Originally posted by eporter66
Also - with the use year, if SSR is March and BCV was say September - then I would just need to figure out when they were both available.
If your points are two different use years, they <u>cannot</u> be combined at all, in any way. Assume you have 100 March SSR points and 50 September BCV points. At 7-months you want to make a 5-day ressie at SSR. At 7-months all points can be used at SSR.
Assume you want a 1-B/R unit in Magic Season at 27 points/night for a total of 135 points. You have 150 points total (100 March SSR and 50 September BCV) so you think you're OK, but you're not.
Since the 100 point and 50 point contracts are different use years you can't combine them. What you would have to do is make ressies using each contract separately, reserving as many days as you can from each contract, then link the reservations.
In our example, with 100 points you can reserve 3-nights for 81 points, leaving 19 points still in that March SSR account. With the 50 point contract you can reserve only 1-night for 27 points, leaving 23 points in that September BCV account.
So you see you could only reserve four of the nights you wanted. You were only able to use 81 + 27, or 108 of the 150 points you have. You wind up having to bank the remaining 19 points and 23 points respectively into their individual use years.
One way to get around this requires you would need to do some point management by banking and borrowing within the accounts. Example, for your 100 point March SSR contract, you would borrow 8-points from the next use year, giving you 108 points, enough to reserve 4-nights at 27pts/night. You reserve the 5th night using the Sep use year points. 27-points, leaving 23 points left over. You bank the 23 points. You link the 4-day vacation with the 1-day vacation so you don't have to change rooms.
Next year, your 100 point contract refreshes with 92 points (100 minus the 8 you borrowed) and your 50 point contract refreshes with 73 points (50 plus the 23 you banked). Your total is 165 points.
Had they not been different use year months, you then simply could combine them for making a reservation. 100 + 50 = 150 points. You make a 5-day reservation for 135 points and bank the remaining 15 points. Next year you will have 165 points (100 + 50 + 15 that were banked)
As you can see, having different use years requires more attention to your points, how you use them, and banking and borrowing.
As already explained, having two different resorts can give you 11-month windows at each resort, by only using the points for that resort. In this case it makes no difference whether the points have the same use year or not because you're not trying to combine points in any way to make a reservation.
Again using 100 and 50 point contracts at two different resorts, 'A' and 'B', it would work like this:
Year one, use your 100 point contract at resort 'A', borrow another 50 resort 'A' points from the next year and make an 11-month 150 point reservation at resort A. Bank your 50 resort 'B' points into the next year (year two).
Year two, use your resort 'B' 50 point contract, borrow 50 points from the next year (year three), and with the 50 points previously banked from year one, you have 150 points available to make an 11-month ressie at resort B. Your 100 point resort 'A' only has 50 points in it (100 minus the 50 borrowed into year one). You bank these 50 points from resort A to the next year. (year 3)
Year three, your 100 point resort 'A' contract will have 150 points available (100 new points plus the 50 banked). Your 50 point resort 'B' contract will have zero points. (50 points minus the 50 points borrowed). Make a reservation at resort 'A' using all 150 points.
Year four: Same as year one. Your 100 point resort 'A' renews with it's regular allocation of 100 points (you did not bank into year 4, nor had you borrowed anything from year 4). Your 50 point resort 'B' renews with 50 points. (again because you had not banked any points into year 4, nor had you borrowed any points from year 4). You simply repeat what you did year one.
Using this flip-flop method you get the 11-month window at resort A for 2 years out of 3, and the 11-month window at resort B for 1 year out of 3.
Hope this helps.