secox28 said:
Hi everyone,
I have been renting points to stay at the villas, and I am trying to decide if I should just buy. We go to WDW about every year. My family has just grown to 5. I really like staying at all of the WDW resorts.
If you're having those doubts, then just do the rental first and then make your decision.
So, my question is this...
Is it really worth it to buy?
Depends on your situation...financial and otherwise. Stay in that
DVC room on your rental points and decide how much it's worth to you.
Is it better to buy resale?
For some, yes. For others, no. Resale will likely save you a few dollars per point that you buy. But it is more time consuming and you'll need to pay cash or come up with your own financing. Also, almost all of the resale contracts are at resorts OTHER than Saratoga Springs. These resorts only have 37 years remaining in their ownership period. If you buy points at SSR, you get 49 more years.
Ultimately, if you like one resort above and beyond the others, that is where you should own. The 4 month booking advantage at your Home resort can be important for the smaller properties. But, if you will consistently book on 7 months notice or less and/or do not really have a strong preference for a single resort, your Home isn't quite as important.
I know that I can choose to stay in the resorts, but do the villas have the same magic?
3 of the 5 DVC properties at WDW are attached to Deluxe cash resorts. The other two were designed by the same Imagineers and built with the same "Disney" philosophy. All of the resorts are staffed and operated by CMs who adhere to the same high-quality standards as the cash resorts.
The rooms themselves are better than 99% of the value, moderate and Deluxe resort rooms on-site, in my opinion.
We've stayed at both SSR and OKW--the two dedicated DVC resorts. There's really something to be said for the sense of cameraderie that exists when the vast majority of the guests know they are all sharing the same Home.
Will I save $ in the longrun?
Will you save money? Probably not. For a family of 5, you'll need to book a Two Bedroom DVC accommodation. 2Bs cost a lot of points, meaning that your buy-in cost will be fairly high as will your dues.
If finances are your primary concern, you will make out much better in connecting rooms at a Value or Moderate resort.
Theoretically some people could "save" money through DVC. But for most it's a question of getting much better accommodations for a fraction of their cash rates. You certainly wouldn't find me paying $600 per night for a 2B at SSR. But through DVC, my entire 5-night stay cost only 139 points. With annual dues of $3.80 per point, that same stay cost me about $528 for all FIVE nights. Of course that's not making any allowance for the intial $12K it cost to buy into DVC.
My point is that for roughly the same money I spent on that Two Bedroom through DVC, I probably could have gotten two rooms at a Moderate resort with discount codes. DVC didn't really save me any money--but it did afford me the opportunity to significantly upgrade my accommodations for the same money.