So long as you don't care to use your points for Disney Cruises, or for gallivanting around Europe as the glossy, 3 lb DVC brochure may have you believe is a good use of your vacation points, then buying resale is absolutely, 100% the best way to go.
My $50/point Wilderness Lodge purchase has more than paid for itself in only a few short years of ownership.
No question...
I question anyone "choosing" to pay a rack price for a wdw room over an intelligent DVC buy...if you are frequent enough that you get solid use out of it.
I'm not talking once...or once every 3 or 5 years...
Disney worlds rooms are so ridiculously overpriced that your can expect to waste 30-50% or your rate up front in overcharges... Sometimes more.
Even if its "only" $1200 a night for a bungalow...that's $10,000 of Scrooge mcducks money a week
And the poly is THE posterchild for this... The single most overpriced hotel. Largely the same as 1971 with a choo choo that they themselves neglect anymore...
This is where I get the two counterargument:
1 location
...that's real estate in the saying...not Hotel rooms. Even a fantastic location doesn't account
For a 50% overcharge...in such a short amount of time as say - - week
2. "It's worth it to ME"
...Ahhhh...two years ago I would have conceded a bit. But lo and behold - behind the scenes - Disney is having a hell of a time filling their "premium" rooms. And why? Because they pumped them up and relied on the lemmings to come up with the money. But even the Disney filled euphoria has cleared and the price curve has taken over.
Full scale conversion of wilderness lodge? Lodge conversion at the GF? Poly "phase II" on deck? Yacht club?
All these things are starting to get mentioned in Disney rumor circles. This is one case were I believe there might be fire behind the smoke.
And what do you know? The price of DVC upfront has gone through an all out assault/ escalation over the
Last 5 years...even when there was a recession.
Disney is very good at spotting the trends... While maintaining control on the purse strings and hoping you don't notice the motivations.
The same thing is going on over at MGM.