OK. I keep seeing this statement, and I have to disagree (somewhat). It simply is not always true. For someone that does not stay in value resorts, plans to visit Disney on a regular basis for a number of years (the # depends on the particulars, but we're not talking 3-5 yrs here), purchasing a properly-sized contract may well result in measurable savings,
even after figuring in financing costs. Run some numbers using some historical data posted on these boards - how many people say they wished they had bought even just several years ago? These people paid OOP for accommodations each year, while the cost of points has risen as much as 20% for some resorts. (seems to me OKW has risen 8-10% in the last few
months!). Assuming these potential buyers had the funds to purchase a few years ago, they would have earned a rate of return on their money (the net diff of a
DVC investment then minus $$ spent for rooms during that same time period) of what - 1-2% on avg?
The key - once again - is to be honest with yourselves. If you know you are going to WDW every yr (for some, more than once a yr) and you know you are not booking in a value resort, the truth is you will be spending $$. If DVC vacationing fits your family style, there is a chance a purchase now makes more financial sense than waiting several years and paying OOP in the meanwhile.
Please understand I am NOT advocating people take on a longer term commitment for more $$ than they can afford - I am saying there are times when that $$ might go further if applied differently. I know we recently returned from a trip where we stayed at CR (garden view) for 9 days. That $3,000 or so alone would have paid for maintenance fees and loan payment interest for several years! If we finance through our home equity (4.98%) or a credit card offer (3.99% until paid in full) the interest would be even less. Now, we paid rack rate because of free dining, but back that out and we
still would have spent less in int and maintenance for an SSR contract. We stayed in value season, besides - now, use a similar example for someone that must travel outside of school schedules, and the cost difference widens.
Please note that I am not comparing buying vs renting, but rather explaining that "as long as you don't finance" is not always a true statement.