Well, I am going to post a number, but I know many here will not believe it. I asked a DVC rep (not my guide, someone else) that one time, and he whispered to me that he could tell me, but I wouldn't believe it. After much prodding, he whispered to me that the average thus far has been 4yrs.
It makes me think that the disers are definitely the minority.
Would Disney have any way of tracking those numbers, given that they could be resales and have different use years?
A time to selout of 6-9 years makes economic sense to me if the original buyer has paid cash for their points because they are probably at or near a theoretical break even point and can get all or most of their origianal money back. Four years might seem too short a time, but if it is the case it could reflect what appears to be going on in the real estate market nation wide right now - too many people getting in over their heads. DVC should not be done as an investment, but it is interesting to follow the trends to see where you stand. Besides the Timeshare Store who are the other major re-sellers?
Does anyone know? Thanks to all for answering my post.
Jim, did you put #4 in just for me? I can't speak to the experience of timeshare in general as to the average length of ownership. I suspect ARDA has statistics on this but wouldn't know how to go about getting it though I'm sure member resorts could fairly easily. For non DVC timeshares there is a fairly large group that own but don't use. They were likely impulse buys but either don't know how to get rid of it OR they can't fathom that their timeshare is really worth only 20¢ on the dollar compared to what they paid. These would skew the numbers in reverse.What general classifications of member might we consider?
1. Those who buy on impulse, later regret and cancel or sell
2. Those who buy for vacations with young children who out-grow Disney and then the contracts are sold
3. Those who sell at some point because of changed circumstances
4. Those who sell as part of a DVC or broader timeshare portfolio management (re-balancing among resorts, adding a new resort, re-balancing among programs, etc)
5. Those who inherit and sell because they do not want a membership
Are there others?
I suspect that the average turnover is affected by the proportion of members falling into the various groups. Group one would drive down average length of ownership dramatically and could represent a significant proportion of the turnover. Am I correct that this would be the experience in the timeshare industry?
If we eliminate just group one, the remaining members might be a much more stable group. Just some late night musing as I have no data to support any of this.