My parents own a week at a timeshare through RCI and they want to give it to me. The only string attached is that I have to pick up the yearly maintenance fee. They have owned this since I was a kid, my brother now owns the other two weeks that they had. I just don't understand how this works. Is it worth it for me to take this over from them? I know we can go anywhere we want with an exchange, and even possibly a cruise? If anyone owns one of these and can answer my questions it would be such a help. My parents are not in the best of health and I don't want to pester them.
I am a timeshare addict! I own over a dozen timeshares, and really love them! I am happy to answer questions about timeshares -- anyone with questions, feel free to PM or email me.
I would need to know exactly what resort and week you own to tell you whether this timeshare is worthwhile or not. However, here are some general tips:
1) RCI is an exchange company; they don't own timeshares (at least not directly.) So, what your parents probably own is a week each year at a specific resort. (Other possibilities include a week every
other year at a specific resort, a week every year that can be
chosen from a group of resorts, etc.) Probably, when you parents say their timeshare is through RCI, they mean that the the resort is "affiliated" with RCI, i.e., RCI will accept their week as a deposit.
2) What RCI does is serve as a clearinghouse; you can deposit your week with them, and choose another week from the ones that other people have deposited. However, it is NOT TRUE that you can go anywhere that they have listed in their "wish book" of resort; this is a lie that timeshare salespeople tell in order to sell timeshares. RCI will offer you a much more limited selection of resorts, depending on what they have available and how desirable they consider your week to be. Most timeshare exchange companies work the same way -- they offer you only a subset of what they have available, based on how desirable they consider your week to be. However, each company has a different idea of what they consider desirable, so a week that trades poorly with one exchange company might trade well with another exchange company.
3) RCI is the biggest timeshare exchange company, but it has the highest fees and the lowest consumer satisfaction. In fact, a bunch of their members are suing them right now. This doesn't guarantee that you will be unhappy using them, but it does make it a lot more likely. However, you have many more options for using a timeshare than just depositing it with RCI; see the list in my next item.
4) When you own a timeshare, your usual choices with it are to a) use it yourself; b) rent it out; c) let a friend use it; d) arrange for a direct exchange with another timeshare user; e) exchange it through one of large exchange companies (RCI or II), which can only be done if your resort has affiliated with that company; or f) depost it with an "independent" exchange company, which does not require resorts to affiliate. In general, exchanging RCI would be my last choice for a timeshare I owned; if I had a week I didn't want to use myself, I would rather use another exchange company or rent it out. However, RCI does work OK in some circumstances.
Can you find out what your parents own, and what the fees are? That would enable me to give you better advice.