fivetexans
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2012
- Messages
- 33
There are a lot cheaper ways of doing what you want. DVC is best used for DVC.I am a current DVC owner. I'm looking into the possibility of buying more points.
Does anyone know if there is a cap or limit on the total number of vacation points you can own? There are many things I want to do with my points beyond traveling just to WDW or DL.
Just curious.
There are many things I want to do with my points beyond traveling just to WDW or DL.
You'd have to buy those points direct to be able to use them outside of DVC unless you just want to trade into RCI. I own another timeshare (two flex weeks) at a FL Gulf Coast beach resort that I love. It's a HGVC affiliate. I can combine my beach trips with DVC trips and it makes my points last longer. I bought both weeks for $5K total and my annual fees are around $1K for each week. I get a two bedroom that sleeps six right on the beach for each week. So sometimes you can get more vacations outside of DVC and it's even easier to accomplish that trying to use DVC points.Thanks for the replies. I was thinking the cap was somewhere between 5-10,000, but wasn't sure.
I do like the idea of staying at Disney year aroundAlthough I think I'd go nuts in a studio after awhile.
And... I know you mean well by offering financial advice on better ways to spend my money on points outside of a DVC resort, I have my reasons and was asking a question for my own purposes. Sometimes cheaper isn't always the goal.
With 8000 points, if you averaged about 22 points per night over all the nights, you could stay in studios year round and live in Disney resorts. And only about $48,000/year in dues at $6 per point. But, the initial buy in would probably be close to $1 million at current resale prices, depending what resorts you purchased. I'm not doing the math on how much it would cost to live in a bungalow year round, lol.
Deb and Bill. Thanks... that's good to know.
I've looked into other timeshare options to combine trips like you mentioned. I like Bluegreen and other clubs as well. I'm exploring my options right now.
We've done longer trips, too. Book the first seven nights online, then call every few days to add more days until we got what we wanted. All one reservation.Captain Jack... not real sure on all of that. I do know in the past that there are restrictions on the total number of days at one time you can make a reservation for. We have taken several 10-14 day vacations and had to make two separate reservations. It may sound a bit silly, but it keeps availability options open for guests.
But, we've never had an issue. We come back and make the second reservation and they link the two together. We don't have to change rooms or anything. Or, we make the one reservation and then make the second reservation at a different resort to experience two different resorts on our trip.
How about buying 52 fixed weeks at the Poly?
Buying DVC to use for other options is not reasonable. What's best depends on many factors including volume, personal preferences, flexibility and the like. I do like DVC plus another mini system such as Bluegreen, Wyndham, Worldmark and maybe Marriott (either weeks or trust points) for many situations. A wholly owned condo possibly that trades with a timeshare exchange company or a fractional might be a good choice for one who wants volume.Deb and Bill. Thanks... that's good to know.
I've looked into other timeshare options to combine trips like you mentioned. I like Bluegreen and other clubs as well. I'm exploring my options right now.
I don't think there's any restriction on the total days but there will be on points owned and length of a given reservation. You'll hear people talk about a limit related to state residency but from what I've been able to find in the past, this is a bogus concern.I'm wondering if Disney would even allow you to do that? Anyone know? Can you even imagine... LIVING at WDW? OMG!