Are the Days of Walking a DVC Reservation Numbered?

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And that is why even someone who decides to walk technically wanted the room that morning because it unlocked the next 7 days.

The purpose is definitely to gain an advantage over others but because of the way the rules are written that reason counts.
Ohhhhh okay then this point is where I think we ultimately disagreed and why I think it isn't allowed under the letter of the current rules and you (maybe?) do. When you make a booking, according to the rules and regulations, you are basing it on one day. That day is specifically check in day right now.

Rules, regulations, legal contracts, etc. often use very specific wording and they definitely can make a big difference.
The check in day is the SINGULAR day that you wish to arrive to the resort and can first check into your room (or I guess just the SINGULAR day that you want your reservation to start if you just wish to leave it empty -ouch that hurts to even say!)

It doesn't say that you can book 11 months from any day that you want for any reason, or any day you wish to have on the books to cancel later, it says that you a are allowed to book 11 months from the singular day you desire as the singular check in for that singular reservation. You cannot have 2 check in days for 1 reservation. You choose the one day you want as check in, and that determines when you can try to book according to the rules.

If you know beforehand that you will walk it forward, you are no longer technically eligible to book if the date you are wanting to walk it to (your desired check in date) is still over 11 months out. As soon as you say that the true purpose of that day would be to walk it forward to a different check in date, it is no longer your desired check in day. It is only a day that you wish to have on the books, but not specifically as the check in day for that reservation. You do not want to have your reservation start that day, which is what a check-in day is.

This is the same reason why you are able to modify it later if your plans change. Your desired check in date has changed so you change to your actual desired check in date if it is also within 11 months. The rules say you are supposed to book the date you want as the start of the reservation.

"make a reservation online via the DVC Website no earlier than eleven (11) months prior to the desired check in day for a reservation"
 
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Has anyone ever starting a walking service? It is a PIA to walk. The walking service would walk a reservation for you. If I were to start this service, I would call it The Walkin’ Dude. How much could I charge?
 
I think allowing 3-4 modifications to a reservation before requiring re-booking might be a good spot.
So, I am making a reservation right now which is not quite 11 months--trying to get 7 nights total. I started with 2 nights. I added one yesterday. I added another night today. Under the 3-4 modification rule, would that mean I am finished for this booking?

This past summer, I stitched together some random nights as they became available (probably at around the 60 day out timeframe). I am positive that I made more than 3-4 modifications.

Would modifications include changing guests? I change guests all the time. Someone drops out. Someone else is added in.

Meanwhile, the person walking the reservation only has to change the reservation on the 6th night to move forward 6 nights at a time. They could do this--what, 4 times? That would cover quite a bit of time.
 
Has anyone ever starting a walking service? It is a PIA to walk. The walking service would walk a reservation for you. If I were to start this service, I would call it The Walkin’ Dude. How much could I charge?
Not sure about the cost, but you missed an opportunity to call it what all members do when they walk reservations lol...

Walkin' The Line
 

So, I am making a reservation right now which is not quite 11 months--trying to get 7 nights total. I started with 2 nights. I added one yesterday. I added another night today. Under the 3-4 modification rule, would that mean I am finished for this booking?

This past summer, I stitched together some random nights as they became available (probably at around the 60 day out timeframe). I am positive that I made more than 3-4 modifications.

Would modifications include changing guests? I change guests all the time. Someone drops out. Someone else is added in.

Meanwhile, the person walking the reservation only has to change the reservation on the 6th night to move forward 6 nights at a time. They could do this--what, 4 times? That would cover quite a bit of time.
I'd say change everything but the check-in day all you want. Limit the number of modifications to the check-in day without having to start over. This is all hypothetical, of course.
If it were 4 modifications, it would obviously allow some walking. I just think that if DVC ever decreed a finite number of allowed modifications, everyone would do it so it would confer no booking advantage at that point.
 
I'd say change everything but the check-in day all you want. Limit the number of modifications to the check-in day without having to start over. This is all hypothetical, of course.
If it were 4 modifications, it would obviously allow some walking. I just think that if DVC ever decreed a finite number of allowed modifications, everyone would do it so it would confer no booking advantage at that point.
Unfortunately even with just 4 modifications to the check in day allowed, you could still walk a reservation up to I think around 4 months? But only if you have enough points to book a whole month solid. Book a start day, extend over time to a month, drop all but the last 1 or 2 days, repeat 4x.

So that would basically limit walking to around 4x the longest single stay you can book. Better than nothing but still not amazing, and it would still let large point holders like renters walk reservations easier than the rest of us.
 
Unfortunately even with just 4 modifications to the check in day allowed, you could still walk a reservation up to I think around 4 months? But only if you have enough points to book a whole month solid. Book a start day, extend over time to a month, drop all but the last 1 or 2 days, repeat 4x.

