If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Unconfigured Ad Widget
Collapse
Unconfigured Ad Widget
Collapse
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
What do you own when you buy a timeshare? Nothing.
LOL, sounds like a disgruntled hotel night manager with nothing to do. I love my points system and am in the market for more. I always loved my membership camping with Thousand Trails, also. Thats just me. If you don't like it, that's just you. No one will force you to sign. Go stay in your local dive motels with meth labs but don't tell me I don't have anything. I have every thing I need when vacationing. I'm in the Disney Contemporary Resort as I type and really wish I was down the road at The Fountains. Just happens my convention is here so stayed here out of convenience. You can have your hotel room!
I'm in the Disney Contemporary Resort as I type and really wish I was down the road at The Fountains. Just happens my convention is here so stayed here out of convenience. You can have your hotel room!
If you were staying at Bay Lake Towers you'd feel differently. Not that there is anything wrong with the Fountains.
I see bay lake towers is for DVC members. Are those suites with all the goodies? I could google, I suppose...
Yes it is a DVC timeshare but occasionally it shows up in RCI for exchange so you don't necessarily have to own DVC to get in.
Of course it's easier if you own but scoring a BLT unit is a prize for many an exchanger.
No property. You own a piece of paper that tell you that you can vacation at one of their resorts if there is availability. If you find a sucker you can sell your worthless piece of paper, but you own nothing in reality. NOTHING. You own debt that will never end.
Well, maybe you bought vapor, but the rest of us seem to be getting to visit our promised bricks and mortar places. I own a share of several properties, my pieces of paper legally guarantee it.
At this point in the conversation he's not giving any information, and how can we help if we don't know what he owns? Now, since we know it's Westgate we know what the problem is --maybe? I actually don't know where this thread is going, so I'm out of it. shaggy
Good answer tonyg and remember most timeshare scammers are in Flordia!
Bottom line is you own percent of something that might not be worth much if you own the deed as we do. It all comes down to owning a use of time in the resort and this is what any timeshare buyer should be buying for and no other reason!
Well, maybe you bought vapor, but the rest of us seem to be getting to visit our promised bricks and mortar places. I own a share of several properties, my pieces of paper legally guarantee it.
FloridaGuy, I am sorry you are so disgruntled and dissatisfied with your ownership, wherever that may be. Most of us here are savvy owners who have made their ownership work well for them.
I have been a very happy owner for 20 years, and have been able to take almost 100 wonderful vacations with our family and friends. TS ownership has emabled us to take so many trips and visit so many places that would not have been possible without being affiliated with timeshare.
Maybe you ought to educate yourself a little more. There are other types of timeshares other than what you bought from Wastegate. If you have a points contract, you are exactly right, but if you have something else you are wrong.
Deeded timeshares in the US, particularly fixed week resorts, give you a deed where you have ownership right in an undivided interest in specific real property coupled with recurring use rights. Many RTU Caribbean timeshares are based on leasehold rights that are superiror in law to a mere points contract. With my South African and Australian timeshaes I have (or had) shares of stock in the ''shareblock'' that owned the real property at the timeshare. The Hapimag timeshare chain in Europe is a points system that operates on the basis of members owning shares of stock in a non-profit company that then owns the actual timeshares. One of my European timeshares operates on a leasehold basis and the other did on a cooperative basis where timeshare members were members of the cooperative that owned the real property.
Would-be buyers, on the other hand, should beware that even the price of $0 may not be much of a bargain. A 2010 story about $1 timeshares (yes, some were selling for a buck back then too) noted that in addition to the hefty maintenance fees, new owners might have to pay membership fees, closing costs, “convenience fees” (good luck figuring out what that is), and a portion of the property’sreal estate taxes. If the property expands or does major repairs, timeshare owners may be required to chip in even more money.
Comment
JLB
Please excuse me, I'm a Dick. Not a moron just a Dick
Contrary to the claim in the OP, the biggest problem with timesharing for those when they are done timesharing, and want to get out, is that they do own something,and are contractually bound to help maintain it.
RCI Member Since 24-Aug-1989/150-plus Exchanges***THE TIMESHARE GRIM REAPER~~~Exchanging/Searching/SW Florida/MO/AR/IA/Consumer Advocacy/Estate Planning/Sports/Boating/Fishing/Golf/Lake-living/Retirement****Sometimes ya just gotta be a dick
No property. You own a piece of paper that tell you that you can vacation at one of their resorts if there is availability. If you find a sucker you can sell your worthless piece of paper, but you own nothing in reality. NOTHING. You own debt that will never end.
wow!! you said it the hard way. But still true though
Comment