MommaBerd
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2011
- Messages
- 3,217
We call it the nookie tax. Its expensive nookie, but my husband is far more likely to vacation if the kids sleep in a different room.

We call it the nookie tax. Its expensive nookie, but my husband is far more likely to vacation if the kids sleep in a different room.
I would add:
b) Since you are thinking of going during Epcot's Food & Wine Festival, I would think BCV could be difficult to book because it is small (not a lot of rooms) and it is near Epcot. Is there a reason you have ruled out BoardWalk Villas? If you want to stay at the Epcot area, it's bigger (has more rooms) than BCV.
c) Renting at 11 months would mean finding an owner who both has the correct home resort and who has enough points they don't need for themselves. Someone might have BLT as their home resort but not have as many points as would be needed for what you want to book. For example, a lake view one-bedroom at BLT for a week in October is 241 points.
d) I have never tried to rent points, but if you're trying to do it at the 11 month mark, I'm not sure how it would work if your first choice is one resort and your second choice is a different resort. If someone is trying to book for you at 11 months, they can only book at their home resort. I don't know how likely it is that someone would have enough points at two different home resorts, so that if they couldn't get your first choice they could switch to your second choice.
e) I don't know who came up with the buzz line of renting DVC points so that you can stay at a deluxe resort for the price of a moderate, but that person is very good at marketing. In reality, it sometimes to leads to people comparing the rack (un-discounted) rate of a moderate versus the cost of renting something which has very limited availability, such as a value studio at AKV. It ignores the fact that sometimes Disney will have discounts for its regular hotel rooms, or free dining. It also ignores the fact that the DVC villas with limited availability are hard to rent.
f) So in order to get what you want, you need (1) an owner who has the correct home resort, and (2) who also has enough points, and (3) who is willing and able to go online at the correct time on the correct date to try to make the reservation, and (4) who is fast enough to book what you want before other people book it.
Alternatively, consider the Poly. Nice sized studios for 3, split bath, trundle bed for the kiddo (so your sofa can stay a sofa!), and what I consider monorail access to MK and Epcot (via a nice, short walk to the TTC). It's my second fave food and wine resort over BCV.
I would add:
e) I don't know who came up with the buzz line of renting DVC points so that you can stay at a deluxe resort for the price of a moderate, but that person is very good at marketing. In reality, it sometimes to leads to people comparing the rack (un-discounted) rate of a moderate versus the cost of renting something which has very limited availability, such as a value studio at AKV. It ignores the fact that sometimes Disney will have discounts for its regular hotel rooms, or free dining. It also ignores the fact that the DVC villas with limited availability are hard to rent.
Most importantly, it ignores the fact that DVC units are not deluxe hotel rooms. The resort is deluxe, but your room is going to have a queen bed and a pull out couch (if you are in a studio). You will not get daily housekeeping (although now you get your trash taken every day) or a lot of little bottles of shampoo and new coffee every day. There is no late checkout, and you may not get into your room until well after 4pm. DVC units are not integrated into the main resort, and often the resort amenties are in a different building for DVC guests - while regular hotel guests have them right there- All of this is normal for the timeshare crowd - and really not that big of a deal for most people - but if I were paying $500 a night at the BWI and got the BWV experience, I'd be upset.
Its a great way to stay on the monorail or near the International Gateway - its not a great way to stay at the Y&BC or the Contemporary.
So should you have any problems with your reservation, you'll need to take it up with the owner
Hearing what I have about the deluxe resorts not being really all that "deluxe", though, I would argue that the location of them is what makes them somewhat worth the money. By using DVC, you are losing some of the accommodations that are not all that well reviewed, and getting a much better price per night. If you're not a fan of daily housekeeping, you sadly now have to deal with the garbage/security check, but that's it. Other than that you get the great location and a balcony for only about 20% more than most moderate resorts.
Poly rooms seem really dark and over themed to me from videos. Do you find it so? I also like the location of the Poly and it is also on my short list! I guess my questions are leading people to think I am only interested in BCV and BLT. However, I only asked about them specifically because people mention how hard they are to get related to other resorts (not even mentioning VGF because I will not spend that kind of money).
Most importantly, it ignores the fact that DVC units are not deluxe hotel rooms. The resort is deluxe, but your room is going to have a queen bed and a pull out couch (if you are in a studio). You will not get daily housekeeping (although now you get your trash taken every day) or a lot of little bottles of shampoo and new coffee every day. There is no late checkout, and you may not get into your room until well after 4pm. DVC units are not integrated into the main resort, and often the resort amenties are in a different building for DVC guests - while regular hotel guests have them right there- All of this is normal for the timeshare crowd - and really not that big of a deal for most people - but if I were paying $500 a night at the BWI and got the BWV experience, I'd be upset.
Its a great way to stay on the monorail or near the International Gateway - its not a great way to stay at the Y&BC or the Contemporary.
One more thing. Since you have posted on this thread about a desire to rent points for a reservation in 2019, you are going to get private messages from people offering you their points. Ignore those private messages unless you initiate the conversation. That is how you get taken.
Oh, and BWV can have difficult parking, especially in the fall with F&W and various conventions at WDW. If you have your own car or plan to rent a car, you might want to keep that in mind.
Not sure why my choices would all have to be the same resort. If the first person with resort #1 couldnt book what I was interested in I would just look for someone else who could rent points at the same resort, or someone who owned at another resort on my list. Same when making offers on houses in my mind. If the offer falls through, you move on to the next.