Great question. I am on the fence about transferring to a trust since many commercial renters also use trusts. But transferring to children in the event of a death I feel should be waived.If we transfer our deeds to a trust, we now have to pay $500 per deed. Is this correct?
Also, if someone passes away and the deed is transferred to their children, the children have to pay $500 for each deed?
Hey now!! said the CFW ownerI don't think a $500 one-time fee will change a lot of people's minds. It is less than what deluxe resorts usually charge per night, or about 6 month's worth of dues on a 150 point contract. The resale market will still be robust, but yeah it will take a marginal hit.
I don't think so since that would not be considered a sale.If we transfer our deeds to a trust, we now have to pay $500 per deed. Is this correct?
Also, if someone passes away and the deed is transferred to their children, the children have to pay $500 for each deed?
If I remember correctly, it wasn't just that. It was the fact that they were being able to create more points for themselves out of the deal.Isn’t another way of looking at it that they increased the cost of studios and decreased the cost of 1 bedrooms?
I might suffer from a bit of persecution complex, but I strongly remember all the headwind we had to fight on this board to try to convince people that we could fight the point charts. Some even said that increasing the lockoff premium could be advantageous because it would increase room availability. I remember also people saying: we don't have the data, only Disney does, we cannot say for sure that 1BR book much less than 2BR.
At the end (by Disney statement) only a couple dozen people complained to them, even if it was recommended to write/call.
Anyway, you're also conflating two separate events. The 2020 original charts had the lockoff premium increase and a reallocation between Poly bungalows and CCV cabins and other units. The point charts with the 7 seasons that caused an increase of points depending on when Easter fell, happened later. Not sure when, I think 2023 point charts.
ETA: to complete the history of DVC playing dirty, there was the time a DISboard user (Bing Showei) managed to force DVC to rollback the way they handle tax refunds on dues for sold contracts.
No--the "lockoff premium" chart increased both. And that's why it was absolutely bonkers.
There is a good argument for raising studios and lowering 1BRs, but unfortunately doing so would probably require violating the Residential Unit is Constant provision in most resorts. If any RUs in any given resort have different ratios of studios and 1BRs, then you can't just reallocate between those room sizes without reallocating across RUs, because math.
There is also the problem that reallocating across unit sizes would violate the maximum reallocation values published in the governing documents, but that did not stop them when they reallocated across SSR, raising the 2BRs at the expense of Treehouses, so who knows?
I think the direction the wind is blowing is such that that DVC is no longer interested in reallocating across RUs, but I've been wrong before.
I remember that too, but that argument was wrong on its face. It was obvious to anyone paying the least bit of attention to availability that 1BRs are the last room size to book system-wide. So I never gave them much of my attention.
In fact, that might explain a few entries on my ignore list.
I suspect I was on your "this guy is a jerk" list, because my attitude was almost certainly: "Of course you are right, and these charts are crap. But a lawsuit is pointless, because if Disney wants to crush you, they will." Happily, we never had to test that hypothesis.
I thought florida timeshare law, total bucket of "points" couldn't increase unless more inventory was added EG Island tower, Poly Bungalos, VGF more rooms added.If I remember correctly, it wasn't just that. It was the fact that they were being able to create more points for themselves out of the deal.
I don't think so since that would not be considered a sale.
It is still a "real world" change as now you have a lot more people that can't book the accommodations that they bought points for at PVB.But even if that was true they could inflate studios point cost and decrease bungalos without ever having real world changes because very few people booked the bungalos?
Right now all we have is that FAQ which only mentions resale, not direct or any other contract modification so fingers crossed for you and others.The language was there related to sale,,,but that doesn’t mean it’s only when it’s a sale.
It could be related to any change in ownership once the new deed has been recorded and sent.
However, my guess is that transfers to a trust or between family might not incur the fee.
I wlll be doing some estate planning next year and wlll get to test this out!!
By "robust" I meant not just lots of resale transactions but also at high point values, close to and in some cases more than the original cost. Do the HI ones consistently get decent resale prices?Lots of timeshares have that. Most name-branded Hawaii locations for example. And as the system scales up cracks may appear because demand is not guaranteed to scale with supply.
Yes. That's exactly what I meant.Do the HI ones consistently get decent resale prices?
Someone earlier said "what stops them from making the fee $5000". Well my guess is that they can get away with a fee as long as it's somewhat justifiable. If they made the fee $5000 they would have to justify why it costs $5000 to process a contract. More difficult to do than $500. In the end, I think this would be difficult to fight.
Whoa - aren't you one of the people who fought back (and won!) on this? I feel like I'm meeting a historical figure! Thanks for all the work you did on behalf of members - even ones like me who weren't even members yet! This feels like getting to thank James Madison for the Bill of Rights!It's an hobby of mine to remind the world what happened in 2019. DVC published a point chart that increased the lockoff premium and reallocated points across units.
The general consensus was that Disney has an army of lawyers, so it would certainly be legal and it would be futile to fight it.
And yet a handful of members fought it and the changes were rolled back.
So at least one of the following is true:
- Disney doesn't have an army of lawyers
- lawyers are not consulted for every decision
- the lawyers are incompetent
- the lawyers warn management of the risks of a certain decision but greedy management do it anyway
So thinking this fee is legal just because Disney has lots of lawyers is not wise.
I had one pass ROFR today & there's no mention of the fee by the broker or the title co.Yeah, I guess the question is what exactly is confirmed or approved during the ROFR process. I suppose you can argue that DVD has affirmatively approved the contract/transfer as is and so they have implicitly become a party to the contract. I tend to think of ROFR, though, as DVD simply declining to step into the buyer's shoes. As a practical matter, for any ROFRs between now and the end of the year, if they do plan on charging the $500 fee if the closing occurs after 1/1, they'd be smart to inform anyone passing ROFR about the fee. I guess we'll see.
Yes. To be blunt, I would argue that Disney lawyers are incompetent (just like their executives , just like their IT, etc, etc). In house fortune 100 lawyers are not what they used to be and just hire outside counsel to do the real work. I doubt the Disney legal team went outside in this case. It’s just too dramatic to be the work of professional outside counsel. This could be pushed back on pretty easily IMO.It's an hobby of mine to remind the world what happened in 2019. DVC published a point chart that increased the lockoff premium and reallocated points across units.
The general consensus was that Disney has an army of lawyers, so it would certainly be legal and it would be futile to fight it.
And yet a handful of members fought it and the changes were rolled back.
So at least one of the following is true:
- Disney doesn't have an army of lawyers
- lawyers are not consulted for every decision
- the lawyers are incompetent
- the lawyers warn management of the risks of a certain decision but greedy management do it anyway
So thinking this fee is legal just because Disney has lots of lawyers is not wise.

I agree. @zavandor is a real hero and put a lot of work into fighting for all dvc owners. Thank you @zavandor.Whoa - aren't you one of the people who fought back (and won!) on this? I feel like I'm meeting a historical figure! Thanks for all the work you did on behalf of members - even ones like me who weren't even members yet! This feels like getting to thank James Madison for the Bill of Rights!