When I look at purchasing DVC the initial cost and then the annual dues I just don't see how you come out ahead. Further, from what I gather DVC members do not get any discounts.
Can someone fill me in?
It really depends on what you compare to and your circumstances. DVC can give you savings or added value and be reasonable if you meet these minimum criteria. You value staying on site enough to pay the extra for the option in a moderate or above, you have a history of going to WDW routinely, you can afford afford it (my def pay cash and no other consumer debt), are OK with the compromises a timeshare brings and you can plan at least 7 months in advance. Until a few years ago I added another option, that of not looking mostly at weekends and that need could return at some point if they reallocate the points again. You really need to hit all of these pretty closely for DVC to make sense. IMO you cannot use the rack rate of DVC as the basis for your comparison and be reasonable. After you decide if DVC makes sense in those general terms then you have to look at your vacation habits, expectations, finances and do some planning based on resort choice, number of points and resale vs retail. Resale will be the cheapest by far with no real compromise other than you may not get the hot/new resort which is a good thing for many buyers. At the end of the day though, DVC rarely saves people money, they just spend the money they would have in other ways from what I can see. Whether that's a problem for you depends on your personal situation but just to be aware.When I look at purchasing DVC the initial cost and then the annual dues I just don't see how you come out ahead. Further, from what I gather DVC members do not get any discounts.
Can someone fill me in?
I still don't get anyone saying it doesn't work financially...even if financed...
Here's what convinced me to buy in last year....we were looking at a family vacation to the Grand Floridian. The cheapest room was going to cost us over $4,400 just for the room for 6 nights during April vacation.
Then I found out, for $15k, I could buy a 100 point stake in VGF, which would let us go down there every other year for the next 60 years, staying in a larger room with a kitchenette...plus $500 or so per year in MF....it's a complete no brainer. Even if I had financed by putting down 20% and paying the rest over 10 years, I still come out WAY ahead. 10 years of every other year vacations would cost me at LEAST $22,000 for accommodations. Or I could pay $15000 plus 6000 or so in MF for $21,000....and at the end of the 10 years, I could turn around and sell it for at least $10,000....for a total vacation savings of $11,000....or if I keep it, I'm already more or less even...or will be soon....and I have another 50 years of every other year vacations for just the cost of MF which is INSANE savings...
Even if you finance at 10.5% which is the preferred credit level, you aren't paying all the money down at once so you don't lose as much in opportunity costs on that money....and you end up paying an addition 6 or 7 thousand....which makes your break-even point further down the road...but that isn't even taking into account room rate hikes....which over 10 years are going to be HUGE. And your main costs are fixed with only MF increasing...
It's a complete no-brainer.
Of course, that doesn't even take into account other discounts like Annual passes, food and dining, regular purchases....
You are comparing owning DVC to Disney rates. IMO, the proper comparison should be from owning DVC to renting DVC points. That is more of an apples to apples comparison, and you will find out it is much less favorable.
I still don't get anyone saying it doesn't work financially...even if financed...
Here's what convinced me to buy in last year....we were looking at a family vacation to the Grand Floridian. The cheapest room was going to cost us over $4,400 just for the room for 6 nights during April vacation.
Then I found out, for $15k, I could buy a 100 point stake in VGF, which would let us go down there every other year for the next 60 years, staying in a larger room with a kitchenette...plus $500 or so per year in MF....it's a complete no brainer. Even if I had financed by putting down 20% and paying the rest over 10 years, I still come out WAY ahead. 10 years of every other year vacations would cost me at LEAST $22,000 for accommodations. Or I could pay $15000 plus 6000 or so in MF for $21,000....and at the end of the 10 years, I could turn around and sell it for at least $10,000....for a total vacation savings of $11,000....or if I keep it, I'm already more or less even...or will be soon....and I have another 50 years of every other year vacations for just the cost of MF which is INSANE savings...
Even if you finance at 10.5% which is the preferred credit level, you aren't paying all the money down at once so you don't lose as much in opportunity costs on that money....and you end up paying an addition 6 or 7 thousand....which makes your break-even point further down the road...but that isn't even taking into account room rate hikes....which over 10 years are going to be HUGE. And your main costs are fixed with only MF increasing...
It's a complete no-brainer.
Of course, that doesn't even take into account other discounts like Annual passes, food and dining, regular purchases....
Look....the truth is I wanted to stay at either GF or Poly...not sure why this isn't an apples to apples comparison. Yea, I could MAYBE rent VGF points for $15-17/point for a total of $3000+...but that's IF I could find VGF points for rent...and IF there was availability at that point for standard view studios, which is dicey. Availability there for studios is a major issue if you aren't an owner.
And the truth is, the room is larger than the regular GF rooms, just as close as the cheapest GF rooms, and it's beautiful...that's as apples to apples as I need to get.