My kids have not exactly gotten bored with Disney (they are 11 and 12), but they've discovered there are other places to vacation (we are from Minnesota, so getting out of cold and snow is nice). Mexico is very popular with them right now - and we are booking Hawaii for this Spring (but not DVC - Maui). Owning DVC ties us into Disney - but we only bought for every other year - so at least we aren't STUCK with Disney as our only vacation.
Disney is not the place it was five years ago, and DVC rooms are not terribly well maintained. Had I to do it again, now - I'd buy an offsite timeshare for much less or just rent - and again, probably offsite. You can get a lot more for your money off property than on. DVC is a nice value if you are an onsite snob - which I was at the time we bought, but a few conferences in Orlando offsite have introduced me to some nice places and made me less afraid of the rental car.
In particular - not related to DVC, but related to our overall satisfaction with Disney - food has gotten more expensive and nearly inedible at anything other than signature places.
It does get more expensive all the time. Park tickets have more than doubled in the past ten years - plus we now have two adult children - at eleven and twelve. Food has gone up. Airfare. Dues.
If you buy more than 150 points (or whatever it is now), buy it pieces so you can sell it off later should you decide you'd like "SOME" DVC but not "EVERY YEAR IN A TWO BEDROOM" DVC.
I like my DVC and its still a good value for us (but we bought for $63 a point ten years ago), and I'm glad we bought but I wouldn't do it now.
Disney is not the place it was five years ago, and DVC rooms are not terribly well maintained. Had I to do it again, now - I'd buy an offsite timeshare for much less or just rent - and again, probably offsite. You can get a lot more for your money off property than on. DVC is a nice value if you are an onsite snob - which I was at the time we bought, but a few conferences in Orlando offsite have introduced me to some nice places and made me less afraid of the rental car.
In particular - not related to DVC, but related to our overall satisfaction with Disney - food has gotten more expensive and nearly inedible at anything other than signature places.
It does get more expensive all the time. Park tickets have more than doubled in the past ten years - plus we now have two adult children - at eleven and twelve. Food has gone up. Airfare. Dues.
If you buy more than 150 points (or whatever it is now), buy it pieces so you can sell it off later should you decide you'd like "SOME" DVC but not "EVERY YEAR IN A TWO BEDROOM" DVC.
I like my DVC and its still a good value for us (but we bought for $63 a point ten years ago), and I'm glad we bought but I wouldn't do it now.