I wonder, with
DVC resale prices pushing the lower limits, I wonder, at what point are they cost effective strictly using them to cruise?
For example, lets say I wanted to go on a cruise every year. An inside stateroom, on say 2011, 8 night Mexican Riviera Cruise. This would set me back close to about $3,382.90.
Now if I could snag a resale for say $40 bucks a point, the same inside stateroom would run me about 250 points, or $10,000.
I wonder if there is a sweet spot in terms of effectiveness of points for cruising. Anyone crunched the numbers?
I think the dues make it a no go. Putting to the side your specific example and looking at the issue more in general, to determine the sweet spot, I'd look first at the dues for the resort I was thinking of purchasing and its history. Then, I'd try to do a comparison across multiple seasons and multiple stateroom categories about the price per point for disney cruises. Whatever the spread will help you determine the break even point.
My general sense (based not any any scientific analysis) is that if, unsing points, you can get a cruise in the $7.50 per point range, you're doing really well. (In other words, if you found a cruise for 300 points that would cost $2,250 if booked through
DCL, you're in good shape.) But let's say that you can do much better than that with careful planning and flexibility to go on the value season for cruising. Let's say you can even figure a way to make it work for $9.50 a point.
So, let's assume dues at $4.50. Using this type of analysis, you're getting $5 per point worth of value by cruising. So, if you could truly find DVC for $40 per point, your break even would be 8 years, not counting the lost value of the money sunk into DVC
Perhaps something to keep in mind in the future, but for present, this is wholly unrealistic. The only resort with points approaching even $50 is vero, which has dues approaching $7/point. This makes it a complete no go. So, that puts you at OKW, where you are looking around $65/point. Now you're talking about a 12 to 15 year break even point, and that's assuming my extremely favorable for-the-sake-of-argument use of $9.50 a point, which is really wholly unrealistic. But even if we assume it's not, I would never do this for a 15 year break even point, because:
1) I've discounted the time value of money, which you can't really discount. Even at crappy interest rates, put the $20,000 or whatever you'd spend on DVC into cds or municipal bonds that mature every year, and use the proceeds for your cruising. You'll come out much better. If you'd need to finance to buy DVC, and thus are financing your cruises at 10.25 percent, forget about it. It's lunacy.
2) If you're really planning to be a frequent cruiser, you can significantly reduce your cruising costs by booking future trip on board. This makes the $9.50 number even more pie in the sky.
3) I haven't included the $95 fee and the breakage associated with canceling reservations made on points. Plus, you'd have to be perfectly efficient about using your points to keep them from expiring. Disney cruises don't take nice round numbers of points, like 160 or 250. I think you're perpetually be needing to borrow and bank, or, worse, rent points for transfer, to make your reservations work, and once you start doing that you're blowing your price per point way out of proportion.
4) A 15 year break even is just not feasible given all the uncertainty of future dues and future points chart increases for cruising.
If a person owns lots of points and want to use them cruise, that's one thing. Nobody should tell another person how to use their points. (My person opinion is that it's way more sound to rent them out and use the cash to cruise, but some people don't want to be bothered or deal with renting, and everyone puts a different dollar value on convenience.) But if the question is whether one should enter into a DVC contract with the express intention of using the points for cruising, even at low resale prices it just wouldn't make sense at this point in time IMHO, and with apologies to the timeshare store resale guys!