We are on a break from the schpiel--seriously considering this. Seems like a good deal. Any
caveats?
Need your advice and experience ASAP! PLEASE HELP!
Thanks
Wyndham timeshares--should we or shouldn't
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NO - Don't do it! They are not an investment, very hard to sell. You can vacation annually for less than what it cost. If you had time, I would pull up all the threads with similar Q.
We went to one in Hawaii [Marriott] and almost took the bait.
Run, don't walk. Nothing they promise is worth it. They do the math up all fancy and it seems like such a deal. By the time you figure monthly costs, initial price, financing if needed -- way too much money.
A fractional is only slightly better.
If I knew then what I know now, I would not buy a timeshare. Up front money then the annual fees, which keep going up. With the Internet, you can rent timeshares anywhere you wish and you don't have the upfront buy in costs. Don't listen to the schpiel about trading . Trading thru RCI (which is also owned by Wyndham) involves more fees. I don't need a timeshare to make me go on vacation.
Here:
http://www.pfadvice.com/2007/02/24/10-reasons-timeshares-suck/
If you hesitate and say it's too expensive they will reduce the price, more than once.
They will lure you in. Be strong!
Thanks one and all. We were considering this to use (though not in same place every year) not as an investment. Does that change the picture? Though now I am thinking we should look at the resale market).
I know only one person who likes it - they make reservation for skiing on Lake Tahoe, and use it every winter. Most people find it a burden, paying a lot to buy it first, after that maintainance fee. And you pay property tax too, right?
Timeshares sell unused rooms in hotels, I know Expedia does it. Try to stay in one of those places, see how you like it.
Under no circumstances would I be pressered to buy something at a presentation. Go to their website, see if there is a discussion forum, what others say. Or check Facebook. It's not a one-minute decision.
And one more thing - somebody told me, Wynham requires a one-year-in-advance reservation, not sure if this is true, but if yes, can you always make plans a year ahead?
Wow. Thanks . Will do that
Not an investment- still does not change the picture. Wait. Check secondary market and you will see the deals. You can rent whatever you want, whenever, on sites such as red week or Timeshare users group.
They prey on you being in "vaca" mode and that you will be lulled in my their creative math.
You weren't thinking of doing this before the schpeil, so don't make a decision in haste. What's that saying, decide in haste, repent in leisure??
Tell them you will think about it when you get home. And if you are interested you will contact them. They will tell you - they can only do this price NOW, or offer the bonuses NOW, or...or and you have to tell them NOW!
They will be more than happy to take your money, should you do your due diligence and decide to go ahead with it.
Would you buy a home under these conditions or a car? Don't do it.
Absolutely DO NOT buy. Had a time share for over 15 years. Used it every year but could have stayed in a hotel or rented a share far cheaper. Couldn't sell it and yearly maintenance fees kept going up each year. Ended up selling for peanuts just to dump it.
WALK AWAY with a smile!!!!!
If you buy, you will be purchasing a point system. It allows these resorts to sell then raise the amount of points it will take to stay there in the future. Then you have to buy more points. Its a new twist to buying a week of timeshare. With the selling of weeks, resorts would eventually run out of inventory. With points it is unlimited sales.
Google "Wyndham Complaints" and you will find lots of members who were misled during the sales process and once they buy they find out they cannot book time at the resorts. The Wyndham on Orlando is running a special price of $67 per night to rent their units out. They already have your money. And your annual maint fee will increase yearly. Plus when the resort becomes run down, you will be responsible for a special assessment to rebuild it. Resort owners at Diamond Resorts in Hawaii were each responsible for a 65 million dollar assessment.
I spend my time helping members of all resorts get out of their contracts, trust me you will find a lot of headaches by owning timeshare. You can't sell them once you buy them. Any special deals you get with your membership will not transfer if you could. They are about selling so they will not allow an owner to be able to offer as good a deal as they offer. I have a list of owners who will give their timeshares away.
My advice..rent for your vacation. It's cheaper and your kids won't be stuck with it someday.
Again, my advice is also NO - Do NOT buy!!!!! - and see my answer to your other post.


Hey - take the freebie gift and enjoy it and tell them - sorry - not this year - maybe next.
Oh but you don't get this and this and this and this, etc.
Well guess what - the next time you go to a sales presentation - they can "bend the rules" and get you that former great (first time deal), but psst - don't tell anyony..................
