This sounds like the new Escrow scam
There are no magic bullets when selling a timeshare, these companies that call you aren't any more equipped to sell than you.
They are much better at taking your money as you feel that someone must be able to
sell your unit easier, but what they sell is
advertising or
escrow service or t
itle search or
prepaid maintenance fees, or some other service that once you pay, you will never see a dime, their contract will be for this mythical service, and when you try to dispute it with your credit card, they will win.
Selling any timeshare is done by listing it
at the market price, or maybe a little under, on all the low cost or free sites.
You must construct a good ad, you need photos, a web page is a good place to keep all the information.
If it is a floating week, make the best reservation possible and point that out in the ads.
Offer to pay the transfer and closing fees, maybe include this coming years use, throw in your unused RCI or II account or any space banked weeks you may have, something to sweeten the offer.
On Craigslist, you need to cancel and relist at least 3 times a week to stay in the readable area. If you have 2 or 3 versions of the same ad, you can cancel and re-list every day.
No secrets, just lots of work.
If you would like some help making up an ad, email or pm me.
Greg
Has anyone heard of this site? I spoke with someone there who told me that they sell timeshares to corporations that package them for resale. However, the fee to the seller is anywhere from 2X to 3X the annual maintenance fee. The agent said the funds go into escrow until the transaction closes. The cost is obviously high, but if it gets you out of an indefinite liability, maybe it makes sense? I've had my timeshare listed on TUG and Craigs List for over a month, and there hasn't even been 1 inquiry.