izzy25
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2014
- Messages
- 215
It all depends on how much money you would save by getting a DVC versus a moderate room and which DVC you would book.We will be traveling to the World next April and still can't decide if we should rent points for a DVC room or just go with a moderate resort. It will be three of us, 2 adults and our 9 year old daughter. Help me with pros and cons please of both!
Note also that next April includes Easter, which is an extremely busy week at all of WDW. While it's not in DVC high season, many bookings can still be a challenge near Easter.
That said, it adds costs on a per-point basis. Depending on resort and room type, you can often do as well with a good room discount via a travel agency or even a Disney offer. Using OP's dates and current point charts, adding travel insurance makes a Lake View studio at BLT (pricier than BWV or BCV, but less than VGF or Poly) cost slightly less than $2500. With a good agency discount, they could get a Garden View room at the Contemporary Resort for the same dates for about the same price, and have two real beds, daily housekeeping, and Disney cancellation policies without travel insurance.We rent points for every stay now and love it. We've gotten great prices and have had all good experiences. But it's not for everyone and the cons above are outlined well. Personally, I think it's worth a try and if you find it doesn't suit you well, you'll know for next time.
As an aside, there's one point rental broker that has a cancel any reason insurance policy you can add on that will let you cancel and get a refund after it's booked. Not sure of the specifics but if that's one of the things bothering you, it may be worth looking into.
That said, it adds costs on a per-point basis. Depending on resort and room type, you can often do as well with a good room discount via a travel agency or even a Disney offer. Using OP's dates and current point charts, adding travel insurance makes a Lake View studio at BLT (pricier than BWV or BCV, but less than VGF or Poly) cost slightly less than $2500. With a good agency discount, they could get a Garden View room at the Contemporary Resort for the same dates for about the same price, and have two real beds, daily housekeeping, and Disney cancellation policies without travel insurance.
Which is to say: Consider where you want to stay. Shop around.
That said, it adds costs on a per-point basis. Depending on resort and room type, you can often do as well with a good room discount via a travel agency or even a Disney offer. Using OP's dates and current point charts, adding travel insurance makes a Lake View studio at BLT (pricier than BWV or BCV, but less than VGF or Poly) cost slightly less than $2500. With a good agency discount, they could get a Garden View room at the Contemporary Resort for the same dates for about the same price, and have two real beds, daily housekeeping, and Disney cancellation policies without travel insurance.
Which is to say: Consider where you want to stay. Shop around.
Late April isn't a high season, once they're past Easter. It's "Regular." Regular is slightly higher than Regular 2, and for Regular 2 this year I was able to book a room at the Poly to attach to the end of my DVC stay (ran out of points for the number of nights needed) for under $250/night.But if they're traveling in April which is a higher season, discounts and exclusive agency offerings may be few and far between. It definitely pays to shop around.
When you shop around and compare apple to apples, instead of apples to oranges, you will always save way more money renting points.
We rented this February for the first time and it was great. Stayed at BCV, which we couldn't have afforded otherwise. We were in a studio and I loved having the kitchenette. We are two adults and DD who is almost 4. We sat on the balcony and enjoyed coffee, could walk to two parks, had an awesome pool and restaurants galore at our doorstep. Our DD had many snacks and cereal in the room, plus we had Garden Grocer deliver. We have already booked our next DCVisit rental this time at BWV. Save a bunch, get travel insurance and enjoy the ease of access to parks!We will be traveling to the World next April and still can't decide if we should rent points for a DVC room or just go with a moderate resort. It will be three of us, 2 adults and our 9 year old daughter. Help me with pros and cons please of both!
Honestly, this isn't true. If you compare a room-only discount on an available DVC villa offered via Disney reservations, it is true. But if you compare, for instance, a BLT Studio Lake View with travel insurance to a discounted Contemporary Garden View room, which is an apples-to-oranges comparison, you can actually get them for about the same rate. And the Garden View room is bigger, and has 2 real beds.
I'm DVC, but I don't drink the Kool-Aid. In many situations, renting DVC points can be a deal. In others, for similar pricing you can get a resort room with real beds and a larger floor footprint, and the ability to modify or cancel.
Honestly, this isn't true. If you compare a room-only discount on an available DVC villa offered via Disney reservations, it is true. But if you compare, for instance, a BLT Studio Lake View with travel insurance to a discounted Contemporary Garden View room, which is an apples-to-oranges comparison, you can actually get them for about the same rate. And the Garden View room is bigger, and has 2 real beds.
I'm DVC, but I don't drink the Kool-Aid. In many situations, renting DVC points can be a deal. In others, for similar pricing you can get a resort room with real beds and a larger floor footprint, and the ability to modify or cancel.