PerryM
TUG Member
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2005
- Messages
- 4,282
- Reaction score
- 2
I’ve followed a number of Private Residence Clubs ,their new title is Destination Clubs (DCs) for 3 years now and normally they are $250,000 - $500,000 per membership and MFs that will make you want to cry. Well there is a new one that’s geared for timeshare folks and they even have a few special features for TUG members! These DCs grow in price with the real estate in the hot areas they are located. Expect membership fees to increase 40% and more a year!
The DC is called High Country Club link: http://www.highcountryclub.com/
I stumbled on them thru the Helium Report – a web site dedicated to DCs, Link: http://www.heliumreport.com/
In a nutshell:
A DC offers you access to private homes and condos and is the next step above a timeshare but below whole ownership. DCs offer many of the same privileges as a timeshare but with 6-star accommodations in a more private setting. Some folks may find this refreshing and for large families these residences typically have 3 or 4 bedrooms. The residences cost a minimum of $1+ M each and have MFs that are on par with high end timeshares (Westin and Marriotts). You don’t have a deed, you belong to a club – like WorldMark. You can sell your membership back to the DC for 80% of what you paid any time you want.
You must personally use the residence or a family member 25 years old can take your place (Like a son or daughter). There is NO renting of the residences and there are 6 – 8 owners needed to pay for the residence. If you divide $1 M by 8 owners that equal $125,000 which is where most of these clubs start.
There are several levels of membership. The top one usually gives you about 45 days of reservations per year and lesser memberships give you 21 days. Many DCs charge extra for holiday usage.
How a DC functions:
A group of investors pool money and start the DC by buying 8 – 10 condos/homes. Then 6 – 8 new members are recruited and their membership dues pay for another residence. The price of the membership is basically the cost of the new residence divided by 8. MF’s are typically 6 – 8% of the current membership fee.
All the deeds are held in a master trust and the founders of the company have title to them. The members are like members in a Point club like WorldMark.
You can sell your membership back to the DC after 2 or more years and typically get 80% back of what you paid. This is done on a 2 out 1 in basis. After they sell 2 more memberships you get a check for 80% of your purchase price.
Reservations are handled by phone and internet with 12 month reservations and shorter term too. Many DCs have more expensive memberships for holiday usage.
If you’ve checked into some of these DCs they typically cost $350,000 - $500,000 with MFs of $15,000 for 6 weeks of usage.
Now don’t get turned off, I the frugal one, would never pay the above and found a DC that is perfectly matched for timeshare owners.
Here is what High Country Club is offering until August 15, 2006 Link: http://www.highcountryclub.com/membership/
High Country offers 3 types of memberships but the two timeshare folks might be interested in are:
• An Affiliate membership gives you 3 weeks of usage per year and costs $20K to join and $4,200 MF per year. That is a MF of $1,400 for a 3 – 4 bedroom 6-star residence.
• A Private membership gives you 6 weeks of usage and costs $30K to join and $7,200 MF per year. That is a MF of $1,200 per week.
As you can see, the cost to join is no more than one week at a moderate Marriott. The MF is right in line with Hawaiian timeshares.
I’ve watched many a DC start up and in the blink of an eye the membership fee is $100K to $200K and the MF is normally 8% of the CURRENT membership fee. This gets old real quick.
High Country’s MF is fixed when you join and increases based on the CPI + 2%; the CPI was 4% last year so the MF would go up 6%.
Selling your membership.
Some DCs require you to stay 2+ years before you can sell your membership. High Country allows you to sell tomorrow if you wish. You will get 80% of what you paid for the membership on a 2 in – 1 out basis. This is a standard for DCs with many DCs require 3 or 4 in before 1 out. This means that if you notify them a year from now that you want they sell 2 new memberships they cut you a check for 80% of what you paid. You continue paying MFs until your anniversary or until they sell 2 new memberships. Imagine a timeshare that did that!
