How to Sell Your Timeshare
Written 8/26/08 by Dave M. for the Timeshare
Users' Group
We at TUG get many questions relating to the various steps in
an effort to sell a timeshare week. Here is one formula for selling
your week. It is a compilation of recommendations of those here
at TUG who have been through the process many times. It expands
on some of the info in the TUG Advice section. That section (link
at the top of this page) should also be reviewed for assistance
in how to sell your week.
Paying Up-front Fees
Most important rule: Never pay an
up-front fee in an effort to sell your Timeshare! Whether
the fee is called an appraisal fee, a market analysis
fee, a marketing fee, an advertising fee or some other
type of fee, the result, historically, has been the same
for all who have reported here about their experiences.
There have been only two reports at TUG of successful sale
transactions as a result of paying such an up-front fee. Neither
has been verified. There have been hundreds of reports
and complaints at TUG from those who have paid such fees without
success.
Yes, I know you want to believe that the company “has a
buyer (or several buyers) waiting to make a deposit on your week.
All the company needs is a $495 deposit from you. It’s
refundable.” Or the company has a money-back guarantee.
I know how desperately you want to believe that sales pitch. Don’t
believe it! There is no purchaser waiting in the wings. Once
the company has your money, they have no significant incentive
to work for you. And despite guarantees and other promises, you
won't get your money back when you complain!
There are narrow exceptions to this advice against paying up-front
fees - for selected nominal fees ($15-$30), such as to place
an ad in a specific publication or at TUG where you can place
as many ads as you want for free with your membership!
What Is Your Timeshare Worth?
Advertise your week at a realistic price. With few exceptions,
owners of timeshares purchased from a developer can expect to
take a beating on resale. Although it’s not what you want
to hear, most timeshares sell on the resale market for only 30%
to 50% of the price you likely initially paid to the developer
when you purchased. Shocked? Please believe it!
The key is to bury forever any thoughts that because you paid
(let's say) $12,000 for your week, someone else will be willing
to pay the same amount. They might, if you were putting on the
same glitzy sales presentation that some high-pressure salesperson
did when you bought, including giving free incentives for attending
the presentation. But you don't have that luxury. So do your
homework and set the price at the right level. It will sell.
To help establish an asking price for your timeshare, try to
find out what other weeks like yours are selling for. Ask your
resort about recent sale prices, check the TUG sales database
(to which you have access if you are a TUG member), look at current
and completed eBay auctions, check real estate records in the
county where the resort is, etc.
For more help in establishing value, look at all of the places
listed below for advertising your week. To find other current
listings, do a Google.com search using the name of your resort
(in quotes, if more than one word) and the word timeshare as
search terms.
When you have done all of that work, you might be even more confused
as to what asking price you should set. As an example, you might
find 15 listings for your timeshare here on TUG in the Timeshare
Marketplace [
http://tug2.com/timesharemarketplace/
] or on Redweek
[
http://www.redweek.com/
] at asking prices ranging from $2,000 to $12,000. First, keep
in mind that most timeshare owners have no concept of what resale
values are. They may incorrectly think of their timeshare as
a traditional piece of real estate that should appreciate in
value. Thus, they way overprice their timeshare, looking to recoup
- at a minimum - most or all of what they paid for it. Second,
make sure you compare the details of your week (week or season
of the year, # of bedrooms, view, etc.) with the other for-sale
listings for your resort to determine which listings are reasonably
comparable to yours. Lastly, keep in mind that if there are multiple
listings for the same or similar timeshares, buyers will seek
to buy only the one listed at the lowest price. Thus, you
should almost always list your week at or below the low end of
the range of asking prices you see. Otherwise, you will own
your timeshare for a long time!
Where Do You Advertise?
Ask your resort for ideas of how others sell their week. Advertise
on a bulletin board or in a newsletter at your home resort, at
the various on-line free timeshare resale services (see listing
below) and at timeshare related locations where you can advertise
for a nominal cost (e.g., here at TUG and in the on-line and
print editions of Timesharing Today )
[
http://www.tstoday.com/
].
Also consider trying to sell your week on e-Bay, setting a reserve
as low as you are willing to sell for or, perhaps even better,
no reserve at all. There are conflicting reports here at TUG
as to whether setting a reserve inhibits prospective bidders
from submitting a bid or whether it helps by setting a minimum
price.
To get started, review other eBay timeshare ads for deciding
on a format for your ad. Then go to eBay's Timeshare Seller's
Guide
[
http://pages.ebay.com/realestate/timesharesellerguide.html
] . At e-Bay, even if your week doesn’t sell, the bids
you get will give you another strong indication of the true value
of your week.
Another auction site to consider, although it seems to have considerably
less activity and often lower selling prices than eBay, is www.bidshares.com
[
http://www.bidshares.com/
].
