WolfpackFan
Retired and loving every minute of it!!
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2000
- Messages
- 2,539
I know folks go thru this exercise periodically, but I thought I'd run the figures myself. I know I'm not taking into account the future value of money, the rising cost of lodging or the rising cost of dues, etc. but here is my rough analysis. If I've missed anything, please let me know.
With Magical Beginnings we will be paying $74 per point. For 150 points that is a total of $11,100.
With 150 points just as an example we could spend 6 nights at a resort during June using only 1 weekend night and 4 nights during January using no weekend nights - that gives 10 nights of lodging with 150 points. Figuring that these resorts are Deluxe resorts, at a minimum the nightly cost if you paid out of pocket would be $200/night. Most of the resorts are even higher than that. For 10 nights that means it would cost $2,000 per year.
Now you have to figure in your annual dues, around $500+/year. So subtract out of the 10 nights, 3 nights to cover annual dues. So that means you would be recovering 7 nights at $200/night out of the original cost, this would total $1400/year. Take the total cost of $11,100 and divide by $1400 and you come out with 8 years.
What this mean is after 8 years we are staying free for the next 32 years. Not a bad return on investment and it would be even better if you based it upon staying in a 1 bedroom unit rather than a studio. They are much, much more expensive, so if you had the points it would be an even quicker payoff.
I just thought this was interesting. Sounds like a no-brainer decision to me.
With Magical Beginnings we will be paying $74 per point. For 150 points that is a total of $11,100.
With 150 points just as an example we could spend 6 nights at a resort during June using only 1 weekend night and 4 nights during January using no weekend nights - that gives 10 nights of lodging with 150 points. Figuring that these resorts are Deluxe resorts, at a minimum the nightly cost if you paid out of pocket would be $200/night. Most of the resorts are even higher than that. For 10 nights that means it would cost $2,000 per year.
Now you have to figure in your annual dues, around $500+/year. So subtract out of the 10 nights, 3 nights to cover annual dues. So that means you would be recovering 7 nights at $200/night out of the original cost, this would total $1400/year. Take the total cost of $11,100 and divide by $1400 and you come out with 8 years.
What this mean is after 8 years we are staying free for the next 32 years. Not a bad return on investment and it would be even better if you based it upon staying in a 1 bedroom unit rather than a studio. They are much, much more expensive, so if you had the points it would be an even quicker payoff.
I just thought this was interesting. Sounds like a no-brainer decision to me.