been talking with Carol Ann via phone about DVC. WE go every year and have since 2005 and some years twice. But although I am a Disney nut, I am thinking that for me one day my DS might want to vacation somewhere else :scared1:. We spend what the yearly fees would be on each trip but that includes tickets and occasional free dining.

I am on the fence on this one...I do believe if we would've purchased when DS was one years old I would've done it. But with him being 10, not sure if I see him going with us when he is 22, perhaps but when I was that age I preferred the beach, and the boys on the beach :rotfl:

We leave in April so perhaps when I get there my answer might just magically appear..
 
Been members since 1995 and my only regret is that I didn't buy more points to start with. I can't believe the prices these days.
 
Just curious as to whether anyone has any regrets buying into the Vacation Club. I've been toying with the idea of purchasing and yet a part of me just wants to 'stay and pay as I go' kind of thing.

Any regrets for those of you who have purchased? Has it cost more than what you expected?

It almost always ends up costing more than you planned - but probably not for the reasons you think.

It seems that after the purchase, members decide to go more often, stay longer and even more importantly, invite friends and family to be their guests. (Did they treat their friends and family's to rooms before DVC? I doubt it, lol).

Many purchased based on staying in studios and then are seduced by the 1 bedroom (and larger) accommodations. They buy more points. (Addonitis can be tough to cure)

If DVC is right for your family and you stick to your pre-purchase travel patterns you will save money on lodging or at least stay in larger rooms for the same price.

If you are a fan of the "free dining" promotions, know that they do not apply when you pay for your room with points. In fact, none of the promotions for cash guests apply to points stays.

DVC is not a financial investment. It's a pre-paid vacation plan.

It's been a wonderful value for our family and I have no regrets, but it's not a good fit for everyone. My advice is to take your time and be sure it's right for you before you buy. Good luck with your research.
 
Been members since Aug 2004 and as others have mentioned, our only regret is not buying when we first started looking into it when WLV was being sold.

And I totally agree with the post about it costing more. Pre-DVC...one trip per year at the most. Post DVC....2 - 3 trips per year! It doesn't take long to figure out ya just have to have MORE POINTS!
 
DVC is not a financial investment. It's a pre-paid vacation plan.
:worship: Very important point! Don't think you are going to make money on this deal.

We bought many years ago and could sell today on the resale market for approximately what we paid per point at OKW. But that doesn't count the annual dues. We do think in our situation that it is cost effective for us because we would otherwise be spending serious money on deluxe resorts and not having the benefit of the larger accommodations and kitchen facilities.
 
We have owned for 3 years and don't have any regrets.....aside from regretting spending so much time on this forum when I could be doing other things, lol.

One thing is for sure --- We are spending more on vacations than ever because of DVC. If we didn't own DVC, we wouldn't go to Disney as much as we do now. Since a Disney trip has a lot of other costs (park tickets, food, souvenirs, airfare, etc.), I can't say that we are "saving" money compared to a week elsewhere in the country.

Yet for us it is worth it. Many of our friends have beach houses or lake houses, and that is their "identity" as a family. For us, we are a Disney family. We spend less on DVC than we would owning a beach house, yet we still get to build great family memories. And even though we technically don't "own" a place at Disney, being part of DVC makes us feel like we do.

I'd definitely do it again.
 
I have mixed feelings. I've loved (and still love) DVC, and the time it allows me to spend at Disney with various loved ones. It's been worth every penny I've spent.

But I wish I had known about the fact that the whole DVC experience is so very subject to changes. I might have bought anyway. I honestly don't know. But although I knew only home resort priority booking and staying at home resort were the only guarantees, the "extra's" (many of which have changed a lot) did matter to my decisions to buy/add on. And the ability to sell, should my "obsession" w/Disney (or my finances) change, was a very big part of my decision to go ahead.

I had no idea Disney would make so very many changes, so very frequently.

I bought 150 points in June of 2006. There were no closing costs charged by Disney then. I've since added on several times. No closing costs on add-on's until now. Now, I really dislike the whole idea of having to pay closing costs -- it's probably no more than a bump-up in per-point cost, financially speaking--but "psychologically" it bothers me a lot.

There have been so MANY changes in less than five years! Some were good, some hurt, some didn't affect me at all.

I wasn't affected by the valet parking change, and I benefited from the change that gives us free internet access.

The wait list changes affected me in a very negative way. I can no longer take spring break trips to Disney--I have a DS who's a student and can't plan ahead (or won't)...back when we could W/L day-by-day, chances were good (and it always worked, the three times I tried it) I could get a spring break trip with/for him and his friends. Now, being restricted to just 2 wait lists, and with wait lists of more than a day or two just not likely to come through, I can't justify buying airplane tickets that we may or may not be able to use. That was a "real loss" for our family.

