canabrits2
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2010
- Messages
- 175
I had a friend who is a CPA and an awesome numbers guy over the other night with his wife and kids. He and his family are huge Disney fans and have gone down the last 3-4 years. I told him about DVC, he had heard of it, and seen it, but never really looked into it.
So after dinner, the kids were playing video games and the wives were in the kitchen chatting we sat down with my laptop and proceeded to crunch numbers in EXCEL based on annual dues, my initial investment and the current cost of a standard room at the Beach Club Resort, because that is where we have points and that is where we will always stay. We assumed a 4.2% annual increase in dues and a 3% annual increase in room rates.
We also assumed a 17 year window...don't know why, just didn't take it out to 2/1/2042. You have to assume you are going to go every year.
This is what we got for lodging only:
Total 17 year NPV, net present value, to spend 1 week at the beach club
$60,423.48 versus an NPV of $29979.12 to initially buy and pay dues for DVC.
NPV is the present value in today's dollar of what you would have in your pocket if you chose not to do the option. SO in this case you would need twice as much in hand to book with cash versus points.
Also keep in mind: IT IS NOT AN INVESTMENT, IT IS PREPAID VACATION. DVC offers an economical way to stay at DELUXE resorts. The numbers do not make sense if you are comparing DVC to Value resorts.
I hope this helps. Give me some time, I will modify the spreadsheet for a 2 bedroom and post results if you'd like. PM me.
YOMICKEY
OMG. That is the best explaination and believable breakdown I've seen and I'm new to researching DVC as a possible option. I'm an Excel person so thank you. Those savings based on the standard room at Beach Club example are awesome. Even if you assumed going every second year, it's still a savings. What are the current annual dues??