Before you buy into DVC (which, for me, would be after I bought a house) be sure you understand the use of points. This year they have changed the point charges to reflect lowering points on weekends (F,S) and raising points during the week (S,M,T,W,Th). We are now 60 points short for our normal vacations. I mention this because if you did all of your research a year ago, this would not be a factor.
That is an astonishing difference for your trips! I haven't seen anything like that difference between the charts for the times we would go. So the "mileage" of different people, different trips, different resorts, different times of year will vary widely.
Is there anyone else out there that rents rather than owns their home and still bought into DVC?
YES.
And as far as I can tell, that is the ONLY question you're asking right?
All the other stuff is just why you haven't yet bought a house, but is absolutely irrelevant to the question that is actually on your mind, from what I'm reading.
True, not everyone gets married.
However, people who do get married have legal protections.
And unmarried people can get a lawyer, spend some extra money that legally married people don't have to spend, to get all of those protections. Just like buying property with a business partner, fully covered legally by a contract, an unmarried couple can cover themselves as well.
Is a DVC only $7500? Is that a one time fee? Do you pay anything other then that? How long is your ownership (forever or limited?)? Can you trade your "spot" like you can with other timeshares? I am just curious how this all works.
The poster you quoted was talking about the price back in '92 when they first wanted to buy, but at the time that amount (that feels low now) felt huge to them.
OP, we are happy renters, with only the slightest twinge (only recently started, and only in one of us) towards the idea of "owning" a house. We love the freedom we get by renting, and the time we gain by not having to do all that maintenance on the place.
And yet we bought into DVC. Do we get to deduct the portion of, er, what is it, taxes? interest? something like that? NO. Because we don't already itemized deductions. Someone who has a mortgage on a house is likely itemizing already, and so they can itemize the bit from DVC too.
But we're still glad we did it, and it doesn't feel anywhere near as weird as it did just thinking about it.