The new DVC properties--first Animal Kingdom, then Treetop Villas, and then BLT--and now maybe GF, give us more choices, to the extent there is availability. That's a positive--but w/out waitlist potential, it's less of an advantage than it might otherwise be. I can and do preplan for T-giving, but the other "extra" trips (3-4 each year) are much more spontaneous...as so many have noted, "spontaneous" trips are much harder for DVC...especially with the far more restrictive wait list rules.

The new differentiation between direct buy owners and resale owners also gives me great pause. Not so much is it an issue of what resale owners actually lose, as it is another indication of yet more changes, some of which really do hurt my ability to use (or to sell) my DVC membership. And "the psychology" of "classes" among owners is hard for me to accept.

I've always been adverse to the idea of timeshare ownership. Disney's DVC seemed different enough to me, when I was buying, to get past that. Now, many people post that these changes are "just like timeshares." That makes me regret having gotten past my disinclination to do a timeshare. I wish I hadn't bought, from that perspective. I don't want to own a timeshare. DVC seemed different. It's a negative (for me) that it turns out it really isn't all that different.

The dining plan was available thru DVC when we bought in, altho I understand that it wasn't at first, so that was a positive change . And this new "segmenting" process seems to have as much potential for problems as it does for good flexibility. I know my linked T-giving vacation last year (I added a day, for reasons that had nothing to do w/dining plan, and got "caught" by the issues that now go w/segmenting...having to check out and in, and difficulties with dining plan allocations actually working...)--it seems to me that being able to segment, and thus use DDP only for certain days of a vacation, has to be causing more administrative issues than day-by-day wait listing--but maybe my "angst" over segmenting is because I really benefited from the availability of a day-by-day unlimited W/L rule and I don't care so much about DDP.

And speaking of DDP--that's really not DVC, but it's hard to go from a great plan (appetizers and tips included) to a much "skinnier" plan (no appetizers, no tips included)...not as big an issue for users who didn't experience the old, really great plan. A distinct negative for those of us who did.

I know that DVC never "promised" anything other than a home resort priority booking window (and ability to stay at the home resort). But I just didn't expect so many changes, so fast (we've only been members for just under 5 years). I don't know that I would have bought based on "guarantees." Actual practices (are they really all "perks?") really did make a difference in my decisions to buy, and to add on.

But, the bottom line remains that my almost 5 years' worth of DVC membership has been worth every penny. I'm not sorry I had these five years (or that I will have whatever time remains to me of enjoying my DVC membership). I just think I may not have purchased if I'd considered only the "guarantees" in making my decision. I'm pretty sure I won't add on again. (Although never say never.)

Good luck with whatever you decide!
 
I'm sure there are plenty of people with regrets, but here on the DIS DVC boards is not the place to look for them. :rolleyes1 Here, you're going to find a lot more cheerleading than regrets.

The folks who made a mistake buying into DVC (and there are a LOT of them) are not going to come to the DIS DVC boards and post their regrets. But you'll see a lot of them selling distressed contracts over on the Fidelity listings -- selling because they couldn't afford DVC, they had a financial or personal setback, etc. I guarantee you that folks selling their DVC contracts for $50 per point or less have regrets.

DVC is a great timeshare, but it is a major longterm financial committment. It's not for everyone.
 
I have mixed feelings. I've loved (and still love) DVC, and the time it allows me to spend at Disney with various loved ones. It's been worth every penny I've spent.

But I wish I had known about the fact that the whole DVC experience is so very subject to changes.

...

But although I knew only home resort priority booking and staying at home resort were the only guarantees, the "extra's" (many of which have changed a lot) did matter to my decisions to buy/add on. And the ability to sell, should my "obsession" w/Disney (or my finances) change, was a very big part of my decision to go ahead.

I had no idea Disney would make so very many changes, so very frequently.

...

Good luck with whatever you decide!

:thumbsup2

ITA

In hindsight, I probably would've bought less points. We bought more points trying to "see" the future.
What I would've done was probably didn't do too much add on but get some transfers here and there if we needed extras.
That way we would still have the base points enough for at least 1/year stay and not be tied to too many points in case we don't need them.
 
We don't have any regrets, and I have to say it has been an adventure.

One of the interesting things has been seeing how we have changed using DVC over the years. When you're parents of young kids the parks are everything, and you're so absorbed by them you don't think beyond. Surprisingly, my kids have continued to love going to WDW even though they're older (college and Sr in HS), although they use it differently. In the future I can see they will go on their own with friends, and later their families. I can see how DH and I will go on our own when we retire, or will use DVC to travel more. It has been wonderful for our family.

