In truth, the initial payment, when one purchases points has NOTHING to do with the maintenance of the resort--
DVC divides the amount of money spent on the resort by the price per point--and that is how the number of points linked to the resort is determined (chicken--egg/price--points/works out in the end balancing the needs of current members with purchasers, or so we hope). The money we pay up front, every penny of it, pays for the resort's capitalization, NOT it's maintenance.
In truth, and here's a whopper, the money we pay for points is not direct profit for Disney--really it pays bills that most other resorts absorb over a much longer calendar. (BWV takes approx. 3 years to be "paid" for--I would suspect the profits of a place like GFlo are only just now paying its capitalization!)
Why does Disney do this? Two reasons: A) They get other people (DVC Members) to pay for resorts in a shorter amount of time. And with that cash, they can turn around and build another DVC resort. Which would lead to an endless circle (of life?) until we get to B) They get DVC Members to lock themselves into 50 or so years of vacations (oh no, the torture!): food, park tickets, souvenirs, etc.
But what happens when our $75/point disappears (as it does the minute we put it down as it simply is paying a "debt")? How does the resort maintain itself?
Dues.
$3.65/point for the WLV.
I'm getting two hotel rooms in January for 5 nights--that SHOULD cost around $2000.
It costs me less than 1/3 of that.
And I won't mention the fact that no one complains about Member Services they way everyone seems to complain about CRO.
And that they act as my
travel agent.
And that I get discounts.
And can pool hop.
Nick