So that would basically limit walking to around 4x the longest single stay you can book. Better than nothing but still not amazing, and it would still let large point holders like renters walk reservations easier than the rest of us.
Agree :(
 
With 30 pages.. I’m sure it has been addressed already. Since walking is ‘unintended’. Plus the booking on ‘check out’ or ‘check in’ has no way to stop the walking ability..is to do away with book up to 7 night rule. Keep the max number nights can book or adjust it too..doesn’t matter. On your home advantage 11 or other resort 7 month..book all that you can and want that’s available that day (all in with your points!) Might be a way to sell crazy amounts of more points. You have the points for 18 days..book it!! Yeehaw! Now each reservation though can’t ever be modified any further to extend the dates without first cancelling the original and start over. You can modify later cutting back on the check in date, shortening the trip that way. No more walking. Problem solved. Looking at the calendar, planning a trip, you will know what’s available or already booked up in the future. Having more points is the advantage over others to get that prized room. All still on fair enough playing ground when making the initial reservation. Just some can out points you instead of later walking over you.
I won’t get into it again, but it’s impossible to walk if booking backwards from check out day.
 
I won’t get into it again, but it’s impossible to walk if booking backwards from check out day.
While I don't think that it would be a great fix going back to booking via check out day (most people would just book one day at a time like they used to), I will say that I think it did help keep the booking time consistent like the rules want. You log in at 8:00 am and there will most likely be a room to at least compete for.

I also think that system did help keep the bookings as small battles between the members each day (or at least each 1-7 days now that they have added the +7 to the 11 month window) for the rooms instead of having big battles establishing walking reservations and then having the rest of the members have a large battle over any scraps that are left over when their booking window actually opens.

It just ended up being very inconvenient to book daily
 
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Has anyone ever starting a walking service? It is a PIA to walk. The walking service would walk a reservation for you. If I were to start this service, I would call it The Walkin’ Dude. How much could I charge?
It’s called the commercial/spec renters
Has anyone ever starting a walking service? It is a PIA to walk. The walking service would walk a reservation for you. If I were to start this service, I would call it The Walkin’ Dude. How much could I charge?
Prices can be found on the brokers/facebook/rental thread
 
Spec reservations aka confirmed reservations became normalized in the post-covid era.

Up until then most reservations were customers seeking out owners and asking if dates were open, THEN dates would get booked and a deal made.

The glut of excess points from cancelled/postponed trips and revenge/peak demand travel coincided. That caused the brokers to start offering new advice… secure a reservation first because inventory was so tight. That strategy gained popularity as renters and rentees got more familiar with how it worked and the potential advantages. The boom of spec res was born.
And in order to secure those hard-to-get "confirmed" reservations, the commercial renters need to walk them.

If DVC cracks down on commercial renting, it won't necessarily eliminate walking entirely, but I'm convinced it will make a huge dent in the number of walked reservations, because owners wanting those dates will no longer be competing against those commercial "uber-renters" with their thousands of points and lightning fast bots snatching up dates, which will reduce the NEED to walk in order to get the dates they want (i.e., a "market correction" of supply and demand by eliminating commercial renting from the equation).

If DVC cracks down on commercial renting, there are a good number of "commercial" owners, who will have a LOT of worthless (to them) points on their hands, since they only have all of those points to commercially rent for profit. If a crackdown occurs, I would expect to see some of these "big hitters" put out of business pretty quickly and needing to dump all of their points cheap. It would be a ROFR bargain bonanza for Disney.

Additionally, all of those commercial renters are in direct competition with Disney cash reservations of DVC rooms. Crushing that competition by enforcing the ban on commercial renting seems like a no-brainer. Disney stands to gain a lot financially, which is why I'm shocked they haven't cracked down on the commercial renters already.
 
Has anyone ever starting a walking service? It is a PIA to walk. The walking service would walk a reservation for you. If I were to start this service, I would call it The Walkin’ Dude. How much could I charge?
Not sure about the cost, but you missed an opportunity to call it what all members do when they walk reservations lol...

Walkin' The Line
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Except you are not personally using your membership. Your sister is. She is not an owner. I firmly believe that owners should get first priority for hard to book rooms, especially at the 11 month mark. If all owners and only owners had a fair shot at the 11 month mark, that to me is ‘fair’. I realize you disagree. If someone doesn’t want to buy because non owners wait behind owners, I think most owners would approve. I realize you disagree.
I think owners should be getting priority, but I also think owner priority should cover at least one (or more) gift reservations per year—but the devil is in the details on ferreting out gift v rental— not allowing primary guest name changes on reservations booked before say 8 months (I could also be talked into 6 months) out might help?
And this would only apply during the highest demand periods, so depending when/where your sister’s reservation was booked, might not even count.

