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- Nov 10, 2018
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- 589
I think to make this a little more accurate you need to decide on a “typical” family during a “typical” stay and what the points required would be. A family of five staying for a week in July for example.
Therein lies the rub! Typical is not an easy description. When it comes to DVC, there is not a one-size-fits-all solution, and that's the beauty of it. Your value on DVC will vary based on your unique criteria (family size/ages/budget/time of year/preferred location, etc) The good news is that the "point" system is very flexible. 7 Month reservations are still achievable, in which case (as my guide said a few times) "a point is a point", no matter where you buy in. The value is in how, when, and where you use those points. If you are a planner, and enjoy thinking about and planning for vacations years in advance, as I do, this is a very interesting & flexible timeshare to belong to. But it does require some planning ahead, which some people can't do as easily, or maybe have restricted travel windows due to school/work limitations. Even for those folks, if they have a preferred location, they can buy in at that resort and be pretty safe with the 11-Month window reservations! I think its a great system, and I used to be very Anti-Timeshare. I had some horrible experiences with other NON-DVC Timeshares that had turned me off, but I'm glad I finally looked into DVC!I think to make this a little more accurate you need to decide on a “typical” family during a “typical” stay and what the points required would be. A family of five staying for a week in July for example.
Sage advice Bill. In that vein I'd say my sheets helped me quantify, a bit anyway the "what are you willing to pay for that" part of the decision of where to purchase. IOW how much more, or less would 11 month access to XXX vs XXX resort cost?the lowest cost would be the resort you will want to stay in most, having the lowest cost resort that you "hate" is not saving you anything. Buy where you want to stay, in the long run it's the dues that will cost you the most.
your spreadsheet doesn't take into account the value of the contract after 10 years -- in other words -- what you could sell the contract for and recoup. That would need to be subtracted out from the final cost.It is pretty amazing even in my 10, 15 and 20 year calculations SSR is always #1. The compounded 6.5% on annual dues over my 10 year period was a nice catch![]()
your spreadsheet doesn't take into account the value of the contract after 10 years -- in other words -- what you could sell the contract for and recoup. That would need to be subtracted out from the final cost.
also -- typical time value of money comments on initial purchase price -- it's not a simple cost divided by number of years left on contract...unless you have a 0% return on capital.
You conclude $3/yr for Poly and $6/yr for the BC but really you have to put up the FULL amount no matter which one you buy, and the price is basically the same ($147 vs $153). So to conclude Poly is ranked 3rd in cost/yr but BC is ranked 15th because you're amortizing the Poly over years you don't intend to own it is somehow flawed.
But in 10 years time there is good chance the Poly will be worth more or less the same while the BCV will have 13 years left, so it's not unreasonably to think it'll be worth $60 less.
Everything save inflation or economic downturn.
Personally I would include the TVM/Opportunity costs and a 3.5-4% increase in dues.
While I agree that in 2042 the value will be $0. IMO in the years leading up to 2042 the value will be in the ballpark of $19(OTUP or whatever cost pp renting is demanding) - dues x remaining years.In 23 years, Poly will still be worth something, while the 2042 resorts will be worth exactly $0.
While I agree that in 2042 the value will be $0. IMO in the years leading up to 2042 the value will be in the ballpark of $19(OTUP or whatever cost pp renting is demanding) - dues x remaining years.
While I agree that in 2042 the value will be $0. IMO in the years leading up to 2042 the value will be in the ballpark of $19(OTUP or whatever cost pp renting is demanding) - dues x remaining years.
And leading up to that they'll be likely lower than zero at some point in that they'll represent liability with out resale value and it's possible the dues will be more than OOP would be.In 23 years, Poly will still be worth something, while the 2042 resorts will be worth exactly $0.
That's a personal choice you've made but from a financial principles standpoint it still holds. I do not believe you would have spent all of the money applicable (up front and dues) on vacations in the first few years of ownership. The way I look at it is for resale I assume half as bank interest (MM, CD's) and half as long term investment dollars. That averages out to around 5% looked at on the whole in my view right now with 2% CD's and 8% long term. For retail I'm more 1/3 short term and 2/3 long term so I assume more like a 6% return. Still I don't participate in the thinking that I'll spend it because I wouldn't have made anything on it anyway, I want to be a better steward of what's been entrusted to me than that. I want value, real and significant value, when I'm spending that much money and making that much long term commitment. But certainly value runs further than just the financial aspects.To me the TVM would not apply as I would have spent the money on vacations anyway. Also I dont invest my money and banks in my country dont give any interests. So if I just had the money in my bank account they would loose value compared to inflation.
While I agree that in 2042 the value will be $0. IMO in the years leading up to 2042 the value will be in the ballpark of $19(OTUP or whatever cost pp renting is demanding) - dues x remaining years.
The maximum resale value will be: ((OTUP - dues) * remaining years) - closing costs
As we get nearer the expiration, for many it may not be worth the hassle to do all the resale process to get just a few years of use. We also don't know which kind of restrictions DVC might put in place for the last few years (cancel banking? Limit borrowing?). I think when the contracts will have 2-3 years left they'll be unsellable.