bumbershoot
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2007
- Messages
- 69,750
We've also observed that some folks have a sense of superiority about this and use a tone I would call "judgey."
Lol, until this thread I’ve rarely felt that people were judging the person, but merely the idea. Until this thread.
I personally always try to tell my story. This was our situation, we financed, then faced a layoff, recognized the razors edge we were on, got better. (That story continues years later with “we slipped back onto the age, bought a house, couldn’t figure out how to be a team anymore, the end”)
It was a risk to get dvc, but even if it’s sold it during the divorce we had several years of nice vacations out of it. Worth it, even with the extra in interest.
one individual essentially responded that the OP should not have financed something they couldn't afford. Affordability was never mentioned by the OP - just that it couldn't be used. That exchange has led to this post.
The person said it, someone else explained what they could have been meaning (not what it seemed to say), and the person Liked the post. I took that to mean that the explanation was correct; that they didn’t mean it about the OP but for others lurking.
Because most timeshare financing either involves putting your house on the line (equity financing) - which screwed a lot of people over in 2008-2010 - and which I don't want to see happen again - or happens at interest rates too high to be responsible.
Our rate was 11%. If you feel that’s high, you’re filtering it through a nice amount of privilege. Our used car financing rate, from Chase (before wamu was stolen by them and before we got chase banks in our area), was 25%. 11 was *nothing*.
Be glad you weren’t in that position.
Me paying off that car ASAP got my then-husband better credit. That got him a cc. A cc whose lowest interest rate while we were married was 10%. So....
We also see people ask if it shows.on credit all the time. That is like a warning flag.
Or...it’s a question. People ask that question about other things, too.
People also ask that as a positive. Will this show up on credit so I can get better credit? It’s a good question to have the answer to.
But I'd rather come across as really judgy and tell everyone its a horrible idea than read another one of those 2009 posts about someone losing their house and being underwater on their DVC.
My dad nearly lost two houses without ever owning a timeshare. My friend nearly lost her condo without owning a timeshare. Timeshares don't make people lose their homes.
We financed DVC in 2009 and thankfully had nothing bad happen as a result. We had continued to resist buying a house before and after that time. If we’d bought a house and cared about being “underwater”
(which only matters if you want to sell it...no one I knew irl wanted to sell their homes, but got big ol’ hurt feelings about owning something that wasn’t worth as much...it was the oddest thing. Why even care? But maybe it was my 12 years leasing VWs that helped me be able to focus on what I was getting from the thing) we could have had bad things happen (emotionally, at least), but the timeshare wouldn’t have been the problem.
As it was, buying the house was kind of the last part of our downfall! Houses are stressful. Dvc helped us. The house didn’t. Sigh.
I don't want to be the reason someone gets foreclosed on.
Aw crisi, don’t put the weight of that on your shoulders.
And comparing people who finance Disney to those who go into credit card debt to pay for their vacations is a foolish way to go. The idea is not to race to the bottom, but rather to put yourself in as good of a position to enjoy life as possible.
But people DO do that. So if it’s putting hotel stays on 20% cards vs taking the 11% through dvc for something they can keep on using for decades, financing is the lesser evil. We don’t live in a perfect world.
I just wonder if people who finance their dvc contract, do they really have the money needed to pay for all the extra costs associated with dvc ownership?
Yep!
We ended up spending an additional $10,000+ per year on maintenance fees, annual passes, dining plans, etc that were needed to actually use the points.
Holy moly. Your vacations are far more expensive than mine. Dining plans cost more than we spend on food oop. We had only two years of wdw APs. Don’t ask about universal APs, though! Airfare was covered by then-husband’s air miles. And I have 160 points, not 800, so the dues aren’t heinous.
However, if a poster is asking about which DVC resort to buy and looking at 20% interest rates
Not sure dvc is that high?
But why would it be advisable to spend all of your money on financing a deal to go to Disney, staying at deluxe resorts, only to not take advantage of what offerings are available to you?
Because Disney resorts are pretty nice. Better than what I can get in the greater Seattle area. And resorts here aren’t close to universal lol.
APs aren’t the only way. Dining plan isn’t the only way (nor the responsible way for me). Etc.
My cousin doesn’t have the parks in her budget. So for our Princess trips I don’t put them in mine. We have had terrific times the last 4 years, doing our cousin trips without parks. People should try it.