I would highly recommend finding a way to make it work without financing. If you have to finance, consider what we have done and continue to do. There are some disadvantages to our way but we feel the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.
We use Credit Card Balance Transfers to fund our
DVC purchases. Hear me out. We use our credit card to put the biggest down payment possible (usually $1000-2000, depending on the title company) when purchasing resale. When we purchased directly through Disney they let us pay the whole balance off with our credit card, and over 3-4 months. This was AMAZING for us as it gave us the opportunity to spread the payments out AND we were able to use our credit card! We do this so we are able to get miles/points/cash back and our Aulani DVC purchase got us around 21,000 miles towards travel (almost a round trip ticket to LAX to visit
Disneyland!).
We use balance transfer offers from our credit cards and deposit the money directly into our savings/checking accounts. Most times you can find a 0% 12-18 month balance transfer offer for a 3% fee, but we wait for the 1-2% fee specials to come out. If you are making a $20,000 DVC purchase, that would mean that you will pay anywhere from $200-600 in fees for the first 12-18 months, depending on the deal. This is WAY CHEAPER than financing through a lender or bank. You will pay more fees than that within the first few months of your loan. We continue to do this over the life of the balance and pay it down as needed.
In order to make this work you will have to have credit cards with high credit limits and that offer balance transfer specials. We initially did this with our Aulani purchase in 2013 and totally funded the purchase this way. We were only required to pay a minimum $200 a month towards the card but we opted to pay more to get the balance down quicker. After paying our Aulani DVC balance off we did the same to purchase Grand Californian points on the resale market. We are still paying this balance down but we are able to do it at our own pace.
The disadvantages to funding your purchase this way are:
1. You need to have credit card credit limits big enough to fund your purchase. You may have to use multiple credit cards to fund the purchase.
2. You need to find balance transfers that make sense. 1-3% for 12-18 month at the minimum!
3. You need to have the discipline to pay down the loan on your own terms and meet minimum payments.
4. You need to plan ahead for when the end of your balance transfer promotion is coming to an end. I've opened up new credit card accounts just to take advantage of 0% balance transfer for 0% fees (Chase Slate is a great credit card for this). You will need to make sure that you can transfer the credit card balance transfer amount to another card, repeating the same process as when you first took out the balance transfers.
5. Your credit score may take a hit due to high levels of credit usage. This isn't really a big deal unless you are planning to buy a house or refinance. Even then, your minimum payment will be less than your typical loan payment so it won't kill the loan for you.
I am in no way a credit expert but we have been able to fund our DVC purchases this way and it works great for us. We save a TON of money on finance charges but we aren't able to claim those fees on our taxes (you can claim your interest % from a loan made to purchase time share properties on your taxes as you would a home purchase).
Has anyone else funded their purchase this way? I'm interested to see if others have tried this and if it worked for them or not. Bottom line is, make sure you can make your DVC purchase work for your own finances and family.
Good Luck!
Keola