I like this solution because it’s just targeting the heart of issue without much in the way of unintended consequences. The only people who will absolutely hate everything about it are commercial renters hyper focused on pulling the cream out of the system for maximum profit potential. Owners could still rent out their points too. The only place they’d be limited is those highest demand resorts/periods, and even then still get up to two in that category.
I like the idea of prohibiting renting any reservations more than 6 months out. Give actual owners (and guests!) priority at the hot spots. If all you’re trying to do is cover dues and
a few extra dollars, there’s no need to be walking hard to get reservations or booking the ultra high value rooms.
I really think this overwhelmingly applies to studios with barely any inventory (AK VAL, BW SV, etc) or select resorts during an extremely high demand time of year.

I just don’t believe members are having issues booking 99% of the rooms available at 11m.
I think it applies to studios (and the 2Bd that require available studios) anywhere a commercial renter can easily get $25/pt or more.
As an owner of both BRV and RIV, I agree there is walking other than the value and club level rooms. RIV is constantly being walked and BRV gets walked for the holidays, it’s happening right now.
I am worried (and maybe Disney is already seeing this?) that restricted resale will dramatically exacerbate walking. Millions of points can transfer in, and an increasing number of RIV/VDH points can never transfer out. A recipe for desperation. If I had restricted resale (currently refuse to buy it, might make an exception for a truly exceptional location) and banked points after a trip cancellation, I’d be walking from the first day of my UY so I didn’t lose my points entirely.
I am wondering if part of this thread is because the 11m is close to Christmas 2025 and people are looking at availability at WDW and seeing a lot of the lower cost Studios and 2BD LO’s already booked out…. a sense of heightened awareness if you will….
🎶 It’s the most walkable time of the year… (members are walking for Thanksgiving right now, but I suppose a Christmas person might be starting brutally early as well).
I’d rather see them increase the rule to 11 plus 14, but with the limitation that once you make that reservation, it can’t be extended, only shortened until you are 10 months from check in date.
<snip>
Shortening would be fine because it releases rooms back to others but the extension just can’t happen until 10 months from the check in date.

Obviously it could benefit larger point owners who can hold a full 14 days, but at least it curbs walking because no one can achieve a walk more than that.
I truly think this would mean most desirable weeks go exclusively to people who can book all 14 days and then dump the first 5+ days.
Then the walk is just limited to how many points you have. Those with more points would just book a really long reservation a month ahead and cancel the first days. Way too much of an advantage to those with a lot of points. You would have to limit modifying that reservation in some way as well for it to actually work
Yes, another proposed modification that would help commercial renters at expensive of middle class families.
Good lord, has anyone here actually come close to doing to this?! When I hear about walking, I'm thinking a couple of days to a couple of weeks. Am I that naive?
I have read reports of people struggling to “start their walk” more than 6 months out. I’m not crazy (or responsible, lol) enough to do it— which is one reason I don’t own at AKV.
I better start walking a standard studio at RIV for the 75th WDW anniversary in October 2046. With the other resorts closing in 2042, there may not be very many rooms! 🤣
At least UY makes a hard break each year.
Perfect, so is 4 modifications enough for someone to walk?
A month, if you have enough points.
And in order to secure those hard-to-get "confirmed" reservations, the commercial renters need to walk them.

If DVC cracks down on commercial renting, it won't necessarily eliminate walking entirely, but I'm convinced it will make a huge dent in the number of walked reservations, because owners wanting those dates will no longer be competing against those commercial "uber-renters" with their thousands of points and lightning fast bots snatching up dates, which will reduce the NEED to walk in order to get the dates they want (i.e., a "market correction" of supply and demand by eliminating commercial renting from the equation).

If DVC cracks down on commercial renting, there are a good number of "commercial" owners, who will have a LOT of worthless (to them) points on their hands, since they only have all of those points to commercially rent for profit. If a crackdown occurs, I would expect to see some of these "big hitters" put out of business pretty quickly and needing to dump all of their points cheap. It would be a ROFR bargain bonanza for Disney.

Additionally, all of those commercial renters are in direct competition with Disney cash reservations of DVC rooms. Crushing that competition by enforcing the ban on commercial renting seems like a no-brainer. Disney stands to gain a lot financially, which is why I'm shocked they haven't cracked down on the commercial renters already.
I wish I could like your post twice, I agree with all of it, but I’m certain a major reason they haven’t taken action is it would be harder to sell PoliTow at $230/pt if PVB resale plunged below $100 this fall. I feel like stopping renting before 6m, but allowing it after 6m for the average member (occasional renter or even bought points to pay for points member) would be a good trade off.
Maybe commercial renters can keep renting at VB, HHI, and OKW during slow periods of the year? 🤷🏼‍♀️
 
I’d rather see them increase the rule to 11 plus 14, but with the limitation that once you make that reservation, it can’t be extended, only shortened until you are 10 months from check in date.

