WOODY13 said:
Thank you all for your quick replies. I think if I owned at BCV and tried to book through DVC and they said it was all booked up then saw it available for cash I wouldn't be happy. But I suppose if you know that going in it wouldn't be as bad. I was just suprised to see that they wouldn't allow DVC'ers to book all the way up till the last minute. I can see why they would release some rooms to CRO but I guess to me it makes more sense to have those also available to DVC.The two systems must be completely seperate so they can't share the same rooms.Thanks again
Actually, you can book up to the last minute, pending availability. Some members have even reported stopping by a resort with no reservation at all, and being able to get a room on points.
As to the difference between Member Services and CRO, it goes like this:
1. Approximately 4% of the villas do not belong to members but are held back by DVC. These units are used as Member inventory when regular member inventory goes out of service for maintenance, etc. This ensures that 96% of the total resort is always available for members. When this 4% is not required to cover for other units, they are released to CRO for cash reservations. For example, say there were 100 villas. MS would have 96 of them, and CRO would have 4. Now two units go out of service for maintenance. MS gets 96 units, and CRO gets 2.
The units are all the same. There are no separate buildings for Member Services and CRO. So you could be staying in villa #2525 this week on points, and next week that villa could be going to a cash guest who got it through CRO.
2. Members may use their points for other than DVC resorts. For example, someone may use their points for the
Disney Cruise Lines. In this case, a villa that normally would have been used with those points is taken out of Member Services and made available to CRO. CRO then rents the villa for cash, and the cash is used to pay
Disney Cruise Line for the member's cruise.
You might think of it as if the member reserved a villa using his/her points, and then traded that villa to the Cruise Line for a cruise instead.
3. Finally, unreserved villas. DVC is designed to run at full occupancy. If at a particular time, not all the villas are reserved, then CRO will attempt to rent those villas out for a cash reservation. It's better to get the cash now rather than let the villa sit empty. Think of it this way. A member banks their points this year and doesn't reserve a villa. Rather then letting it go empty, CRO rents the villa for cash. Next year that member (or some other member) uses their points for the Disney Cruise Line. Since DVC has already received cash for a villa this year, they can use that to pay for the member's cruise line next year, and thus won't have to take another villa out of DVC inventory as explained in #2 above. In other words it's just the same as #2 above, except they trade a villa from this year to go on a cruise for next year.
Bottom Line: The number of villas available from Member Services and the number available for cash through CRO will vary all the time, from Disney Season to Season, and from year to year. It all depends on member's patterns of using points, including banking points, borrowing points, and usage of points outside of the DVC resorts.
For high demand times, basically all the villas would be available for members and CRO would get none or very little. During low demand times, when members are not using the villas as much, CRO would get more villas to rent out for cash. For example, if a member uses their points for a cruise, DVC will make villas from the lower demand times available to CRO to cover the cost of that cruise. They would not give CRO a villa from one of the more popular DVC vacation times, such as Christmas.
Hope this helps.