Been to a number of presentations - and they are good at what they do. I like to also check out their sales techniques, closing tactics and the like - and then very calmly tell them - well, not this time............................
More closing pressure - and then you tell them again - not this time, and a bit later - for the 3rd time - not this time, and hey - I have graciously stayed past the hour and a half and now we have to get to......................... Adios Amigos.
The real numbers - if you crucnh them thoroughly - DO NOT WORK. PERIOD. You overpay - period, even if buying a repo - as the annual HOA dues and related exchange fees are so high.
I am glad that I stumbled upon this website and discussion. I completely DISAGREE to the assessment given on Wyndham timeshares. I have 2 of them and I love them and use them to their fullest every year. My maintenance fees per month are low and have decreased every year ~$60/month. We have rented out points on ebay, we have given trips as wedding presents, we have used them with family,etc. We constantly get upgrades and discounts on attractions and love the resorts....
wow, that is quite a stumble.
I once purchased a time share in Ocean City MD. I was suckered into buying. However, when I arrived home to Frederick, MD the next day, I thought it over and saw what a ripoff that was. Fortunately, there is a law in MD that allows you 72 hours to negate a contract. I immediately sent a Telegram (remember those?), to the seller, cancelling my purchase. I got an angry phone call later that day from the agent, but I was at home, and I controlled the situation. I had no problem after that.
I was quite open about on line research...wonder which one of the salesstaff noined as 4284?
BINGO ! That explains the stumble. Sneaky ba$tard$
I'm guessing that based on this thread, Wyndham will no longer allow potential timeshare clients/victims any break time, especially those with access to the internet!
hahha, good one Judy
Don't know anything about timeshares at Wyndham, own a unit on Kauai with Marriott, wish I had known about the resale market when we bought in 1997. It is all paid off now and since my husband passed away I am trying to sell with no luck unless I want to walk away with $2500 (paid $16k). You have gotten good advice from other posters here.
NEVER buy a 'time' share. It's like buying options that may or may not apply when and where you want to use them. If someone called you at home and offered to sell you this stuff, wouldn't you hang up?
*IF* you want to own vacation real estate, buy a vacation rental condo! You will be in charge of who maintains it and who rents it. You'll use it as you please. You will get tax deductions. (You can even deduct your airfare to visit it "to conduct maintenance".) Given time, it will be worth more than you paid for it.
If you want to vacation somewhere, rent a place or buy it.
clar4284, would you mind sharing where your time share is and the particulars? My parents purchased on just outside of Disney. I cannot pay someone to use our week there and I end up going places that I do not want to go and paying additional trading fees just to use the week instead of losing our annual maintenance fee which has gone up about 30% since purchase.
I will admit that when my parents retired they got a lot of use out of it because they had no restrictions on time or place. As long as there was a golf course withing 20 miles, and most do, they would go. Now that I am using it, it seems that most resorts are at the beach or inland but no where near anything of interest. The last one we stayed at was on a golf course but to get dinner at somewhere other than the clubhouse it was a 30 min drive one way.
Save yourself the frustration and limitation and put the money in the bank for future vacations. As for the sales pressure. You are in control of you. Just walk out the door and go have a nice dinner. You are not under any obligation to buy.
LOL. Reminds me of our salesman on Kauai - back in '86 - Mike Hawkins. He said - I will give you a list of 10 property managers and you can easily rent your week out for a couple thousand dollars if you don't use it every year.

Hey - we were on a honeymoon and i had a very good year, so I didn't hold up closing for that - but never saw old Mike again.
He was a dang good salesman - and I told somebody else at the Cliffs Club - that I would hire him as a salesman - but would make sure I have a very good malpractice type insurance.
Without getting into the good and bad of timeshares (we have two weeks in Palm Desert which has worked out very well for us, but only because it's a lockout so we actually get 4 weeks of use/exchange). I wanted to comment on ChiSue's post which includes statements about tax deductions and writing off your airfare, etc. let me just say do your research. That is such a broad statement, it's laughable. If you use your vacation condo door more than a certain number of days you don't get to take depreciation and your deductions are limited to the amount of income you make from the property. If you use it and don't rent it out, you can NEVER take deductions for flying there to do maintenance, etc. DO YOUR RESEARCH.
clar4284 on Aug 3, 12 at 8:15am
<<I am glad that I stumbled upon this website and discussion. I completely DISAGREE to the assessment given on Wyndham timeshares. I have 2 of them and I love them...>>
Interesting that clar (joined August 2012) just found out about Fodor's and went straight for the Lounge and straight for this topic.
good one clar!!
can you spell t-r-o-l-l
I thought I had replied to this post - but it may have been another similar one.
