I was curious, this being the budget board...
- What are you thoughts on the DVC resales... have any of your purchased them?
I agree with huskies90:
I think you have to go into thinking DVC is a luxury and not a way to save money. Similar to the dining plan. When you crunch the numbers, you almost always can do Disney cheaper.
Not only can you do Disney cheaper -- sometimes you can do DVC cheaper. I own in another TS points system, and when we are most likely to go the next few times, I can trade into a DVC 2 BR for about $200 a night. Which is often less than a DVC owner pays in terms of their yearly fees. Great deal, right?

Except I can get into another resort that is just as close to the four parks as the DVC units, with much larger 2 BR units, for about one fourth that. With four teenagers, that extra space matters even more than the lower price.
With rare exceptions, staying onsite at all is a luxury expense -- it's just about always possible to go cheaper by staying offsite, and often it's cheaper to stay off site in a unit of better quality. Since we'd need two rooms if we stayed onsite, I can always get a nice offsite 2 BR for less than it would cost us staying in a Value; usually I'm spending less on the 2 BR than I would on
one Value room. But if you want to stay onsite, renting is a great value of the non-Disney kind.
Buying DVC is a long-term commitment. DVC resale prices have dropped considerable; at one time you could be pretty sure you could get back what you put in, even buying direct from Disney. That's no longer the case, or at least it wasn't last I checked. I don't think there's any guarantee that DVC resale prices will stabilize where they're at right now, either. Renting points, you don't have to worry whether the resale price stays high or not.
Renting points, you also don't need to worry about an exit strategy if your family situation changes -- you just quit renting the points. You also aren't committed to going to the Disney resorts year after year. Yeah, it's possible to trade your points to RCI for a vacation elsewhere, but it's not a good trade financially. Other RCI members like me can trade into DVC for less than a DVC owner pays in yearly fees, but the flip side of that is that the DVC member would pay DVC prices for any resort they trade into -- which is why a lot of DVC owners pick up a second TS ownership for trading through RCI.
The DVC RCI membership is also restricted to a small percentage of the RCI resorts, and DVC owners can't use Extra Vacations or Last Call. While admittedly a high quality Last Call resort is pretty rare, there are plenty of nice resorts you can rent at a nice price with Extra Vacations, meaning you can pay renter prices but don't take the risks of renting from an individual. Unless you are an RCI member through DVC, who doesn't have that option.
So the main difference between renting DVC and owning is that DVC ownership is much less flexible, and that inflexibility is on multiple fronts. If someone buys into DVC with cash and uses their points every year, then their yearly cost is less than it would be renting, but you still have to factor in that initial price, meaning someone has to go x-number of years before owning is the cheaper option. But even if someone does go to Disney that long, other factors might make DVC a poor choice for the entire time -- they might prefer offsite as the kids get older, for instance, because the kids want more space or they like to hit other parks some days and would prefer a more central location or they just think some offsite resort sounds interesting and want a change.
For most people's budgets, buying DVC is betting that you know the future accurately enough to be sure it's a good deal. If your current luxury budget is big enough, and it's something you want, I'd say go for it!

But if you're going to have to commit your luxury budget from the next however-many years, think twice, is my advice.