When I look at the increases every year in the Diney hotel prices I see the value in my
DVC jumping right out at me. We stayed at POP for a RNR trip when no DVC rooms were available. It cost me $167 per night in a standard view room. A studio at OKW at 44 points for 4 nights would have been $77 per night for a larger room and much better amenities.
I love this comparison, because it makes the critical assumption that you
must make to justify DVC on a
financial basis -- comparing the cost of DVC to the cost of an onsite Disney resort room.
Of course that math works! DVC pricing is
structured to look good in that comparison. In fact, using that same logic, the
Disney Dining Plan also looks good! And buying a Marriott, Hilton, or Wyndham timeshare direct from the developer also looks good...if you compare their timeshare to their hotel rack rates. The Disney bean-counters and marketing kids must chuckle whenever they see this comparison here on the DIS!
In order to justify DVC
financially, you
must start with the assumption that your family would not be happy vacationing anywhere else but in an onsite Disney resort. That IS a valid assumption for many families who consider the onsite value-added to be critical to their enjoyment of a vacation.
But a lot of other families would be much smarter comparing the cost of DVC to not only onsite cash options, but to all other options including offsite vacation homes, cash hotel offsite, offsite timeshares, etc. I'll give you an actual example of that type of comparison.
Last May, I had a split reservation -- two days (Sun-Mon) at OKW followed by three days at Wyndham's Bonnet Creek Resort (which is basically right across the street). Both reservations were with my DVC or Wyndham points, both were for one-bedroom villas, and obviously both were in the same season and weeknight stays. My OKW points cost was also $7 per point X 27 points = $189 per night. My Wyndham cost was $40.32 per night.
(Full disclosure: We caught a flukey break with Wyndham; the normal rate for that period would have been $67.20 per night)
If you're going to justify DVC using a
financial basis, I submit that you should compare the DVC cost against what you
really would spend -- not the phony marketing comparison with Disney onsite rack rates.
I think the only way that works out in DVC's favor is for those few families who
absolutely would not go to WDW unless they could stay in a Disney deluxe resort.