The $322 figure is from TTS' website -- their minimum closing cost. I figured that would be accurate for a 50-point purchase, although other brokers may charge more.
I think those are two different aspects of a transaction.
First the points. If you are buying within a particular Use Year, you buy that year's points. Period. The points are not free. What
DVC is giving you, however, is an extension of the banking deadline if you are buying a 2009 UY. Now the
real reason they do that is that they are selling you points that you probably could not possibly use if they didn't...and you wouldn't buy 2009. There is value to the banking extension, but it's not free points like some guides imply.
In truth, annual dues (AKA maintenance fees) have nothing to do with Use Year or points...but that is a confusing concept when trying to compare direct and resale because dues are often handled in the reverse manner in the resale market.
Dues are the owners' portion of the operating expenses of your home resort for the calendar year -- Jan 1 to Dec 31. They have nothing to do with points, they have to do with costs of operating the resort.
Disney pro-rates the dues. So if you close on a contract with DVC direct on Sept 1, you will pay 4 months pro-rated dues. For sticklers...the way DVC does it is actually the
correct way to apportion dues.
But in the resale arena, dues are handled differently. Generally, but not always, dues are apportioned by the points. So, for example, I have an October UY. If I sold a contract between now and Dec 31, the buyer would get all of the 2010 points, covering the period from 10/1/2010 to 9/30/2011. But I paid my 2010 dues back in January. The most normal situation in resale would be that the buyer would get the rest of 2010 "free" and would pick up the dues in January 2011.
If you use the logic some DVC guides use, the resale buyer would be getting an entire year of points from 2010 FREE...and bankable into 2011!
IF price is a buyer's main consideration (and it's not the only valid thing to consider), there really aren't any shortcuts. You just have to price out all of the costs associated with the options and make a decision based on what's the best overall fit for your family. If you are looking at price
exclusively, buying resale will price out better almost every time.