Why did you purchase DVC over another timeshare company like marriott, Hilton, Wyndham.
I think the first question is "should I consider buying a timeshare". A timeshare is, IMO, a good fit for someone who:
- can commit to going on at least one "significant" vacation every year,
- does not expect large (negative) changes in income or health, and
- prefers condo-style accomodations to hotel rooms when possible.
If you can say yes to all of those things, then trhe next question is "should that timeshare be DVC". IMO, DVC is a good fit for someone who:
- is a committed Disney fan,
- wants to visit WDW at least every other year for at least the next 10+ years,
- would never consider staying offsite, and
- rarely if ever stays in a Value resort.
If someone can't say yes to all of those, then it is likely you'd be better off taking your Disney trips some other way---renting from a DVC owner, booking a regular hotel room, staying offsite, mixing between different Disney destinations, etc.
There is an even smaller group of people for whom an ownership
at DLR makes sense. Those people cannot imagine staying at any of the various hotels on Harbor Blvd within easy walking distance of the Esplanade, but absolutely must stay in a Disney-owned hotel.
Aulani, Vero, or HHI are even smaller-niche products, because there are a LOT of great resorts all over Hawaii, Atlantic coastal Florida, and Hilton Head respectively.
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I bought my first timeshare in late 2006, when my kids were four and six. At the moment I own five different ones. All were purchased resale. Owning timeshare made it possible for us to take vacations I would never have paid for out of pocket.
More importantly, the "use it or lose it" nature of timeshare helped me make taking vacations a priority. That's a big change from how I used to be. Early in my career as a Professor, my Department Chair asked me where I was going on vacation that summer, and I answered, "Oh, I don't take vacations." And, I meant it.
I went from "that guy" to someone who, next month, is tacking on a five night stay at Wyndham Canterbury in San Francisco to explore the city with my LA-based son---in part because I had some points in RCI that I needed to use by the end of this year. In the next year or two, I'll be downsizing from five to one or probably two. One of my resorts is likely to cease operations soon, and divorce is going to claim some of the rest. My kids are now early in their careers, and will have both more limited vacation time
and a desire to spend at least some of that vacationing withoutr either parent in tow. As they get more established I may add to the portfolio again. Or I might not. Time will tell.