TUG Special Offers:
I convinced the folks at High Country that timeshare folks might be interested in their offering. I informed them that timeshare folks had two points that they needed to address and they did. Until their next price increase, which is a whopper at August 15, here are special benefits for TUG members:
• You can buy a membership and NOT pay MF’s for 1 year. Since timeshare owners are always booked up 12 months out they realized that you could not use their DC and thus are allowing TUG members to buy and not pay MF’s for 12 months. Of course you can’t use the DC either but you can vacation in your timeshares and lock in a cheap price.
• You can buy an Affiliate membership and when you decide to use it, you can use for 3 years and then upgrade to a Private membership and pay only $10K more. With Private membership, you get 3 12 months reservations, one of which is a holiday week and get 3 more weeks of usage (total of 6). That way folks who have only a few weeks of vacation now can “lock in” a higher membership usage for years down the road.
• Group & Corporate memberships allow your friends and employees to use the DC. The same applies here too, lock in the Affiliate membership and have up to 3 year to upgrade to Group & Corporate for today’s difference of $20K.
So, to recap, you can buy an Affiliate membership for $20K, and NOT use it for 1 year and then pay just $4,200 for 3 weeks of usage. 3 years later you can upgrade your membership for $10K, if you want, then get a total of 6 weeks of usage for the current MF which is $7,200 now but that will show 3 years of CIP + 2% increases each year.
High Country’s initial resorts are geared for skiers/snowboarders but have super locations now and more to follow. Three days before you leave on your vacation they send you a FedEx package with your keys and when you leave just leave keys in a table. Cabo is the only resort residence and it has a front desk.
Do your research, look at Helium.com and HighCountryClub.com The salesrep at High Country is Heath Kirschner.
Things to consider:
All the DCs out there, but one, give you NO deed or anything tangible for your investment. Most are $300K - $500K and the risk to me can’t be justified. With High Country you can start at 20K then later upgrade for an additional $10K. This is more like it and similar to a WorldMark. MFs are higher than an average timeshare but in line with 5-star Hawaiian Marriotts and Westins.
Holiday weeks:
The Affiliate membership has NO holiday week feature. You can reserve 2 weeks of usage with 12 month reservations and the third week must be used at 90 days or less. 12 month reservations and 90 day reservations start on a Saturday.
The Private membership allows you to book ONE holiday week per year. Holiday weeks are the weeks containing federal holidays. Spring break is 4 weeks in March and are defined two years ahead as to which weeks they are. Holiday weeks start on a Friday night for 7 nights. You can book any holiday week you want but then must wait 2 years before booking the same exact holiday week. E.g. you book Christmas week in Whistler then next year you can book New Years week in Whistler then 4th of July week the year after than somewhere else and then back to Christmas week in Vail or Whistler if you want.
No planned activities:
DCs pride themselves on being private and you check into the residence as you would if you owned the place. There is no bell captain, no activities coordinator, nor front desk or room service nor phone calls from marketing offering you a $25 coupon to a local restaurant – just a private multi-million dollar home or condo.
Who the heck is High Country Club?
First it has 100+ members already – believe it or not that puts them in the top 5 DCs in the country! They just started and have had only one price increase up to now. August 15, 2006 is their second one and an increase of 66%. They are positioning themselves in the realm of top end timeshares.
If High Country Club goes out of business, members would get up to 60% of their membership fee.
This is something that may appeal to some and with the TUG specials makes easing in much easier. Read the Helium Report and learn, learn, learn. There is risk here, but you can get in early with less money.
Check out the leader in the DC field, Exclusive Resorts link: http://www.exclusiveresorts.com/ They have 2,000 members and the average condo/home is $3 M. Membership fee is $395,000 with a MF of $25K for 6 weeks of usage. There is NO reason High Country Club can’t join these levels in 3 or 4 years – you get to then use $3 M homes for $1,200 per week!
3 years ago, the Exclusive’s membership fee was $180K – all those folks get to use the new residences paid for by new members.
