johnkrusinski
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2002
- Messages
- 88
They have purchase incentives all the time, cruises have been a common one lately. $100 a pt for SSR IS a lot, you can get it for about half resale. All you give up is the purchase incentive, easy financing potential and cash type exchange options like DCL. IMO making it harder (but not impossible to finance) and pushing one away form cash type exchanges is doing you a favor, not a disservice. For SSR, I'd definitely go resale. IF you decide to proceed retail and the cruise is an issue, make sure you have the cruise booked you want by the time you sign on the dotted line.Hello, I am completely ignorant on buying into the DVC. Please help guide me with any negotiations if allowed when purchasing. We are looking at Saratoga Springs since that is where my sales rep is pushing us towards. Is there better deals? They are telling 100.00 a point! That seems like a lot. Also, I heard that you can ask for a free family cruise to close the deal, is this true???
Thanks for any help and suggestions.
It is a lot. You should be able to get SSR resale for <$55, and there have been some sales somewhat lower.They are telling 100.00 a point! That seems like a lot.
If you are actually offered that, I'd sure get it in writing, as Dean suggests. If it's a legitimate offer, should be no problem at all to put it in writing in the body of the sales contract.Also, I heard that you can ask for a free family cruise to close the deal, is this true???
...which most folks think are trivial. AND...in the spirit of full disclosure, the benefits which are retained by buying direct are NOT guaranteed and can be changed at any moment by one stroke of the Mouse's pen.* Resale will be less than purchasing directly from Disney, but come with restrictions.
It's not more difficult; the interest rate might be slightly higher than Disney's 10.75% or 14.75% rates. OTOH, you might be able to finance with a home equity loan for half that.* It might be more difficult to finance a resale. Disney financing my not be cheaper, but may be more libral.
Good point, and equally true of buying direct from Disney. You need to really understand what you are buying (or not buying) whenever purchasing ANY timeshare...but few do.* You have to evaluate resales carefully. A resale contract may be relitivily cheap, but it may also not have any usable points for 2 years. That doesn't make it a bad deal, but you have to know what your getting.
Cliches are cool, but just because something gets repeated a lot on an Internet discussion board doesn't mean it's the perfect answer for every family. Sometimes it's just the security blanket for folks too lazy to really figure out what they're doing.* Finaly, it might be tempting to get the lowest cost per point, but I think the old saying "buy where you want to stay" still holds true.
There are sometimes special incentives, but no negotiation. And you have to remember that the "incentives" are discounts off a selling price that is often DOUBLE what you could get the same thing for buying resale.Or is there NO NEGOTIATIONS with Retail?
Both. Bought my first contract resale, then bought a smaller add-on direct when they had a legitimately-good promotion....something they haven't offered in a while.Thanks for helping out with the questions. Do you own a DVC? If so, did you buy re-sale or direct retail?
I don't think this ever reasonably applied as it's thrown around the board though I'm guilty of saying it myself when the price differences were much less than they are now. IMO, the better thought is to buy the the best value that gives you what you're comfortable with. Someone who pays $140 a point for BLT then rotates their stays between all of the resorts just wasted most or all of the $$$ difference even with the lower fees which will never make up for much of the higher cost even if the the maint fee differences hold (which they won't).* Finaly, it might be tempting to get the lowest cost per point, but I think the old saying "buy where you want to stay" still holds true.
I've seen a BWV sale for $46 a point. I don't know if it passed, but I really wanted it, but it was a differnt UY. I do find that the smaller the contract the higher the point. I saw one I wanted yesterday and called, but the place was closed. I've had addonitis really bad lately and I just can't shake it. It's easier buying the first time vs adding on and wanting to mantain the same UY. I'm an April UY and the contracts are not as easy to find that fit my need right now. When I find it I'm sure this will be my last add on, so I want the right fit!![]()
Not to me. That same $2000 invested during that 30 years would be worth $20K or more adjusted for inflation depending on specifics.Though everyone wants to get the absolute lowest price, and the price/point difference seems huge if you're looking at a $50 vs. $60 per point contract, over the term of your ownership (assuming you own till expiration), the difference is pretty negligable.
Take a 200 point contract, if there were a $2000 difference, over your 30+ years of ownership, you're talking less than $70/year.
You might instead think of it that a couple years ago, it would have been $80/point and not $60.
Not to me. That same $2000 invested during that 30 years would be worth $20K or more adjusted for inflation in 30 years depending on specifics.
I think it's safe to say it will if invested reasonably, it could be a lot more but it certainly could be less. All better than zero which is what you have if you overpay for anything. The point is that differences in prices (of anything) at any point in time are not necessarily negligible. Of course it depends in large part what you do with the differences. If you simply blow it, it doesn't matter and brings to mind the old adage of a fool and their money are soon parted. And if you finance those differences, it's a double whammy.It "could" be worth $20K or more in 30 years, not necessarily "would".