Many owners report “breaking even” after 6-7 years.
They report it -- based on incorrectly calculated math. (generally comparing it to rack rate, often forgetting to include dues, failing to discount for lost opportunity).
The most direct comparison is compared to renting points, at between $16 and $21 per point. Even a real "deal" of a re-sale contract will take 12-18 years to break even. A incentivized direct contract can break even in about 15-22 years.... A sold-out direct contract will take 25+ years to break even.
Now, this does NOT include the possibility of re-selling the contract. You can break even by using a contract for 6-10 years and then re-selling it, assuming it has increased in value over that time period. (so this may not work with the 2042 contracts).
2042 contracts would still provide 12 years of discounts.
I've broken down the math elsewhere, but no..... you get almost no discounts on 2042 contracts.
Let's say you by 100 points of BWV for $150... Add closing costs, about $16,000. Currently $8.08 dues. That's $15,352 in dues over 19 years.
Adjust the immediate costs for lost opportunity (in other words, paying $16,000 at once is actually more costly than paying $800 per year for 20 years, they are not the same) -- With an annualized discount rate of 3.5%, you get a present cost of approximately $22,200, add in the dues, you're at about $37,500 -- Spread over the 19 years of the contract, you're paying: $19.70 per point per year. That's about the same as renting -- it might even be a little more than renting.
Is this a different type of math or do you mean you see more value elsewhere?
Seems like if someone loves a 2042 resort there is still financial benefit.
Unless you can get a fully loaded contract for under $125 per point, you're not seeing any real financial benefit.