DVC 1,000 Point Club (2026)

Over the last couple of months we've been adding on more Aulani subsidized contracts (being sold by brokers as non-subsidized, which is why I haven't been posting them in ROFR thread).

Now up to 3,555 points total.
 
Over the last couple of months we've been adding on more Aulani subsidized contracts (being sold by brokers as non-subsidized, which is why I haven't been posting them in ROFR thread).

Now up to 3,555 points total.
What is your process to determine if it is subsidized prior to making an offer?
 

Over the last couple of months we've been adding on more Aulani subsidized contracts (being sold by brokers as non-subsidized, which is why I haven't been posting them in ROFR thread).

Now up to 3,555 points total.
So jealous. Congrats!!
 
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I think it's something that once it's known, it doesn't work for anyone.

So the genie stays in the bottle for others to find...and if I want more wishes.
Interesting because all of the brokers provide very little information to go off of.
Unless you are making offers and getting names off the contract to then look up their deed, if you see they bought early you continue with the deal, if not you cancel the transaction. The downside is paying to look up the deeds, the time commitment, and jerking the brokers around if you do it to many times.
The only other thing I could think of is www.fidelityrealestate.com lists the unit number, and you are targeting some of the earliest units that were sold, then possibly going through the above step anyway.
 
Interesting because all of the brokers provide very little information to go off of.
Unless you are making offers and getting names off the contract to then look up their deed, if you see they bought early you continue with the deal, if not you cancel the transaction. The downside is paying to look up the deeds, the time commitment, and jerking the brokers around if you do it to many times.
The only other thing I could think of is www.fidelityrealestate.com lists the unit number, and you are targeting some of the earliest units that were sold, then possibly going through the above step anyway.
In Hawaii you don’t have to pay to look up deeds, but it’s still harder than in Florida that’s for sure.
 





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