We own a timeshare that we bought in the mid 1980's. Do not buy a timeshare if you can't afford to throw money away. If you can that is fine because that is what you are doing.
You can stay at a top notch hotel for a week and it will still be cheaper.
You can exchange thru RCI which is what we do, but even so, you'll find that certain cities have few to no timeshares to exchange. In addition, we've been trying to use our timeshare in the pacific northwest for many, many years and have never gotten an exchange.
"You can stay at a top notch hotek for a wek and it will still be cheaper"
Let's just say a top-notch hotel would cost, what $500 a night, that's $3500 for a week I just don't understand the math.
The fuzzy math one listens to in a timeshare presentation is what is hard to understand.

They first try to show you how much you are spending on hotels etc each year.
Hey - I love the Internet for checking out good hotel deals, and you do not have to spend $500 a night to stay at a top hotel/resort period. You can stay in nice accommodations for far less, unless of course, you just have to have a specific hotel during busy season, etc.
Additionally - if you check ahead - you can many times find a nice condo on a weekly deal for far less than you would expect, especially if you can travel during the offseason.
Also to review prior discussions/comments - aside from your out of pocket cost for the timeshare purchase, most people overlook their annual HOA dues for timeshares, and ours in Princeville, Kauai - which we paid cash for back in '86 - is now about $1,000 a year. Times change - and we don't get over to Paradise as much as we used to - so we are selling it - and we might net enough to pay this year's HOA dues.
Secondly, the fuzzy math ones try to show how much over the next 20? years you will save with your timeshare - but Q pleez: What is the initial value of my "investment" (today - a "standard" 2BR 2 BA timeshare will probably be in the $20,000 plus range? - but holy shxx: Some were trying to double that on the first go-around before "knuckles" is called in to show you all the newly found flexibility you have - and if you buy a lockoff room - ever other year - you only have to spend this teeny little amount......................).
So, if you take that $20k+ and invest it now - very conservatively - say 3% on average for the next 20 years - you will have a good chunk of change in 20 years to use for travel, etc - whereas if you buy the timeshare - you have pretty much zippo at the end of that time, or have you not checked the "resale" - read "Repossession" sheets on timeshares lately.
Finally - there is the expense for most timeshare owners of belonging to a timeshare exchange company - and the added expense of actually exchanging your week.
The only real benefit I will say I/we had over the years was using "bonus" time to stay at some resorts in Park City - and also in Palm Springs years ago - - which was from a timeshare my in-laws bought at the Heidelberg Inn in June Lake (a week we now own f & c - and may keep) - which was part of the old Glen Ivy system - but now - even bonus time is harder to find, and costs more.
Ergo - my best advice is don't buy a timeshare or into a points system (Wyndham, etc), unless you are absolutely convinced you will love and visit your home resort every year for the next couple of decades, and believe me - that is very hard to predict.
Don't do it.
I can vacation WAY cheaper and better on my own than any timeshare I have ever seen. The couple people I know who got persuaded and bought on a vacation have been forever sorry. It's a moneypit for them with very little reward.
This may be the one and only time I agree with Tom. These are only to benefit the developer. Save your money so you won't have buyers remorse.
Thanks to one and all. I am going to just kick back and enjo.ay the rest of my vacation. And not think about it ---except to enjoy the dinner we paid for by listening to the schpiel. Mahalo and aloha
?
They fed you dinner? I'm surprised they didn't starve you!
My parents had RCI, now just mom. And for some reason, while using it in Vegas with my sister, mom signed up with Wyndham! WTF?! The last time she tried, she had second thoughts and put me on the phone with the woman, since I was in law school at the time. I did the whole spiel: recent widow, elderly, taking advantage, who would a jury side with, etc. Mom got out of that one. Why did she do this again? Because she can be so...unthinking. Yeah, I'll go with unthinking.
LOL SF7: In addition to the "pressure" - you can get some great perks by going to timeshare presentations (dinner chits, show tix, etc) - and I love just to hear the new sales pitches, and then politely tell them no, tell them no again, and by the 3rd NO - start standing up and looking a wee bit irritated.


Plus - despite what they say - you can always come back and buy the same deal - even if they give you the old dog and pony show about Today, only Today, repeat ad nauseam - only TODAY - can we offer these incredible deal points................................. - because God above said so..........................
