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- Mar 19, 2014
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- 1,320
When you add in interest (assuming you need to finance) to buy, it is impossible for me to justify the cost over other options.
Have to agree with you there and it is the part that consistently boggles my mind - when you factor in the financing, especially at the high rate that DVD charges with 9.99%, you might as well just book the rooms through Disney with the usual 25% discount and call it a day? I don't get how Disney gets away with such a high interest rate, so easily. The only thing I can think of is what our guide said, that it's a legacy to pass down to your kids. So the "gifting" aspect, regardless of how much said gift ends up costing folks, is what draws them in? A HELOC/Home Equity Loan is a great financing option, but even at ~4%, you're still paying something that needs to be factored into the whole picture.
Just taking a look at the Exhibit A - Blanket Satisfaction of Mortgages statement, 44 out of 300 listed are from 2019. If I'm understanding it correctly, then the other 256 were financed through Disney for x length of time. The earliest date of mortgage I see is from 2008, so this doc can not possibly be complete in any way, but interesting nonetheless.
Unless it has changed, Disney doesn’t report your debt to a credit agency. So, this could contribute to the ease of financing?
Plus, if someone has a Disney Visa can get some of it for 6 months no interest.
Makes it easier for them to sell with just” Look, your monthly payment is only XYZ!”
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Correct me if I am wrong, BUT even if you bought DVC from Disney and...
100 point contract @ $180
Financed $18,000 @10% over 10 years
$237.87 per month payment
Total Principal Paid over 10 years = $18,000
Total Interest Paid over the 10 years = $10,544.56
Total price of DVC ownership = $28,544 / 100 points = $285 per point
$10,544.56 / 1,000 points (100pts x 10 years) = $10.54 per point in interest
Adding $10.54pp financing to $8pp dues = $18.54pp.......ouch!
Note:
Interest costs on a timeshare purchase are KILLER
I think it will be a long long time before it $400 pp. With the exception of a few resorts, it makes more financial sense right now to rent points than even buy resale. The emotional pull is propping up prices right now. That emotional pull and pixie dust can only push prices so how.Looking at historical DVC prices:
1991 = $51
2007 = $100 = 16 years to double from $50
2012 = $150
2020 = $200 = 14 years to double from $100
My guess, based on the past 30 years - In 2034, the price will be $400 for a new DVC resort