For Wyndham I think you're at a pretty comparable exchange situation compared to
DVC,
The advice I've received, both from Dean and other experts, is that Wyndham is not a particularly strong trader -- not the timeshare to buy purely for trading purposes. However, I think it's vastly superior to DVC for trading for two reasons.
The first is that Wyndham gives you
free full RCI membership, which means you have access to 3,500 or so RCI resorts. DVC gives you only a small number of options -- I don't know how many, but it's a small fraction of RCI's total system. If you want to ski at Vail, DVC may have zero options -- the full RCI will have dozens.
Secondly, if you try to use DVC to exchange, the points cost is the same for a particular-sized unit regardless of location or quality of resort. Think about that for a minute --
one size fits all. News flash: all timeshare resorts are not created equal, so if you're paying one-size-fits-all (meaning average), you are not likely to get premier resorts in prime time.
That's not true with Wyndham. With Wyndham, YOU decide how much you are willing to pay for a particular reservation. You can exchange "like-for-like" and get a 2 BR for a 2 BR cost. But many exchanges are not like-for-like -- they are deeply discounted. Here's the strategy one Wyndham owner posted over on TUG, edited for brevity:
28K - only for truly blue weeks (ed. note - lowest demand) or for the less popular resorts found in overbuilt/quiet areas
42K - for offseason weeks at popular resorts or anytime at quieter/less popular resorts...
70K - for shoulder or high season at popular Wyndhams and non-Wyndhams, ...also for non-Wyndham resorts in season
105K - for 2BR trades, when it REALLY matters to me, or for hard but not impossible trades to non-Wyndham resorts
You'll notice none of those are anywhere near the 154K I was using above. She's talking about getting 2 BRs for studio points costs! Try that with DVC.
Don't get me wrong -- I love DVC. But for DVC stays, not other stuff.