CanadaDisney05
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2017
- Messages
- 1,141
I’m hoping someone can help me get a better understanding of what the main benefits of DVC are. I feel like I’ve done my research, but something is still not clicking. I keep hearing how great of a value it is. I keep wanting to believe it’s a great value. But from my understanding, the benefits may not really be worth the cost. Here is my analysis. Please sell me on why I am wrong:
Quantitative:
I made up an example to have some numbers to look at.
Assumptions:
Home Resort: Boardwalk
Points to Purchase: 60
Price Per Point: $135
Maintenance Fees: $7.17
Disney’s Inflation Rate: 4.5% (This is an assumed rate of inflation of maintenance fees & cash prices)
Actual Inflation Rate: 2%
Nights to Stay: 7 Nights every other year
Contract Expiry: 2042
Time of Stay: Summer Months
Using these assumptions, I came up with an average cost of the room to be $261 per night in today’s dollars. I looked up the same room type for this current summer, and it is going for about $340 per night. So you are getting a long term savings of roughly $79.00/night
To take this even further, I calculated a Net Present Value of future cash flows comparing the savings on the same room to the cost of DVC. With the assumption that you can earn 6% if you invested the same funds, it would take an additional upfront investment of $7,280 to be able to fund the same trips through cash purchases.
You can make the conclusion from a monetary viewpoint that you would likely come out ahead by purchasing DVC if you regularly stay at deluxe level resorts. The breakeven point would be staying at resorts that roughly cost about $240 per night in today’s dollars. This is roughly the cost of a moderate resort. If you were to regularly stay at anything below that, DVC would end up costing you more.
Qualitative:
The qualitative benefits of purchasing into DVC is that you get a deluxe level resort for the price of a moderate level resort. From what I understand, Disney does not upkeep the DVC sections of the resorts to the same standards that they keep the hotel sections. You also do not receive daily housekeeping. So if you regularly stay at moderates, you really have to decide whether regular housekeeping is worth more to you than the benefits that come with staying at a deluxe resort.
Another thing to keep in mind is that buying into DVC reduces your liquidity, as well as forces you to be a slave to anything and everything Disney. While on the surface this sounds fine (pathetic, I know), if Disney decides to increase the prices of their park tickets, or annual passes, or food, you have no way out. If the quality of the experience care and upkeep of the parks and hotels decreases, you have no way out. If you want to go on a vacation away from Disney, your vacation funds are tied up.
While I do understand you can always sell your DVC or rent your extra points, this does not come without its own costs. There are commission fees. If Disney becomes a less desirable destination, the selling price of your DVC will decrease. If Disney implements even more restrictions on resales, your investment value decreases. When you rent your points you will not recoup the full value you spent on them.
I think the biggest drawback is that using DVC almost always limits you to staying at the same resort over and over with very little flexibility due to the availability past 7 months. It also forces you to plan your vacation almost a year in advance.
In conclusion, with all of the drawbacks to the purchase of a DVC, I would expect a larger discount than $79/night.
Quantitative:
I made up an example to have some numbers to look at.
Assumptions:
Home Resort: Boardwalk
Points to Purchase: 60
Price Per Point: $135
Maintenance Fees: $7.17
Disney’s Inflation Rate: 4.5% (This is an assumed rate of inflation of maintenance fees & cash prices)
Actual Inflation Rate: 2%
Nights to Stay: 7 Nights every other year
Contract Expiry: 2042
Time of Stay: Summer Months
Using these assumptions, I came up with an average cost of the room to be $261 per night in today’s dollars. I looked up the same room type for this current summer, and it is going for about $340 per night. So you are getting a long term savings of roughly $79.00/night
To take this even further, I calculated a Net Present Value of future cash flows comparing the savings on the same room to the cost of DVC. With the assumption that you can earn 6% if you invested the same funds, it would take an additional upfront investment of $7,280 to be able to fund the same trips through cash purchases.
You can make the conclusion from a monetary viewpoint that you would likely come out ahead by purchasing DVC if you regularly stay at deluxe level resorts. The breakeven point would be staying at resorts that roughly cost about $240 per night in today’s dollars. This is roughly the cost of a moderate resort. If you were to regularly stay at anything below that, DVC would end up costing you more.
Qualitative:
The qualitative benefits of purchasing into DVC is that you get a deluxe level resort for the price of a moderate level resort. From what I understand, Disney does not upkeep the DVC sections of the resorts to the same standards that they keep the hotel sections. You also do not receive daily housekeeping. So if you regularly stay at moderates, you really have to decide whether regular housekeeping is worth more to you than the benefits that come with staying at a deluxe resort.
Another thing to keep in mind is that buying into DVC reduces your liquidity, as well as forces you to be a slave to anything and everything Disney. While on the surface this sounds fine (pathetic, I know), if Disney decides to increase the prices of their park tickets, or annual passes, or food, you have no way out. If the quality of the experience care and upkeep of the parks and hotels decreases, you have no way out. If you want to go on a vacation away from Disney, your vacation funds are tied up.
While I do understand you can always sell your DVC or rent your extra points, this does not come without its own costs. There are commission fees. If Disney becomes a less desirable destination, the selling price of your DVC will decrease. If Disney implements even more restrictions on resales, your investment value decreases. When you rent your points you will not recoup the full value you spent on them.
I think the biggest drawback is that using DVC almost always limits you to staying at the same resort over and over with very little flexibility due to the availability past 7 months. It also forces you to plan your vacation almost a year in advance.
In conclusion, with all of the drawbacks to the purchase of a DVC, I would expect a larger discount than $79/night.