(I have NO financial interest in their club and will receive NO compensation if anyone joins – I think this is like one of those “pre-construction” type Marriott specials that comes around only a few times in a decade and you might seriously consider what they are offering at this point in time)
The DC is called High Country Club link: http://www.highcountryclub.com/
I stumbled on them thru the Helium Report – a web site dedicated to DCs, Link: http://www.heliumreport.com/
In a nutshell:
A DC offers you access to private homes and condos and is the next step above a timeshare but below whole ownership. DCs offer many of the same privileges as a timeshare but with 6-star accommodations in a more private setting. Some folks may find this refreshing and for large families these residences typically have 3 or 4 bedrooms. The residences cost a minimum of $1+ M each and have MFs that are on par with high end timeshares (Westin and Marriotts). You don’t have a deed, you belong to a club – like WorldMark. You can sell your membership back to the DC for 80% of what you paid any time you want.
You must personally use the residence or a family member 25 years old can take your place (Like a son or daughter). There is NO renting of the residences and there are 6 – 8 owners needed to pay for the residence. If you divide $1 M by 8 owners that equal $125,000 which is where most of these clubs start.
There are several levels of membership. The top one usually gives you about 45 days of reservations per year and lesser memberships give you 21 days. Many DCs charge extra for holiday usage.
How a DC functions:
A group of investors pool money and start the DC by buying 8 – 10 condos/homes. Then 6 – 8 new members are recruited and their membership dues pay for another residence. The price of the membership is basically the cost of the new residence divided by 8. MF’s are typically 6 – 8% of the current membership fee.
All the deeds are held in a master trust and the founders of the company have title to them. The members are like members in a Point club like WorldMark.
You can sell your membership back to the DC after 2 or more years and typically get 80% back of what you paid. This is done on a 2 out 1 in basis. After they sell 2 more memberships you get a check for 80% of your purchase price.
Reservations are handled by phone and internet with 12 month reservations and shorter term too. Many DCs have more expensive memberships for holiday usage.
If you’ve checked into some of these DCs they typically cost $350,000 - $500,000 with MFs of $15,000 for 6 weeks of usage.
Now don’t get turned off, I the frugal one, would never pay the above and found a DC that is perfectly matched for timeshare owners.
Here is what High Country Club is offering until August 15, 2006 Link: http://www.highcountryclub.com/membership/
High Country offers 3 types of memberships but the two timeshare folks might be interested in are:
• An Affiliate membership gives you 3 weeks of usage per year and costs $20K to join and $4,200 MF per year. That is a MF of $1,400 for a 3 – 4 bedroom 6-star residence.
• A Private membership gives you 6 weeks of usage and costs $30K to join and $7,200 MF per year. That is a MF of $1,200 per week.
As you can see, the cost to join is no more than one week at a moderate Marriott. The MF is right in line with Hawaiian timeshares.
I’ve watched many a DC start up and in the blink of an eye the membership fee is $100K to $200K and the MF is normally 8% of the CURRENT membership fee. This gets old real quick.
High Country’s MF is fixed when you join and increases based on the CPI + 2%; the CPI was 4% last year so the MF would go up 6%.
Selling your membership.
Some DCs require you to stay 2+ years before you can sell your membership. High Country allows you to sell tomorrow if you wish. You will get 80% of what you paid for the membership on a 2 in – 1 out basis. This is a standard for DCs with many DCs require 3 or 4 in before 1 out. This means that if you notify them a year from now that you want they sell 2 new memberships they cut you a check for 80% of what you paid. You continue paying MFs until your anniversary or until they sell 2 new memberships. Imagine a timeshare that did that!
TUG Special Offers:
I convinced the folks at High Country that timeshare folks might be interested in their offering. I informed them that timeshare folks had two points that they needed to address and they did. Until their next price increase, which is a whopper at August 15, here are special benefits for TUG members:
• You can buy a membership and NOT pay MF’s for 1 year. Since timeshare owners are always booked up 12 months out they realized that you could not use their DC and thus are allowing TUG members to buy and not pay MF’s for 12 months. Of course you can’t use the DC either but you can vacation in your timeshares and lock in a cheap price.
