Brian Noble
Gratefully in Recovery
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2004
- Messages
- 18,359
If you have an idea of when you want to go, the time to secure an exchange can be very minimal---put in an ongoing request for the date(s), resort(s), and minimum unit size you want, and wait for it to happen. You need a backup plan in case that doesn't come through, especially if you are going during a time of high overall timeshare demand for central Florida and/or you have a very specific request.
The common backup strategies are to either add smaller units and more resorts (including non-Disney resorts) to your request as your dates get closer, or have a reservation using some other means that you can cancel very late with no penalty.
Another common strategy is to start with a very wide net, taking the first thing that is acceptable, and then "trade up" as better units become available. This costs a little bit more (because you nominally pay an extra fee each time you trade up) but a bird in the hand...
In II, I used the wide-net/trade-up approach, because inventory seemed harder to come by than it does right this second in RCI. In RCI, so far, I'm using the widen-as-you-go strategy but I may rethink that for the future.
Exchange is never as certain or as flexible/convenient as owning. On the other hand, it can be significantly less expensive than owning or renting from an owner. For the family that doesn't view the occasional offsite stay akin to a term in a federal prison, exchange can be a way to get access to DVC from on a space-available basis without the higher costs of ownership. In that sense, it works really well for us. We're happy to take an exchange when we can get it, but if we can't, well, staying at Bonnet Creek or maybe one of the Hiltons is okay too. In fact, after "squeezing" the four of us into a 1BR a couple years ago, we've mostly decided we'd rather be offsite in a 2BR+ than onsite in a 1BR going forward. We're not yet irrevocably addicted to the pixie dust.
Finally, while the "marginal cost" in time for each exchange is pretty modest, the "sunk cost" of time in navigating the timeshare exchange learning curve is non-trivial. As I alluded to before, it's a hobby, not a rational "time investment" strategy.
The common backup strategies are to either add smaller units and more resorts (including non-Disney resorts) to your request as your dates get closer, or have a reservation using some other means that you can cancel very late with no penalty.
Another common strategy is to start with a very wide net, taking the first thing that is acceptable, and then "trade up" as better units become available. This costs a little bit more (because you nominally pay an extra fee each time you trade up) but a bird in the hand...
In II, I used the wide-net/trade-up approach, because inventory seemed harder to come by than it does right this second in RCI. In RCI, so far, I'm using the widen-as-you-go strategy but I may rethink that for the future.
Exchange is never as certain or as flexible/convenient as owning. On the other hand, it can be significantly less expensive than owning or renting from an owner. For the family that doesn't view the occasional offsite stay akin to a term in a federal prison, exchange can be a way to get access to DVC from on a space-available basis without the higher costs of ownership. In that sense, it works really well for us. We're happy to take an exchange when we can get it, but if we can't, well, staying at Bonnet Creek or maybe one of the Hiltons is okay too. In fact, after "squeezing" the four of us into a 1BR a couple years ago, we've mostly decided we'd rather be offsite in a 2BR+ than onsite in a 1BR going forward. We're not yet irrevocably addicted to the pixie dust.

Finally, while the "marginal cost" in time for each exchange is pretty modest, the "sunk cost" of time in navigating the timeshare exchange learning curve is non-trivial. As I alluded to before, it's a hobby, not a rational "time investment" strategy.