Yup.....very difficult to get these Resort/std view rooms at BWV....oh well....i'll keep trying1st week of December. There are other rooms available, but the SV studio's have been walked for a month.
Yup.....very difficult to get these Resort/std view rooms at BWV....oh well....i'll keep trying1st week of December. There are other rooms available, but the SV studio's have been walked for a month.
Giving owners more flexibility to use their points within the program instead of renting to get the cash, certainly is one way to potentially reduce the rental martlet….
This is an opinion, and a valid one, as it doesn’t affect you.
The same way the contract doesn’t guarantee room size or view, it DOES guarantee that commercial* renting is prohibited. *What defines commercial is up for debate on these boards only, the act itself is definitely prohibited and it’s not an opinion you can disagree on.
So, just to be clear, and this is nothing against you specifically.I didn't claim commercial renting is not prohibited; I stated that I don't believe it causes harm.
Correct.When you say not spec, do you mean you picked room type and view and dates and then they booked it for you (quite possibly with distressed points)?
But how does the waitlist work?If the rooms don’t come back and the waitlist doesn’t fill it means that demand is the culprit…now, that doesn’t means that some who got the rooms were not walkers because walkers eventually stop.
But, in my case, I obviously had dates that did include at least one person walking who kept going because of how quick it came through….and this happens to me every year for first week of December.
Now, different story for the second week…I usually need to do more stalking because the rooms don’t come back which means the rooms are being held by someone who at least wants those dates.
I definitely think that at BWV, point charts for December for studios should be closer in value to make the competition between the views more equal.
But, nothing is going to ever be perfect…when demand is this high.
For me...How does the waitlist tool now work?
You can’t leave us hanging like that!![]()
This used to happen at BWV. If you missed your day, put in a waitlist. Last year I had a 11 month waitlist for a December night. It never filled. I chalked that up to the refurb.Did you not waitlist? I put in a waitlist for my second room the morning of December 3rd for Dec 3rd to 5th to replace the PV I had and it filled in three days! I picked up the 2nd on my own.
If you have a waitlist, keep up hope
For me...
When I am working my butt off to get a room, I am able to stalk my way into a room before my waitlist ever comes through.
So, just to be clear, and this is nothing against you specifically.
You don't think, having thousands of Studios booked and listed for rent. AKA, no one is currently staying in these rooms, they are being held in case someone does want to stay, by people trying to make a buck... Is harming normal members who could otherwise have a chance to book those rooms for trips they want to take themselves?
To put it another way....
Let's say I am at a Quick Serve, I start saving tables, then renting them out to diners. Would you have an issue with this? I mean, someone is going to use the table anyway right? So it doesn't really effect you...
So, just to be clear, and this is nothing against you specifically.
You don't think, having thousands of Studios booked and listed for rent. AKA, no one is currently staying in these rooms, they are being held in case someone does want to stay, by people trying to make a buck... Is harming normal members who could otherwise have a chance to book those rooms for trips they want to take themselves?
To put it another way....
Let's say I am at a Quick Serve, I start saving tables, then renting them out to diners. Would you have an issue with this? I mean, someone is going to use the table anyway right? So it doesn't really effect you...
But how does the waitlist work?
Disney has mucked around with this at least once.
I think it used to be real-time, meaning as soon as you released a room it immediately was checked against existing waitlist requests before being released to other DVC members.
But several years ago, I recall Disney announcing a change that this was only checked once per day, meaning other DVC members had potentially hours to sneak in and “steal” a reservation.
More recently, it seems like waitlisting is acting the original way but I don’t recall seeing an announcement for this.
How does the waitlist tool now work?
For your quick-service example, I don’t think it completely relates since charging for something that is free doesn’t fully correlate, but I see the example you’re drawing. While I get mildly annoyed when people take up residency at a table well before food is ordered, let alone ready (if they are even buying food from that QS), I don’t think that is something Disney should add rules to address, and/or cast members to police. Open seating is open seating and I accept I may be out of luck.
This. It's the convenience that makes this timeshare program unique and it works out as there's a significant demand for Disney onsitr properties that will support the timeshare model even with the cancellations.That’s correct; I don’t have an issue with it. Just as I don’t have an issue with members who cancel reservations for most any reason. That’s part of the flexibility I appreciate with DVC. I have four concurrent reservations for a family trip later this year. Since there is some uncertainty about who will be able to travel and when, I will definitely cancel one and possibly up to three of the reservations. I will ensure that is done more than 31 days out, but one of the studios will likely be released less than 60 days out.
This is a slightly different scenario, but with over 200k members, even if a very small percentage is holding reservations that may or may not be cancelled or changed later, it’s the same situation. I’ve taken the position that intent shouldn’t matter. If an owner booked the room with their points, whether it is owner-occupied, guest-occupied, renter-occupied, left empty for an early morning arrival/late afternoon departure, or even cancelled, it's an acceptable use of points.
For your quick-service example, I don’t think it completely relates since charging for something that is free doesn’t fully correlate, but I see the example you’re drawing. While I get mildly annoyed when people take up residency at a table well before food is ordered, let alone ready (if they are even buying food from that QS), I don’t think that is something Disney should add rules to address, and/or cast members to police. Open seating is open seating and I accept I may be out of luck.
Just for the record WDW does address this when things get out of hand, and posts CMs telling people ‘the rule’ - you need to get your food before taking a table. I’ve come across this many times.
It makes sense to me. Even if it’s annoying when my party can’t take a rest at a QS table, it is much more annoying to buy a meal and have nowhere to eat it. Or your family had planned to eat mid-afternoon and a one hour storm blows in, and all of a sudden there’s not one QS table available in the park. It makes sense for CMs to step in at that point and only let people with food trays take any newly opened tables.
I think the point they were making, though, is that this situation is not the same as DVC where both owners are allowed to book as many rooms as they want, and use them for whom they want within the rules....
The problem that was being discussed....at least the way I read it...was about the impact on availability and not on whether someone is or is not renting outside the rules.
Seeing a whole bunch of confirmed reservations doesn't both some of us because we don't see rooms booked to offer to renters, on their face, as any different than an owner booking rooms and holding them for themselves, even when they know they will cancel them later on.
That is why I keep saying, its just a different mindset on how we view DVC and the program......I get others are bothered by it and want a system that should allow owners to have priority for rooms over those that are not owners...and can't understand why all of us don't feel that way....its because we have a different view on how it works. Not anything more than that.
Disney wants DVC to succeed as it's a great cash cow. Making new rules and processes that suppresses enthusiasm for the product sales....not going to happen.
Disney only will make changes if it helps their bottom line.
It goes to the reasoning of impact and when worthwhile for management to step in.
While some people may have not had an issue with being unable to get a table to eat the food they just bought, that’s not the same as saying there is no problem.
Whether it is tables, DAS, commercial renting… if/when something is having an outsized impact then it is on management to weigh - because they can see things more clearly than we ever could.