And believe me - as propita says - many people do succumb to the pressure. Not for nuttin do the timeshare marketing programs bring in the numbers - by offering great perks - as they know it's all a numbers game: Get enough warm bodies in here and we will close some of them.
Hey - I plan to go to a timeshare presentation in Cabo San Lucas in the late fall - where according to my fishing buddy (an ole grade school friend) - the various timeshare resorts have reps all over the airport trying to stop you - and they offer a free fishing day - so - HOOKUP!!!!!!!!!!!
As for DebitNM: Come on now girl - you have at least grudgingly agreed with me before - even if I am not yet properly informed about the merits of your Albuquerque, but prefer Sante Fe, or points north such as Taos. Double
You can have some nice vacations with a timeshare, but in the long run they won't be cheap. Our annual maintenance fees are $650. To trade, I have to pay $100+ to RCI. If you have some limits on when you can take vacations, you will find it very hard to book sites. If you really want a timeshare, do NOT buy it from the company. You can find timeshares on the resale market for as low as 10% of what they are asking, depending on the site.
Remember also that timeshares are built in vacation spots, not in interesting urban areas, even in Europe. There is one in Manhattan that is great (if you can get it) but just about everything else is rural and is based on golf or skiing. (Oh, yeah. . . Las Vegas and Orlando.)
My beautician told me the trick for getting out of a timeshare presentation. Don't ask any questions and don't rebut their points. Just let them talk. They are like a evangelical trying to save an athetist.They have a counter point to everything. If you don't try to argue they run out of the lines in their script.
My vacation time is way to precious to waste on something like that - no amount of freebies would be worth the irritation.
Wow, I just checked back on and discovered lots new great info. I am eventually going to go into this in a trip report, but here's what happened.
We went for every other year --got a ton of extra points, free weeks, yada yada yada. I was still reluctant but DH really wanted to do it. He spoke to two friends who have points with Marriott and elsewhere and are pleased.
That took up an entire day of vacation and I couldn't sleep that night. The next day I told DH that the 2 bedroom unit was not what we were buying. That we needed to see the studio. So our salesman met us after another free breakfast (can't tell you how much I miss papaya) and took us to "our" building--beautiful, but blocks from the ocean -- where we saw a beautiful one bedroom.
We got started late on the day. I didn't sleep that night either. The next day (Saturday) I broke down and read the documents. DOH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I got out a notebook to write down the many questions I had about each page. Yes, there were our initials by each statement that they'd gone over very fast--but I had questions.
Luckily, we had a seven day right of rescission.
The last straw was the fact that we could only use it on odd years. We thought we only accrued points every other year, but we could not use our points except on odd years.
OK, none of us knows how much time we have left to do things, but I know I have to little to go postponing vacations. Palmettoprincess, your beautician was spot on. One of my objections was that I had stage 4 cancer (there is no stage 5). He used it as a reason to buy! Had another customer who had cancer and she was making sure to get the most out of life while she had it. They have a very professional film interviewing satisfied buyers, one of whom was ill and wanted to grab some gusto.
Yeah, me too. Only not just on odd years!
Imagine, using terminal illness as a sales feature!!!!!!!!!!!!
We took a trolley with our withdrawal to the address listed (not the sales office) and had the recipient sign a copy for us. Then we spent our vouchers. So these two breakfasts, one lunch and an aloha shirt and dress cost us 1 full and 2 half days of vacation. And me 2 nights of sleep. Vicky, you are right. Not worth it!
We left Oahu on Tuesday and met our friends on Kauai at their Marriott bonus week. We were supposed to be subjected to a points presentation, but Marriott forgot to schedule it. Yay.
So Tuesday I saw a documentary called the Queen of Versailles (about the King of Timeshares going under with the economy). It is a celebration of obscene excess and bad taste--his incredible fortune was made selling timeshares to "greedy" people who came for the vouchers and stayed for the hard sell. Can't tell you how happy I was that we hadn't bought.
Then I logged back on to the forum and saw more reinforcement not to do this. And am so happy that I finally followed your advice. THANK YOU THANK YOU!
I'm glad it worked out. You do owe yourself another good vacation. Rather than waiting for two years why don't you open an account at the credit union. Have $100 a month (or what ever you were going to pay for maintenance fees) put in the account automatically. Then start looking for your next vacation. You may end up just taking a long weekend but the choice is yours.
