Thinking of selling one of my Boardwalk contracts myself. I found one thread from the past, but no one was specific on whether they had luck with TUG, Redweek, EBAY, etc. Any input would be appreciated.
Price it too low and Disney takes it. You no longer own it and Disney pays you your asking price less any closing costs you incure, but the buyer loses out.Facebook. All those you mentioned cost money. Go through a reputable dvc title company who will hold the escrow and I bet you'd have no problem. However, I'm sure the buyer would want a discount rather than paying a premium. And it may take longer to come up with a buyer if you don't have a premium location.
Facebook? While I am on Facebook, I never post. Wouldn't only your "friends" see it?
We purchased our first contract from a private seller several years ago and had no issues at all. As a matter of fact, at the time DVD was going to take the points through ROFR and we actually counter-offered with a slightly higher amount and by some miracle it actually went through!
This doesn't make sense. How can you counter-offer Disney's ROFR? From what I understand, if Disney decides to exercise their ROFR, then that's it.
It used to be quite common, remember DVD doesn't really want these back, they just want to sell retail. I haven't seen it referenced much in the past few years and I don't recall any instances where it was reported as an option or as a failure.There was a time (several years ago as I recall), when several posters reported Disney allowing buyers to raise their offers after Disney indicated they would take the contract Can't say if that still happens.
There are 3 parts to this IMO. First, it can be a win win selling on your own. It's reasonable when you already have a buyer lined up such as a family member or acquaintance and for things were it's easy to sell like small or high demand contracts. For the rest, it likely isn't worth fooling with. For some of those situations doing it on your own can be a good choice, where it isn't, closing a lower cost firm like LT transfers (under $180 OTD single contract) is often the best choice. As for title insurance, it's rarely a reasonable choice for DVC IMO. One can easily research on their own and other than a bankruptcy or known divorce situation, the chances of it being helpful are about zero. Maybe for very lost cost insurance and very high cost packages it's reasonable to consider but those would be case by case. I'm only aware of a single instance with a timeshare where title insurance paid off and I don't recall any with DVC. IMO it's like pet insurance or any other specialty insurance, if you can afford to lose it, you can't afford it anyway. IMO this is often the situation where fear overcomes true evaluation and planning. Basically people get to thinking of it as protection that doesn't cost much so they don't go any further than that. Once DVC is changed over to the buyer, the changes of it getting reversed are essentially nil. One can easily research DVC for all but HI, that's the one place I'd likely at least consider it routinely.When you say selling yourself... if you mean that you are planning on using a reputable DVC title/escrow company, then it's pretty simple. They do all the work anyway. When you are paying commission to an agent, you are paying for their network and their advertising... not their contract expertise.
If you mean you are going to try to sell it without a title/escrow/closing company or an agent, then I think you are in for more headache than it's worth. Bear in mind, the $170 to the seller is a fixed cost, and the Doc Tax and title insurance are fixed expenses. Trying to avoid using a title company will save, at the most, $200-300 for the entire transaction. Also, I think you will be hard pressed to find a buyer who will trust a stranger, the seller, with his security deposit during the 2-3 month closing process.
My opinion anyway, for what it's worth.
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