Anonymous wrote:Timeshares are nothing but a scam. I recently stayed at the Marriott vacation club Grande Vista Orlando over Christmas, and I paid $2100 (everything including taxes) for eight nights (seven days) on AirBnB. It was a 2BR, 2 baths, a full kitchen and a living room overlooking the golf course. During my stay, I met several people who own timeshares at the Marriott vacation club, and they paid a one-time fee of 30K plus a 4K/year maintenance fee. These timeshare owners might have to pay assetment fee, and the maintenance fee will go up in the future. That's a scam to me. YMMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still have trauma from dealing with my parents and this was 25 years ago. My parents did buy with good intentions - forced vacations bc my dad wouldn't take them without the sunk cost. Long story but settling my parents estate was a mess (despite their belief the had planned - and they did). Anyhow, the timeshare was forgotten about until several years after their death. The estate was closed and we assumed they'd gotten rid of it before they passed. Imagine my surprise to receive a past due bill, addressed to my father only, at my residence - a place he had never lived. Seems the "deed" was in his name only, he died first. What a mess getting out of that! Agree with the PSA.
What ended up happening? Did you have to pay any fees?
So to get into some of the background, but part of the crazy involved me ending up being the executor of my mom's estate bc the attorney who did the estate plan/will for my parents "had never had a client die before and didn't know what to do." I also had a number of siblings: one living overseas, one in the military, one going through a messy divorce (and thus no head space to deal) and one special needs/institutionalized. I was the only one in the area the estate needed to be probated in. Add to that a financial advisor who defrauded my parents (FA was convicted of securities fraud), I had a mess. The time share was the least of my worries. Anyhow after attempting numerous ways of getting rid of it, a friend/attorney suggested sending a quit claim deed to the HQ and county that the time share was located in. They wrote it up for me, I signed and filed...............and never heard another word. I'm not sure that what I did was actually correct or if the timeshare folks saw that I had an attorney and the government involved and let it go. I never got another maintenance bill so something worked. Either that or my dad has a huge past due bill that I'm unaware of.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still have trauma from dealing with my parents and this was 25 years ago. My parents did buy with good intentions - forced vacations bc my dad wouldn't take them without the sunk cost. Long story but settling my parents estate was a mess (despite their belief the had planned - and they did). Anyhow, the timeshare was forgotten about until several years after their death. The estate was closed and we assumed they'd gotten rid of it before they passed. Imagine my surprise to receive a past due bill, addressed to my father only, at my residence - a place he had never lived. Seems the "deed" was in his name only, he died first. What a mess getting out of that! Agree with the PSA.
What ended up happening? Did you have to pay any fees?
Anonymous wrote:I still have trauma from dealing with my parents and this was 25 years ago. My parents did buy with good intentions - forced vacations bc my dad wouldn't take them without the sunk cost. Long story but settling my parents estate was a mess (despite their belief the had planned - and they did). Anyhow, the timeshare was forgotten about until several years after their death. The estate was closed and we assumed they'd gotten rid of it before they passed. Imagine my surprise to receive a past due bill, addressed to my father only, at my residence - a place he had never lived. Seems the "deed" was in his name only, he died first. What a mess getting out of that! Agree with the PSA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get how timeshares work
If you inherit it, you are responsible for the annual fees (usually thousands) even if you don't use it.
But a timeshare is just you buy a week at a place right? How is this any different that just renting a vacation rental for a week? I don't get it.
You are a co owner of the property, responsible for maintenance fees. But, typically you have no say in the maintenance decisions and are not entitled to a specific unit. Sometimes you are entitled to be there for a specific week but most places have converted to a points system where you have to book way in advance.
There are people who fully own a specific unit year round and can update and furnish it themselves, that seems OK. But usually when people say timeshare that's not what they mean.
I don't hear any benefits here. What's the point?
My in laws bought one because they basically wanted to commit themselves to a week at Disney every year. They did this when the grandkids were little. Now the kids don't want to go with them anymore. (Not our kids - my BIL's kids.)
They got it cheap but it's not SO cheap to actually use. They tried to give it to us to use once but all the properties we could spend their "points" at were going to cost enough money that we felt like the juice was not worth the squeeze.
TL;DR: I think people like the idea of being committed to a week of vacation somewhere warm and it seems like a bargain. Then it's not such a bargain and you don't want to go there anymore anyway. But you're stuck.