This is from a current Diamond gold level owner who was in almost the same situation as you more than 20 years ago, on Hawaii, having gone through a sales presentation we were talked into, signing up, finding TUG, and rescinding. The most important thing I can tell your right now is .....
Slow down and take your time to do some research.
Any deal you see on the resale market now will still be there a year from now. You don't need to rush into anything.
What should you research: Some thoughts:
- How often do I want to visit this area? Every year? Every other year? Every few years? How many people should I think about - the two of us, children, adult children, spouses of children, grandchildren? We usually like to take two vacations each year, one just my wife and I, and a second with our 16 yr old son. We usually like to venture to new places, but often find our self in Florida because thats where a majority of my family is. Hawaii is another one I can see us doing a number of trips to, but probably different islands each trip. This is why I really liked the points option where we can choose different resorts rather than be locked down to one area.
- What other resorts are in the area that might also fit our needs? We aren't too picky when it comes to the resort.
- If we want to have the option of visiting other areas, what are those other areas? Is there a resort collection (Diamond, Wyndham, HGVC, Marriott, etc.) that has resorts in those locations where I can book directly instead of doing exchanges? If I want to do exchanges, what kind of trade power do I need and what is best option for getting that trade power?
- If you buy into a resort collection, be it Diamond, Marriott, HGVC, Disney, Welk, or whatever, understand that the structure will be set up so that operator of the system will have almost total control of what happens at the resort, including deciding who manages the resort (usually a subsidiary of that entity) and what your annual fees will be. So when you purchase recognize that is a decision to get in bed with that entity. You should decide if that entity is one that you want to get in bed with.
- What does the pricing look like to just simply rent comparable accommodations versus buying a timeshare - recognizing that if you rent you are not obligated to pay annual fees, and can put that money towards a rental anywhere you want, whereas with a timeshare you are obligated to pay fees with your ownership regardless of whether you actually use the unit(s). This is a good point, but so far we have been taking 2 trips religiously each year and often find lodging is the most expensive part. Would love a points program where we can roll over points to the next year or borrow for bigger trips.
- Consider doing rentals in an area you are interested in for one or more years to give yourself time to investigate and collect information. It's unlikely that resale pricing in your area will change much during the time you spend collecting information. This is definitely something I will consider.
Just take your time, do your homework, and only buy when you have done enough backgrounding so that you are comfortable that the deal you are accepting is one that you are happy. Don't let yourself fall into the trap of being sure that you get the best possible deal (unless that is your thing). When you are ready, just make a deal that you know is a good deal. If you wind up spending a bit more than you might have needed to, so what? It will still be far less than the developer deal.
And for me, long ago I got tired of trying to squeeze out every dollar I could during negotiations. It was a lot of work, the satisfaction was ephemeral, and when I took a step back I realized those mercenary behaviors were corrupting me and turning me into someone I didn't want to be.