I definitely think you made the right decision and hope you enjoyed Kauai even more.

Take the "down payment" and use it for a vacation for wherever you want to go next - and then also use the annual HOA fees you saved to extend another week.
Also tell your DH - I have a bridge to sell him, but he only gets to use it the 5th Thursday of every month.
BTW - I haven't seen the movie - The Queen of Versailles - but she (Ms. Segal) is the epitomy of self-worship - plus they were just a couple of dummies all told.

A one time "beauty queen" - who just had to have her pic everywhere and a ridiculous castle (read - mega money hole - 56,000 square feet or some such) to live in.
Their company (Westgate - out of Florida originally) - was trying to get up $50,000 a week for a 2BR/2BA at theier newest Tower/Las Vegas resort (which was behind the Planet Hollywood) - and I about fell out of the chair when they rolled out the first number. Higher even than beachfront Maui/Kaanapali (was Mariott pushing those?) - which was also ridiculous - but that was a few years ago and things have really plunged since then).
Of course, they then zig and zag and slice and dice - and voila - you have a studio for every other year, but give us your money today and it only gets better, yada yada yada.
Hey - we knew we weren't buying anyway and did enjoy the show tickets.
I have 0 trust in anyone and it's pretty impossible to scam me or sell me anything I didn't decide I wanted - heck, I dont' even trust EXCEL!!
Congratulations, Con Brio, for having the intelligence and courage to get out of this timeshare agreement.
It wasn't courage or intelligence, it wwas DOH. These Fodor friends have warned me--why not listen? So glad I did. And don't worry, I am already planning the next one. DH is giving a lecture in Albuquerque that coincides with the Balloon Fiesta (!!!). So a trip there with a visit to Santa Fe and Taos is scheduled for October (the books, including Fodor's, have just been shipped from BAM) with a stop in St. George Utah to see a dear friend on the way home.
One of the ways of coping with late stage cancer is to always have a next trip planned (at least for me).
Thanks again to one and all. A trip report will be coming any day. (By the way, longhorn55, are you a UT grad too?)
Let me know if I can help with NM doings! I have several replied to several posts on here in the last few weeks about Fiesta etc.
Yes, Con Brio, I bleed burnt orange. Hook 'em!
Thanks, Deb! I have seen some of your posts (I'm not lurking, just researching) and would love your help. I may have a better idea after I look at the books that came in the mail today (and look at the old threads some more), but my burning questions are how long to spend in Albuquerque and how long in Santa Fe and side trips. We've got a week. Too long? Not long enough? (But maybe I should read before I impose?)
It depends on what you want to see and do. You could stay the entire time in ABQ and do day trips to Santa Fe and even Taos.
I realize that most folks want to stay in SF, but if you are wanting to be sure [as sure as you can be] that you will actually see mass ascensions in the mornings [which can be cancelled for weather, and can happen several days in a row] it would be best to spend the majority of time in ABQ.
SF is a quick drive [about an hour] so you can go there after the launches are done [and that's by 9 or so]. You can even drive up to Taos from here[another hour past SF].
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I am open to suggestions. I suspect that DH would rather drive back and forth on day trips than keep switching hotels. I just "extended" the ALB part by a day or two (at least) because we found a big crafts show near the balloon park which sounds like all day Saturday. Sunday DH has business at UNM so we can explore around there and Nob Hill then. Which means we haven't even started Old Town... which means we can't even think of leaving Alb til Tues post launch. (But then, I've not finished researching... maybe we won't be ready even then.)
The Truth is it's only an investment for your quality of life and family memories.I am a owner and I like the membership. But most people don't understand and buy out of emotions and hate it. I will tell you the truth on how to buy and love it. Buy only on the re-sale market like ebay and make sure there is no mortgage attached. I only pay hoa so its much cheaper that's how you win. Only buy in a rci and points system and make sure your home base in a spot that almost weather proof like Las vegas.The hoa fees our cheaper and their is a lot of hotel competition that keeps fees low. Never buy a timeshare below 250,000 points if you cant afford just the hoa fee it's not for you! The fee will raise every year, but taxes and maintenance will with time so mine goes up 1 dollar a year.Not all hoa fees are the same at each resort home location. So don't buy in a hurricane of flooded area, hoa are higher there. Buy a bi-annual ownership if you want very cheap hoa fees and cant travel alot that's how you win. And if you can book presidential suits that's how you get your money back out of it. hotels can't match 2400 sf 4 bed and bath. But most people don't have enough points to rent them. It is much cheaper if you can travel weeks at a time to use a timeshare. It is not is you only want a few days here and there that's how the fees eat u alive. Don't use the exchanges at-least you buy the weeks without using your points. but always travel during slow months and you will win big like the winter months points are much cheaper and that's how you get more for your money. It's not tax deductible, but much cheaper than owning a second home in a different location.
