spiceycat said:
when the finally 10 years are here - if WDW is still going great - guess what those prices won't be down. Instead WDW will buying back the contracts and RENTING out the villa.... they are very, very good at doing this. and they would before they let anyone stay onsite without a major investment....
Pat, I couldn't disagree more. Heck, CRO isn't that good at renting out the weeks they get from DVC now. And while I think DVC will still have some value at 10 years out, I seriously doubt it will be anywhere near the percentage it is now compared to nightly rates or adjusted for inflation. But we won't know for sure until the time comes will we, LOL.
Zmsksirt, there is some truth to what you say. There certainly are cheaper alternatives. DVC is right for one group and one only, those willing to invest in deluxe options to stay on property at WDW. Even then they should avoid going mostly on weekends. However, you are way off base in your attitude toward DVC. For the right owner, DVC is by far the best vehicle to accomplish the task. DVC is a leasehold property. We can argue over deeds, RTU, etc but all that is academic, it means nothing one way or another. Whether DVC is the most expensive folly or the best vacation investment for a person totally depends on how they use it and their vacation preferences. There are many RTU properties that are highly desirable. The thinking that deeded means good and RTU bad is, in and of itself, a flawed thinking. I own RTU at DVC and MX and deeded for several Marriott weeks. I also own true Hybrids in Aruba where they are RTU but with an automatically renewing lease and the government must buy the existing buildings if they take it back at 60 years.
It is true that later in the term this balance will shift and continue to do so. Given the free passes and use I've had, I'd already paid for my DVC points, all of them. Even if I use Motel 6 prices for the baseline value of the nights I've stayed. If I walked away, I would still be ahead. Thankfully I can sell for more than I paid for them but this too will change at some point. Not many timeshares can say their product, RTU or not, has appreciated over time and that includes almost all Marriott resort even for pre-construction prices. In some ways, not having to be tied to the property forever is likely a good thing but it depends on the resot. The Whaler owners just got a Special assessment that essentially doubled their yearly fees, which were high already. Even the Kauai Marriott has had significant Special Assessments and given the flood damage there, they can count on more SA in the future.
I'm not aware that DVC didn't have deeds. I have a friend who bought in 1992 and one of my contracts I bought resale was originally bought in 1992, both had deeds. If they waited, it was less than a year. I think there are others on this board who bought even earlier, maybe they'll have the info.
Considering that most all timeshare weeks were bought retail at one point or another and that most timeshares are worth pennies on the dollar, no matter how poor a choice DVC is, it's a lot better choice than AT LEAST 98% of those that bought retail. DVC is not for everyone but it is great for those that see value in staying at deluxe resorts on WDW property. And it is a very flexible system with high fees but essentially no add on fees. It is not for one happy to buy somewhere like SA, Foxrun or Australia and trade to easy to get places like non DVC Orlando, or Branson.