ok my wife and i are looking at DVC and have some questions.
1. how hard is it to trade and go somewhere else in the world? ie. not disney.
2. what do you lose or gain by trading?
3. can you just pick a place and then trade or do you have to chose from whats avalible to you to trade?
4. can you please tell me any other perks not listed you have encountered by being a DVC member?
5. is it worth it?<----thats the big one!
6. dose The Timeshare Store have a good reputation?
7. what problems if any have you run in to in the past?
my wife and i are not rich by any means. i am in the army currently in Iraq and she is a stay at home mom. we are looking to our vacation future and found the DVC. we are just trying to get the best bang for our buck. we thank you for any feed back you might have.
I'll try to address question #5.
I teach calculus for a living, so I'm one of those people (yes people, not geeks) who just loves analyzing numbers, applying formulas and creating graphs. Although we loved the DVC presentation, which we first saw last month, we could not become members unless the numbers made sense to us. Here's what we found.
It absolutely does depend on your travel habits whether or not this makes sense, but even for us, who have been visiting annually (typically for 10 days and staying at value resorts), DVC makes sense financially. Taking into consideration our purchase price (including finance costs) and annual dues, I set out to find the point in the future when these are balanced by the cost of paying for rooms annually. Yes DVC is a large outlay up front, but then the annual dues are less than even the cost of a value resort. For our particular situation it would take 7 stays at a deluxe to 'break even' or 23 at a value resort. In reality, we hadn't always planned to stay at a value resort annually. We had hoped to do some vacationing at moderates and deluxe resorts too. As a result, it would probably have taken us a dozen vacations or so to reach the point where the 12 year total of our annual 'pay as you go' trips would equal the total cost of DVC purchase and annual dues for 12 years.
It's what happens after the 'break even point' that convinced us to purchase.
If both room rates and DVC dues increase at the same annual rate (I estimated 4% based on historical data), the absolute (in dollars) cost of rooms
increases more quickly than the cost of DVC dues. The compound 4% rate of increase will lead to an absolute dollar increase that is more on the rooms (which start higher) than the DVC dues. If you're a math person, both functions are exponential, but the rooms start (after the 'break even' point) with a higher 'y' intercept. Bottom line for us, in 12 years I'll be able to stay at a AKL Villas Studio (as an example) for about half the cost (54%) of staying at a Value resort! Each year after that, the ratio is the same, but the price is changing for both situations so the actual dollar 'gap' is greater each year. This is not a small discount...12 years from now, it will cost $879 LESS for us to stay 10 nights at AKL Villas than 10 nights at POP! In other words, our annual dues will be 54% of the cost of a value resort. If I extrapolate to 2057, when DVC deed is up at AKL Villas, it will be $3903 less to stay at AKL Villas, but I'll be really friggin' old. Oh well, my daughter can enjoy it!
The DVC is not for everyone, but it's great for us (and 110,000 other families thus far).