Sorry, I meant don't use the rci -exchanges, only net-work exchanges there is no fee for that usually. Pros: u can cook at a resort and save a lot of money. You don't have to worry about personally maintaining your property. You can go to many areas over 6,000 and never get bord. And the S.f. and Amenities can't be matched or location. Cons, you cant control the hoa fees. hard to resale with a mortgage that's why people complain.
I'm sorry, but the idea of plunking down a huge sum of money (when you could spend less renting anywhere you want for 30 years or so) because you can "save money by cooking your own meals" just doesn't make sense. You can also rent a timeshare or apartment and cook your own meals. And you really don't have to worry about maintaining your own property whenever it is a condo -- and even less when you are only renting.
Incidentally, friends own a timeshare in Cancun, and every year they invite others to go down the same two weeks -- but the friends end up renting another timeshare and they pay less than the owner does just for his annual fee -- not counting the original investment! What's wrong with that picture?
You don't put a huge amount of money down on a re-sale for example: buying a condo would run about min 100,000 to 300,000 in the best location anywhere. Say u purchase a timeshare for 2000.000 and pay hoa fee monthly 100 mo for 250,000 points your winning big time and people do it every day on ebay. taxes and insurance will always go up whether your a homeowner or a timeshare owner the difference is they pay in a pot for it all vs an individual owner. The upkeep of a home from roofing/ paint/ carpet/ ac/ etc way more expensive then an increase of a 2.00 a year on a timeshare.( the big jumps on increases on hoa fees are high-risk areas,but don't buy one there if you can use an exchange system. It really does not matter where your home base is if your flexible.
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I own timeshares in Orlando and other Florida locations that I bought on E-bay for pennies on the dollar. My yearly fees haven't gone up in three years and we use them every year. I don't work for any timeshare company and would not recommend purchasing from them. However with fees at $90 per month I don't think you could spend two weeks in Orlando for less unless you stayed in a dump. If you buy wisely owning timeshares can work out for you. Be aware though Florida property taxes apply. Mine run under $100 a year. When I see the resort starting to run down,I resale on E-bay and have never lost money. Be smart and they can be loads of fun.
Another disadvantage of timeshares is that you are somewhat locked into where you choose, unless you "trade" - and that usually involves an annual membership in Interval International or RCI - and then an exchange fee - which have really gone up.
Figure adding almost $300 to the cost of any "trade" for weeks that you have banked.
And Con-Brio - how ye doing?
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FYI - we went to a seminar a few months ago - about how to sell your timeshare. (In addition to the one we bought way back in '86 on the north shore of Kauai - we recently inherited one from my in-laws - a nice one at a ski area they also bought a long time ago).
While we didn't pay that much for the timeshare in Princeville - and the HOA dues used to be MUCH lower - nowadays - we also don't travel to Hawaii like we used to and have actually not even used weeks we "banked" from the one timeshare - much less now having two.
Remember - to trade your week(s) - you usually have to belong to an exchange company such as RCI or II - and pay for the exchange - which together - now runs over $200.
In any event - the seminar was PACKED with owners who wanted to sell their timeshares and could not.
This company would take over your timeshare rights (IF you paid them THOUSANDS of $ !!!!!) - and negotiate with the company to relieve your commitment.
READ - REPEAT - RIDE THE FINE PRINT!!!!!!
IT'S AN ONGOING RESPONSIBILITY/ANNUAL PAYMENT FOR HOMEOWNER DUES FOR FOREVER!!! - and people were actually doing it - PAYING THIS COMPANY THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS - TO GET RID OF THEIR TIMESHARES - - they were that unhappy with their timeshares!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Timeshares have always been a bad buy. But for those who really feel they need one I make one recommendation: Never buy from the developer. Always wait for timeshares to appear on the secondary market, usually at half-price. People like you get excited at the new developments and jump right in, only to become disillusioned later and dump the property onto the secondary market, at a loss, for a patient, informed buyer to take advantage of. This is a good article about Wyndham:
http://www.timesharescam.com/blog/149-wyndham-timeshare/