Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen rates much cheaper than $1k but the Disney hotels always seem overpriced to me. We have gone a few times but have stayed in Disney Springs or a timeshare. Lots of the other parents at my kids school stay on site though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a Disney timeshare 30 years ago to hedge against inflation.
So we pay about $ 150 a night for $800 hotel rooms at places like the Grand Floridian, Beach Club Villas and the Polynesian.
It has worked well for us.
The maintenance fees are a beast.
NP. No... we pay about $5 per point. So less than $1500 per year.
Nobody in 2024 paid less than $7.92 a point in fees and 2026 will be more. It takes 120-234 points for a week in a resort view studio at GF. So the maintenance fees on those points would be $950-$1850/year.
To buy 120 GF points today would cost $22,200 plus any interest if financed.
The OP asked how people can afford it. We are just responding to the question.
Many of us who bought DVC decades ago realized Disney prices were marching up. So buying in let's us access accommodations that would not be in our reach otherwise.
We plan to retire next year. Our monthly dues of $175 a month are budgeted in.
And we will be in those $750 rooms several times a year on our Social Security plus a small pensions!
Ahh, decades ago. Most of us in this board were in grade school decades ago. Leave it to a Boomer to come in and crow; screw you, I got mine!
Leave it to a whiny millennial to blame boomers.
Yep…such whiners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just a friendly reminder that you do not need to buy DVC to do Disney affordably. We love Disney, but I just can’t get the DVC math to work for us. Or the lack of flexibility to book last minute.
I’m happy to take whatever hotel Disney is offering on sale and keep the flexibility to spend my travel dollars on something else. But kudos to the Boomers who bought 30 years ago and can plan their years around Disney trips!
Gen X in same boat. I need more flexibility. But I also think that if those Boomers had invested same amount in stock market, the net return would be higher.
Why are you comparing it to the stock market? That's idiotic.
It's a prepaid vacation.
If the money is sitting in the stock market you aren't going on vacations with it
I understand that. But here’s the question. If you took X dollars (the buy in fee) and invested it in year Y (buy in year), but each year subtracted the amount you would spend on the lodging for an equivalent vacation (minus the annual maintenance fees, would you be ahead or behind? I don’t know the answer to that question but the stock market has outpaced inflation over those years so I’m a little suspicious that the Boomer DVC buyer actually would come out ahead. But it might be close and then the question is how you value the psychic value of not stressing about the annual vacation cost against the psychic and other value of having more flexibility with your vacations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just a friendly reminder that you do not need to buy DVC to do Disney affordably. We love Disney, but I just can’t get the DVC math to work for us. Or the lack of flexibility to book last minute.
I’m happy to take whatever hotel Disney is offering on sale and keep the flexibility to spend my travel dollars on something else. But kudos to the Boomers who bought 30 years ago and can plan their years around Disney trips!
Gen X in same boat. I need more flexibility. But I also think that if those Boomers had invested same amount in stock market, the net return would be higher.
Why are you comparing it to the stock market? That's idiotic.
It's a prepaid vacation.
If the money is sitting in the stock market you aren't going on vacations with it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a Disney timeshare 30 years ago to hedge against inflation.
So we pay about $ 150 a night for $800 hotel rooms at places like the Grand Floridian, Beach Club Villas and the Polynesian.
It has worked well for us.
The maintenance fees are a beast.
NP. No... we pay about $5 per point. So less than $1500 per year.
Nobody in 2024 paid less than $7.92 a point in fees and 2026 will be more. It takes 120-234 points for a week in a resort view studio at GF. So the maintenance fees on those points would be $950-$1850/year.
To buy 120 GF points today would cost $22,200 plus any interest if financed.
The OP asked how people can afford it. We are just responding to the question.
Many of us who bought DVC decades ago realized Disney prices were marching up. So buying in let's us access accommodations that would not be in our reach otherwise.
We plan to retire next year. Our monthly dues of $175 a month are budgeted in.
And we will be in those $750 rooms several times a year on our Social Security plus a small pensions!
Ahh, decades ago. Most of us in this board were in grade school decades ago. Leave it to a Boomer to come in and crow; screw you, I got mine!
Leave it to a whiny millennial to blame boomers.
Anonymous wrote:The trick for us was buying DVC before we had kids. It was all paid off when kids were born and affordable because we didn't go crazy with points.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just a friendly reminder that you do not need to buy DVC to do Disney affordably. We love Disney, but I just can’t get the DVC math to work for us. Or the lack of flexibility to book last minute.
I’m happy to take whatever hotel Disney is offering on sale and keep the flexibility to spend my travel dollars on something else. But kudos to the Boomers who bought 30 years ago and can plan their years around Disney trips!
Gen X in same boat. I need more flexibility. But I also think that if those Boomers had invested same amount in stock market, the net return would be higher.
Anonymous wrote:Just a friendly reminder that you do not need to buy DVC to do Disney affordably. We love Disney, but I just can’t get the DVC math to work for us. Or the lack of flexibility to book last minute.
I’m happy to take whatever hotel Disney is offering on sale and keep the flexibility to spend my travel dollars on something else. But kudos to the Boomers who bought 30 years ago and can plan their years around Disney trips!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bought a Disney timeshare 30 years ago to hedge against inflation.
So we pay about $ 150 a night for $800 hotel rooms at places like the Grand Floridian, Beach Club Villas and the Polynesian.
It has worked well for us.
The maintenance fees are a beast.
NP. No... we pay about $5 per point. So less than $1500 per year.
Nobody in 2024 paid less than $7.92 a point in fees and 2026 will be more. It takes 120-234 points for a week in a resort view studio at GF. So the maintenance fees on those points would be $950-$1850/year.
To buy 120 GF points today would cost $22,200 plus any interest if financed.
The OP asked how people can afford it. We are just responding to the question.
Many of us who bought DVC decades ago realized Disney prices were marching up. So buying in let's us access accommodations that would not be in our reach otherwise.
We plan to retire next year. Our monthly dues of $175 a month are budgeted in.
And we will be in those $750 rooms several times a year on our Social Security plus a small pensions!
Ahh, decades ago. Most of us in this board were in grade school decades ago. Leave it to a Boomer to come in and crow; screw you, I got mine!
Leave it to a whiny millennial to blame boomers.