It won’t completely stop it but it would cut it down. And, the plus 14 is only at the time of original booking. Those that truly go longer than 7 would be able to do that.

If you realize you need more, then you make a new one to merge later. You don’t get to extend up to 14 after the fact.

Shortening would be fine because it releases rooms back to others but the extension just can’t happen until 10 months from the check in date.

Obviously it could benefit larger point owners who can hold a full 14 days, but at least it curbs walking because no one can achieve a walk more than that.

There are some people, especially international members, who book 3 or 4 weeks vacations. The limit for a single stay is 30 days, 14 days is just an arbitrary number. And this proposal would give large owners a really big advantage over smaller contracts. I am against any solution that favors large contracts (call me socialist if you must).
Most of the proposal I've read have this in common: everyone suggests something that would work for them, without considering the membership as a whole. I hope DVC will not just consider the average member, but the interests of everyone.
 
I am worried (and maybe Disney is already seeing this?) that restricted resale will dramatically exacerbate walking. Millions of points can transfer in, and an increasing number of RIV/VDH points can never transfer out. A recipe for desperation. If I had restricted resale (currently refuse to buy it, might make an exception for a truly exceptional location) and banked points after a trip cancellation, I’d be walking from the first day of my UY so I didn’t lose my points entirely.
This is a concern for sure! 50 of our RIV points are resale and I do worry about availability when I make those reservations. I am careful to use them all so we don’t have points to bank. DH and I have talked about this very scenario as more of those direct points get sold and become restricted on the market.
 

There's been conversation about potential changes for years. I expect most of the solutions they discuss are way more cumbersome and confusing than the problem. And I've never been clear on how big a problem it actually is - seems to only impact a few particular room types. But it might be worse than I realize.
Walking can be easily be stopped by just reducing the number of times you can drop the 1st day of the reservation for high demand rooms such as but not limited to ALK valve and club level. They could institute a policy were you can only drop the 1st day once or twice before you have to cancel the entire reservation and rebook it. The exception would be if the dates you need to change are already within the 11 month window and are available to people not already walking.
 
I think owners should be getting priority, but I also think owner priority should cover at least one (or more) gift reservations per year—but the devil is in the details on ferreting out gift v rental— not allowing primary guest name changes on reservations booked before say 8 months (I could also be talked into 6 months) out might help?
I routinely book with just my name so that the system doesn’t time out on me.

I will now get penalized for going back in and adding the rest of my party to the reservation?

I also wouldn’t be able to contact MS to have my name removed and my SO (who is on the contract) put in my place?

These are not gift or rental reservations as they are for our family, but how would one know since I modified the names right away?
 
This is a concern for sure! 50 of our RIV points are resale and I do worry about availability when I make those reservations. I am careful to use them all so we don’t have points to bank. DH and I have talked about this very scenario as more of those direct points get sold and become restricted on the market.

Riviera points are currently and will always only be good at Riviera within the home resort priority window, just like points at every other resort. And even today, standard view rooms can be difficult to get unless you book during the home resort priority window. So I think anyone saying that it will be harder than normal to book at Riviera in the future because of resale restrictions is just repeating FUD.
 
Riviera points are currently and will always only be good at Riviera within the home resort priority window, just like points at every other resort. And even today, standard view rooms can be difficult to get unless you book during the home resort priority window. So I think anyone saying that it will be harder than normal to book at Riviera in the future because of resale restrictions is just repeating FUD.
I disagree as the other O14 resale owners have a chance to switch at 7 months to a different resort if there dates are not available during their preferred travel time. Resale Riviera owners can't and must book RIV so it will become much more competitive at the 11 month window as when it switches to 7 months others with qualifying points can book RIV and possible take that room away if they are not on it.
 
I disagree as the other O14 resale owners have a chance to switch at 7 months to a different resort if there dates are not available during their preferred travel time. Resale Riviera owners can't and must book RIV so it will become much more competitive at the 11 month window as when it switches to 7 months others with qualifying points can book RIV and possible take that room away if they are not on it.

If they "switch" at 7 months, stands to reason they booked Riviera at 11 months...so there is literally no difference. The only way this FUD works is if we assume people have Riviera points that they use purely as sleep around points today - not booking Riviera villas, only booking other resorts at 7 months. Which I am sure there probably are some people who do that but not many.
 
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