Dean said:
Find your best deal and control the closing company. Do your due diligence no matter who you deal with. I don't think it makes that much difference otherwise and certainly wouldn't pay more to buy from a specific one. A private sale will likely save you a number of dollars. You can control the closing costs better putting them more in a reasonable $250 or so range, less if you feel like doing much of the work yourself. And you usually can save enough on the actual price and many times on the maint fees to make it more than worthwhile. Esp since most of the resale companies wrongly suggest you need to pay the entire years fees even if your only getting points for part of the year. You also have the ability to play around with alternate options like a permanent swap of X for Y, something you have essentially no chance with through a broker. But it will depend on specifics and you should look at every deal for what it is and what it is not whether it be private, resale company or through
DVC. Only then can you compare apples to apples.
Dean's points are all well-taken, but Dean has the benefit of being an expert in the timeshare world. I'm not being cute - he really is, and I often recommend people contact him with technical questions about the industry...especially outside DVC. Unfortunately, I don't have Dean's experience or knowledge of the timeshare industry, so I would not feel as comfortable as he does going my own way.
I think an experienced resale broker can be critical with
one aspect of a resale purchase -- ROFR. The handful of realtors who deal with DVC often have a much better handle on what will pass ROFR, and what will not, than we do. If you don't pass ROFR, all other components of your contract are irrelevent to you -- you lost the deal.
In my own case, I was in a position where the only recent ROFR on the resort I was buying, that
I was aware of, was at $70. The seller was asking $73, but I wondered about $72. My broker suggested that $73 was a good price, and that other contracts had been ROFR'd at $72. That wasn't speculation; she knew. I paid $73, other contracts were ROFR'd at $72...and the rest is DVC history!
We recently (this week) had a situation where someone was trying to buy a private sale at considerably less than is going to pass. We don't know everything here, but there are some contracts we just look at and say
We tried to give that person sound advice, and we probably moved them in the right direction, but if they offered what I think they did, they are going to get ROFR'd. That's the weak link in going out on your own - you could miss a great contract for a couple hundred bucks.
The other situation where I think a good broker/realtor can be very helpful is when problems arise in the transaction - the seller starts acting weird, documents are messed up, Disney loses the paperwork, etc. They can be very helpful in those situations.
Again, if you are an expert in this stuff, you don't need to worry about those issues. But, as the wise man once said, "A man's got to know his limitations." I know some of mine, and I want a strong partner in my corner.