A calculation of timeshare economics is more complicated than simply dividing the purchase price by the number of years of usage and adding the yearly fee to get a yearly cost.
You should consider the lost investment value of the capital that is tied up in the timeshare. For example, a $12,000 investment that returns 5% after taxes represents $600 per year.
You should also consider the inflation factor. Today a 2-bedroom condo at OKW rents for around $600 per night including sales tax (depending on the season). But not too many years from now, it could cost $1,000 per night or more. Of course, the maintenance fees will also go up with inflation (although Disney has done a good job so far keeping the average increase minimal) -- but the maintenance fees are low compared the nightly rental cost of a DVC condo. Because of the inflation factor, timeshare economics often improve over time.
As others have said, DVC makes the most sense if you stay at DVC resorts, but it's nice to have the option to stay at non-DVC resorts at WDW as well as all over the country through the DVC Concierge Collection.
Other factors to consider are:
- What would you spend on vacations if you weren't a DVC member?
- Are you reasonably sure that your job and personal commitments will allow you to plan vacations well ahead of time with little or no chance that you'll need to cancel at the last minute?
- Do you consider the "use it or lose it" nature of any timeshares (including DVC) to be a burden or a "nice problem to have?"
The economics of DVC have worked out very, very well for us. We could sell our DVC points for more than we paid. The maintenance fees and "lost investment opportunity" have been far less than the benefit we received (especially because we bought at a time when we received free park passes through the end of 1999, a sales incentive which is no longer offered).
Timesharing -- whether Disney, Marriott, or a cheap resale of a lower tier timeshare -- isn't for everyone. But for people who like to stay in spacious condos in great locations, it can be an excellent way to spend ones vacation dollars.
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Werner Weiss, Curator of
Yesterland, featuring discontinued
Disneyland attractions