Addonitis is real, and you need to be able to handle it.

The comments about DVC changing are real, and I do feel vulnerable to the "Disney machine." It seems as though their vision about DVC is changing (a part from being a money maker for Disney...that has stayed the same :lmao:)(and I don't hold it against them...they are an American company that has responsibility to their shareholders). Until that settles down and gets clarified, we are in a period of uncertainty and risk which I do not like.

However, having said the above, we have no regrets!!!!! :thumbsup2
 
Did a ton of research before I purchased and knew what I was getting into.
1) Maintenance fees - run $3ish to almost $7 per point annually, depending on resort, and go up slightly each year.
2) You are only guaranteed a reservation at your HOME resort, based on availability. No more, no less.
3) While trading is an option, it's not the bet use of points.
4) I don't get upset at promos through Disney (e.g., buy 4 nights, get 3 free). I can still take advantage of those and not use points, though DVC has many times still been a better deal even for that reservation).
5) As for new buy-in incentives, those don't bother me either. It's like buying a house. Once you buy from a developer, you don't expect them to come back and offer you things they are offering to new buyer's today.
6) I knew I could plan in advance, which would give me a better shot at getting a reservation I wanted.
7) While at the time they were appreciating due to Disney's ROFR process, I knew my contract may eventually be worth nothing on the resale market.
8) You will spend money. Park tickets, food and airline tickets are expensive.

With all of that said, I think if you realize the non-glamorous things as well as the glamorous (nicer, larger accommodations, ability to resort hop - for now, and any perks being offered), it has been well worth the cost at least for us. We joined in 2007, and have added on three times since. We have taken 8 trips with the 9th being this summer. We still really enjoy our time there, and I can see DH and me going well after the kids are gone. :hug: we would have never paid cash to stay at the places we stay. Too rich for our blood the non-DVC way! LOL!

It's not for everyone, but does work really, really well for some. Best of luck with your research! :thumbsup2
 
Wish we had done it sooner, and that I had known more about UY, and possibly chosen a different one.
 
Like PP's our big regret is not buying sooner! :thumbsup2

Having said that though, you must keep in mind that first and foremost this is NOT an investment that could yield a profit. You are prepaying for resort accommodations, period! The perks are great, but you can't buy based on perks!

Addonitis is real! :lmao: We take family all of the time and have fallen victim to this strange malady! :rotfl: (Working though a case now....just looking over the books to see if we should let it pass!)

We do go at least once a year...more if we can squeeze it into our schedules. So you have to add on the cost of transportation to and from WDW as well as tickets and food. The more you go the fewer souvies you buy....but they are still there. :woohoo:

We would do it again in a heart beat and highly recommend it...just make sure that it is money you don't need for anything else and that the rest of your financial house is in order! It is definitely a luxury, not a necessity!

Good luck with the decision!
 
We bought in 2009 but considered DVC for many years as we had been going to Disney almost yearly since 1994.

We have no regrets and I am glad that I waited for the right resort to come along. We did consider buying several times but it all came down to wanting to be at a location on property that we loved--that location was the CR. Since there was no DVC option at the time, even though it would have saved money per se, we just knew we would have regrets if we were forced to stay elsewhere.

When BLT was announced, we knew it was time for us to join. At this point, my only regret was not buying more points because I am constantly wanting more, even though I may not need them as much as I think.

As far as money saved, yes and no. We were not concerned so much about spending less as we were that we could end up with much bigger places for no more than we were paying for a hotel room. Right now, we plan on summer trip a year and have stayed on that plan.

We make sure our trips are 51 weeks apart so we can get 2 trips out of one AP and that saves us money as well. If we want to do a 2nd trip, our plan is to do it during the year when we have the AP.

But, at some point, we will add on more points, we will bring extended family with us (grandchildren some day) so in the end, it won't save but rather make it affordable to do what we want.

Good luck!
 
We are in our 8th year and have no regrets. Every situation is unique, and who knows how we will feel in another 8 years. But, we have gone just about every year (sometimes twice) since 2003, and we love it. I love the resorts, accomodations, and of course the parks and golf (had to get that in).

We have brought family, given a trip as a gift, and this year we are going down with friends and their daughter, so our DD will have her best friend with her.

Even without a child, my wife and I would have considered joining. We have a small contract compared to many here (150), so at this time it is very manageable. I would love to add-on, but have no idea how our vacation plans will change over the years. To me, if we end up going every other year, our 150 will become 300, and that is plenty for us.

We have no complaints, love our vacations, and are happy with our decision. Good luck to you -

Eric
 















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