It's easy to get swept up in the magic of Disney and who wouldn't want to vacation at one of the DVC resorts. As I told another poster, I would enter this discussion from the point of view of the DH who needed convincing - because that's where I was a few years ago. I'll fast forward to the end so you know how our situation ended - we bought 300 points and have been very happy. The whole investment thing didn't impress me. I'm very old-fashioned and grew up fairly poor so money has always been a concern. Our one splurge has been to have family vacation at WDW. We done this since 1973 (with 4 kids) and have probably been there 15 times. Our first time was in the now-destroyed north wing of the Contemporary in a room for $32 (with 3 kids). As another kid arrived and expenses started to go up, after a couple of stays at the Poly, we shifted over to the moderates (we love the CBR). Eventually those started to top $200 a night and we consider switching to the value resorts. We now have 11 grandchildren so we travel to WDW as a group of 21. You have to realize that wherever you make any decision, you never have a complete set of information upon which to base your decision. What you want to try to do is cover the major points. For us the first major point was "would we be continuing to go to WDW every 18 to 24 months". If not, end of story! When you buy those points, you commit to going to WDW and the tickets, meals, transportation, and misc. can get to be expensive. The next question is not is it a good investment but rather "can we afford it?" My feeling is that if you can pay cash for the points, you're probably okay but if you have to finance that purchase, be careful. You have three children and if your plans are for them to go to college, the last thing you want to be doing is sending a check to Disney every month for an upscale vacation and not be able to afford college tuition. We get a bill for around $1,400 every January for our maintenance fee and that's a sizeable piece of change. If you do decide yes to both those questions, then the only convincing DH needs is to visit any of the DVC resorts. They are all incredibly beautiful. All themed differently so you can pick which one you like. And you get a nice selection of room types and sizes. I've also found that it takes some of the uncertainty out of get the rooms you want as you can book at you home resort 11 months in advance (and we've always gotten our first choice of rooms). And the thing you have to remember is you are staying in a Deluxe Disney Resort for the price of a Value Resort. I would urge you to consider the two points that I mentioned and not get swept up into the magic of Disney if it isn't right for you.