A simple call to any resort to ask if they accept deedbacks (should be deedsback, I think, grammatically) is always the first step.
I am on the board at a small resort, and our president has chosen to accept deeds back for a price. But we have no way of disposing of weeks, so our fees just go up a little each time, so we require owner be current on fees and for the owner to pay two years' additional fees upfront.
Our timeshare expires as a timeshare and is RTU and not deeds, so we will end the timeshare in 2032, very likely without any objections from owners, I am fairly sure owners won't be upset. The sale of the six units (in Frisco, CO near Breck) will be substantial cash, which will be distributed to owners on a share basis. It's going to be okay money for the end of a timeshare, much better than Skier's Edge's end, which is now Lodge by the Blue.
So the people who deedback are going to lose in the end. But then again, the resort was built early 80's, so I think a lot of owners will be dead by then, and even Rick and I will be 77. I pretty much don't care what happens in 2032.
The board at this resort has been accused at annual meetings of not letting people out of their timeshare obligations, but those are the people who just stop paying and don't even call or email the board, and we have our emails in every newsletter.
One lady owes 10 years of fees plus attorney fees, and she is angry at the president, who has been very blunt with her. He can be blunt, but he is older and former military. I applaud his tenacity with folks who just stop paying. It really hurts all of us. I just wonder how many people are going to pay to rid themselves of their weeks because I sure don't want them, and I know the other board members have taken on weeks they wish they hadn't.
The other owners have to absorb all of the attorney fees and lost MF's of owners who do not pay.