• You can buy an Affiliate membership and when you decide to use it, you can use for 3 years and then upgrade to a Private membership and pay only $10K more. With Private membership, you get 3 12 months reservations, one of which is a holiday week and get 3 more weeks of usage (total of 6). That way folks who have only a few weeks of vacation now can “lock in” a higher membership usage for years down the road.
• Group & Corporate memberships allow your friends and employees to use the DC. The same applies here too, lock in the Affiliate membership and have up to 3 year to upgrade to Group & Corporate for today’s difference of $20K.
So, to recap, you can buy an Affiliate membership for $20K, and NOT use it for 1 year and then pay just $4,200 for 3 weeks of usage. 3 years later you can upgrade your membership for $10K, if you want, then get a total of 6 weeks of usage for the current MF which is $7,200 now but that will show 3 years of CIP + 2% increases each year.
High Country’s initial resorts are geared for skiers/snowboarders but have super locations now and more to follow. Three days before you leave on your vacation they send you a FedEx package with your keys and when you leave just leave keys in a table. Cabo is the only resort residence and it has a front desk.
Do your research, look at Helium.com and HighCountryClub.com The salesrep at High Country is Heath Kirschner.
Things to consider:
All the DCs out there, but one, give you NO deed or anything tangible for your investment. Most are $300K - $500K and the risk to me can’t be justified. With High Country you can start at 20K then later upgrade for an additional $10K. This is more like it and similar to a WorldMark. MFs are higher than an average timeshare but in line with 5-star Hawaiian Marriotts and Westins.
Holiday weeks:
The Affiliate membership has NO holiday week feature. You can reserve 2 weeks of usage with 12 month reservations and the third week must be used at 90 days or less. 12 month reservations and 90 day reservations start on a Saturday.
The Private membership allows you to book ONE holiday week per year. Holiday weeks are the weeks containing federal holidays. Spring break is 4 weeks in March and are defined two years ahead as to which weeks they are. Holiday weeks start on a Friday night for 7 nights. You can book any holiday week you want but then must wait 2 years before booking the same exact holiday week. E.g. you book Christmas week in Whistler then next year you can book New Years week in Whistler then 4th of July week the year after than somewhere else and then back to Christmas week in Vail or Whistler if you want.
No planned activities:
DCs pride themselves on being private and you check into the residence as you would if you owned the place. There is no bell captain, no activities coordinator, nor front desk or room service nor phone calls from marketing offering you a $25 coupon to a local restaurant – just a private multi-million dollar home or condo.
Who the heck is High Country Club?
First it has 100+ members already – believe it or not that puts them in the top 5 DCs in the country! They just started and have had only one price increase up to now. August 15, 2006 is their second one and an increase of 66%. They are positioning themselves in the realm of top end timeshares.
If High Country Club goes out of business, members would get up to 60% of their membership fee.
This is something that may appeal to some and with the TUG specials makes easing in much easier. Read the Helium Report and learn, learn, learn. There is risk here, but you can get in early with less money.
Check out the leader in the DC field, Exclusive Resorts link: http://www.exclusiveresorts.com/ They have 2,000 members and the average condo/home is $3 M. Membership fee is $395,000 with a MF of $25K for 6 weeks of usage. There is NO reason High Country Club can’t join these levels in 3 or 4 years – you get to then use $3 M homes for $1,200 per week!
3 years ago, the Exclusive’s membership fee was $180K – all those folks get to use the new residences paid for by new members.
(I have NO financial interest in their club and will receive NO compensation if anyone joins – I think this is like one of those “pre-construction” type Marriott specials that comes around only a few times in a decade and you might seriously consider what they are offering at this point in time)