Same here. I've stayed off site in hotels and other timeshares. I did that to save money. My preference is to stay on site and once I could afford it I stayed on site. Once on site I moved from values, to moderates to eventually DVC. Notice how I skipped the deluxes; could never justify paying those rates. This all took place over the last 20+ years.
So if you buy a DVC are you then committed to visiting WDW every year or can you trade it to travel to other places? And is it easy to trade.
So if you buy a DVC are you then committed to visiting WDW every year
or can you trade it to travel to other places? And is it easy to trade.
So if you buy a DVC are you then committed to visiting WDW every year or can you trade it to travel to other places? And is it easy to trade.
IMO this really is a simple question with a simple answer, assuming we're talking about someone buying in and making that decision as part of the process. You're certainly not absolutely committed to your home resort or even WDW, but many situations put you in a VERY negative position looking beyond even your home resort. The bottom line is it is not reasonable to buy in to DVC today with the idea of using non DVC options and that is an absolute without an exception IMO. Even only for DVC resorts it's often not reasonable for a given family depending on their travels times and ability to plan. Cash type equivalent exchanges (DCL, Disney Collection, Concierge Collection) are never a good value and AT BEST they are a break even with significant risk on all fronts, it may be a necessarily evil if you own already but not for buying in. BVTC is limited in both available resorts and availability. DVC members are at a dramatic disadvantage trading in RCI and exchanging timeshares in general is a crap shoot at best. That's not to say one can't be successful at times, just not very often for high demand options and/or high demand times. That's partly because of the specifics of DVC as it relates to exchanges and partly because this is the nature of timeshare exchanges in general. In that past I've laid out the one strategy that maximizes the possibilities for those that do own and chose to attempt an exchange. The only reasonable option as a new buyer is to buy the points you plan to use at DVC and no more other than POSSIBLY a small cushion to guard agains reallocations or longer/bigger trips than anticipated. For one looking at a studio for 5 days adventure season (S-F) that might be 20% while one looking at a 2 BR Magic/Premier should likely buy no extra points or even less than they think they need.So if you buy a DVC are you then committed to visiting WDW every year or can you trade it to travel to other places? And is it easy to trade.
I've issued the challenge before for anyone to show me a guaranteed non DVC resort option that's a good value, truth is there aren't any, zero. There are a very handful of potential options in RCI that would be a good value IF (BIG IF) you could get them. Here's an extreme but real life example I've posted before. A few years ago we went to Cabo for 2 weeks. Our total cost as an RCI exchange was around $600 for the 2 weeks including around $350 of that as exchange fees. Had we used DVC for those 2 weeks it would have been 1500 points plus just under $200 in exchange fees.
Actually the $600 (maybe just over) included the exchange fees. The prices were so reasonable that I ended up getting an additional week in a 3 BR that ran concurrently with one of our other weeks (1 day off but starting 1 day earlier than our 2nd week) at a different Gold Crown resort for the same costs. That actually raised our total cost to just over $900 for the 2 weeks. We ended up enjoying the first resort so much that we did not even check in to the second resort. We were able to stay in the same OF unit for all of the 2 weeks.Och, that sure makes using DVC points to trade into RCI real expense even if one assumed only MF of $5/point for those 1500 points, $7500+$200 for DVC vrs $600+$350 for non-DVC.
We used to own a timeshare in Kona which was part of RCI and all I remember was the hassle of trying to exchange it. I still cringe when I think of it. And than every December I would get the annual maintenance fee assessment for $1,000 (which is like 2/3 of a summer rental house). Merry Christmas to me..
I'm sure DVC's are still better than a regular time share as when Disney does things they always do it better.
But if it ain't broke don't fix it.
Thanks for all you help!
My view is either you eat the bear or it eats you, that's true with DVC and every other timeshare I know even the ones that are fixed week, fixed unit and never exchanged or rented. With DVC you can restrict yourself to DVC resort usage only and decrease the amount of education and planning that goes into it but the principles remain the same. Like stocks, the best and worst decisions are made on the buy in. IMO, if one is not willing to put a certain amount of planning and effort in, may as well stay on the sidelines.I think that there are timeshare people and not timeshare people. Dean is a timeshare person, he wants to understand the system and work it and get value for it. I suspect he takes some enjoyment in getting bargains. Other people are not timeshare people. I'm really not. Cash is fine for me. DVC used within the DVC system is "timeshare lite." You don't need to understand the RCI systems, you don't need to do much more than book your trip far enough in advance to get a room and pay your dues bill, and go to Disney often enough to use up your points. However, for all that it is still a timeshare - you still need to make use of it. You'll still find that availability can be challenging, even within the system. You are still at the mercy of the timeshare management company.
It doesn't sound like you are a timeshare person. And it doesn't sound like you are convinced you'd go to Disney often enough to make it a good deal.
(I don't leave my house on Black Friday, either. But I know people who are already planning their post Thanksgiving shopping trip).
It does not make you a FL resident and it does not give you access to Disney discounts which they choose to offer to FL residents.Does owning DVC make you a florida resident?
Does owning DVC make you a florida resident?