WVU Disney Fan
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Aug 5, 2016
- Messages
- 278
I've seen what look like incredible rates but am nervous booking this way.
My main concern is linking dining plan, adr, tickets, fast pass, etc. Prices just seem to good to be true.
What is MDEWe are renting DVC points for the first time this coming November. I used David's DVC rentals. Super easy to use but do plan to book early to get what you want. Also realize that DVC comes with some differences in housekeeping. We have ME set up and bought our tickets through ParkSavers. Everything - ADRs, tickets and Memory Maker - is set up in MDE.
My Disney Experience. Online planning tool/app.What is MDE
From what I understand if I go through a site like David's whoever owns the points I rent would make my room reservation and add dining. But can I personally add my adr and fast passes? Or is that something I also have to rely on the owner of my points to do? Thanks everyone for your information been very helpful so far.I own DVC, and have handed my excess points to David's to rent out to someone else. It was a very easy process and I trust this company implicitly. Unless you find a DVC owner you trust completely, you might want to use a company like David's...there's much less chance of something going wrong. When you rent through a company like this..they tell you what's available. They take 100% of your money up front..the DVC owner, who's points are being used, gets only 50% of the money when the vacation is booked. The rest of the money goes to them when the vacation is completed.
Can you get some great deals? Absolutely. But, you need to understand that someone else is in control of your vacation, up until the time you're standing in the resort, checking in. They need to add all requests you may have, add dining, etc. You won't get daily housekeeping, unless you pay addtl for it. You can't change your mind...we lose our points if they aren't used (this is why people rent them out....they get cash for them when they are in danger of the points going unused!)
As someone already noted, there are villas that are going to be very hard to get. Getting an Epcot area villa (BCV or BWV) during Food and Wine can be tough. You need to plan early...at least 11 months out!
From what I understand if I go through a site like David's whoever owns the points I rent would make my room reservation and add dining. But can I personally add my adr and fast passes? Or is that something I also have to rely on the owner of my points to do? Thanks everyone for your information been very helpful so far.
From what I understand if I go through a site like David's whoever owns the points I rent would make my room reservation and add dining. But can I personally add my adr and fast passes? Or is that something I also have to rely on the owner of my points to do? Thanks everyone for your information been very helpful so far.
Prior to buying DVC, I "rented points" from my brother and I paid him the rate that David's was charging renters. One of the big drawbacks of renting is that you get the urge to purchase DVC.I've seen what look like incredible rates but am nervous booking this way.
Prior to buying DVC, I "rented points" from my brother and I paid him the rate that David's was charging renters. One of the big drawbacks of renting is that you get the urge to purchase DVC.
Once the owner gives you the reservation number, you can add it to MDE and verify that the names, dates and type of unit are correct. The owner can add a dining package for you if you pay them for it at the time that they add it. Tickets, FP+ and ADRs are your own responsibility. You will have all of the advantages that any Disney resort guest has (like EMH, access to the resort's theme pool, ADRs at 180+10, FP+ at 60 days prior to arrival) but none of the benefits that DVC members have (such as member discounts or events).
But here are a couple of things that non-owners may not understand about DVC:
I'm not trying to scare you off. I just want you to be informed about the way these rentals work so that you can go into it with open eyes. Too many people look at the price calculators on the brokers' websites and think that the units are available and just waiting for them to be booked by the next lucky renter. It's much more complicated than that.
- You're not "renting points". That's a disboards term. You are renting a reservation. The points belong to the DVC member and always will be. The reservation is under their control until the moment that you check in.
- Those units with low points like BWV std. view and AKV Jambo value studios may not be impossible to get but you are highly unlikely to be able to book the value studio and will be very lucky if you get std. view at BWV. Set your budget to cover the units that cost more points.
- Demand for DVC rental far exceeds the number of available units and owners willing to use their points for a rental. DVC is designed to be at or near 100% occupancy all year long. That means that owners will be competing with one another for the more popular DVC units at the most popular times of the year.
- DVC periods of peak demand are not the same as Disney's periods of peak demand. Marathon weekend and Sept. thru December book up quickly.
- DVC units are not the same as staying in a hotel room. Aside from not getting daily housekeeping, you will not get 2 beds in a studio unless you're staying at OKW. What you get in a studio is a queen bed and a full sleeper sofa. Some studios will also have a Murphy bed that is smaller than a twin bed that will accommodate a 5th person.
- An owner that is willing to use their points for your reservation has restrictions on their points. Because of the restrictions that we deal with, the likelihood of getting a refund if you change your mind or need to cancel are less than when dealing directly with Disney. If they borrowed points, used banked points that are expiring soon, are past their banking deadline or if you cancel so late that their points go into holding, they aren't likely to give you your money back.
- Any changes, special room requests or adding the dining plan have to be done through the owner. Dining plans must be paid in full at the time that they are added to the reservation because that's the way that DVC works.
- You cannot request an upgrade when you get to the resort. With DVC, you get what you paid for. Any upgrades would be charged to the owner (i.e. additional points would be taken from their account).
- The owner retains control of the reservation, even if you went through a broker like David's. If the owner is behind on paying their mortgage or membership fees, Disney can (and will) cancel reservations that they have made. Even a broker cannot control that.
- Owners are not magicians. We cannot get you a reservation for a unit when there are none available. We are not likely to "walk" a reservation in order to get you what you want, nor are we likely to add our names to a waitlist to get it for you. Your chances of getting exactly what you want are much greater if you have lined up someone, who owns at the resort that you are interested in booking, at least 11 months in advance of the day you wish to arrive. The probability of success goes down from there.
- It takes a degree of trust when renting a DVC reservation, but it goes both ways. The renter is trusting the owner to make good on their promise to keep the reservation in good standing for the renter. The renter is trusting that the DVC owner will not cancel the reservation and run off with their money. OTOH, the owner is trusting that the renter will pay in full according to the terms that they set forth in the contract. They are also trusting that the renter will not damage the property or otherwise run up a bill that the owner gets stuck paying.
- When you rent a DVC reservation, Disney is not involved in the transaction at all. They will not make good if something goes wrong and you show up at the resort without a room in your name. Sometimes, it's not even the owner's doing. There is a recent thread on the DVC Member Services forum concerning an owner's reservation that was canceled by DVC for no apparent reason. This happened to be a reservation for themselves but it could just as easily have been a reservation for a friend, family member or a renter. The reservation cannot be re-booked because the unit went to the next person on the waitlist. It can happen. You'd get your money back in a case like that but you would be without a reservation and Disney won't do anything to help you other than to book a room for you at the prevailing rate for whatever is available.