Advertise at some of the online free (or free except for a $10-$35
registration or listing charge) resale sites that get considerable
action. Examples include the TUG Timeshare Marketplace [http://tug2.com/timesharemarketplace]
, Redweek.com [
http://www.redweek.com/
] , MyResortNetwork.com [
http://www.myresortnetwork.com/
] and Transaction Realty [
http://www.transactionrealty.com/
] . For other resale sites frequently mentioned favorably here
at TUG, see this listing
[
http://www.tugbbs.com/forums/showthread.php?t=17673
] .
Consider advertising in newspapers. Place a classified ad in
the Sunday
“Real Estate – Timeshares” section of major
newspapers in locations where concentrations of visitors to your
resort live, etc.
How about the local newspaper where the resort is located? Visitors
to the area will likely want to come back and may want to buy
a piece of the resort area, just as you did. They are prime targets.
There may also be some timeshare resale realtors in your resort
area (such as there are in Hilton Head) that will try to sell
your week for a commission. They typically advertise in the Timeshares
classification of the Sunday real estate section of the resort
area’s local newspaper.
What if Your Timeshare Loan Exceeds the Likely Selling
Price?
Be prepared to pay off the loan or put money into the transaction
(paid to the closing company) in order to sell it. Very few potential
buyers will be interested in taking over your loan payments.
You might decide you can’t afford to sell at the price
your research indicates is reasonable, because you still owe
an astronomical amount on your timeshare loan. Consider refinancing
your loan to get a lower interest rate and make the payments
more palatable for you and, perhaps, partially deductible. The
best way to do that may be to refinance your home mortgage for
an additional amount or open a home equity loan so that you can
pay off that high-interest timeshare loan. By doing that and
paying off the timeshare loan, you will have made your timeshare
much more marketable.
It's also possible, perhaps likely, that your timeshare loan
is a personal consumer loan rather than a mortgage-type loan
where the lender takes a security interest in your timeshare.
If so, you can probably sell your timeshare just as though you
didn't owe any money. But keep in mind that you'll still have
to repay that loan eventually!
If the high unpaid balance on your timeshare loan prevents you
from selling, consider trying to rent your week each year to
minimize your losses until you can get the debt paid down somewhat.
Much of what is written in this article (paying no up-front fees,
setting a reasonable price, etc.) applies equally to rentals.
(See the 'How to Rent' article in a separate 'Sticky' thread.)
Cold Calls from Resellers
Once you start listing your week for sale, expect calls and e-mail
messages from entities promising a quick sale at your asking
price (or even higher). All you have to do is pay an up-front
fee of $99 to $799. When that happens, go back to the Up-Front
Fees section at the beginning of this article!
Scams to Avoid
Beware! There are a variety of scam artists waiting to prey on
you when you place an on-line ad.
One current scam involves an offer to pay you more than your
asking price. You are told to wait until their check (usually
a foreign ' bank check' or 'certified check') clears and then
refund the difference, still netting you a very attractive sales
price. The problem is that well after their check cleared your
bank and you sent them money, their check will bounce and you'll
be stuck!
Another gimmick is to invite you to a meeting at a second tier
hotel/motel near where you live and offer you several thousand
dollars for your timeshare. At the same time they 'invite' you
to purchase a great (not!) vacation package for (usually) $6,995.
The problem is that the real value of the vacation package ('free'
cruise, discounted vacation rentals, discounted air fares, etc.)
is several hundred bucks at most. All of the package offerings
can be found on eBay and other Internet sources for nominal prices.
Further, the 'free' cruise and other benefits require significant
additional payments.
A similar gimmick is the meeting at that same second tier hotel/motel
where you're told you can unload that terrible no-value timeshare
that you have simply by paying $3,995 (or some similar high amount).
You might also be told (incorrectly) that the loss you incur
upon sale is deductible on your tax return. Before considering
such an expensive and unnecessary transaction, follow the various
sale options discussed in this article!
Perhaps the best advice is that if you get an offer or solicitation
related to your ad that seems too good to be true or seems unusual,
ask about it on the TUG Buying, Selling, Renting Timeshares forum
[
http://tugbbs.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=13
] .
Timely and Accurate Information to Prospective
Buyers
Treat prospective buyers the way you would expect
to be treated if you were considering a purchase. Respond quickly
to e-mail messages or phone calls from prospective buyers. Consider
making reasonable counter offers when someone offers less than
your asking price.
Make sure that information in your ad and in responses
is accurate. If you tell a fib or accidentally provide the wrong
info about the annual maintenance fee, the view from your unit,
whether it's a fixed or a floating week, whether maintenance
fees for this year have been paid, whether this year's use is
available and whether the week has been reserved or other important
information, you'll likely lose your sale when the prospective
buyer checks your info with the resort. No one likes to deal
with someone who can’t be trusted. Worse, you might have
legal difficulties after a sale, based on your having provided
inaccurate information.
Once You Have a Buyer
It’s best to have a contract with your buyer
that specifies what the buyer gets in addition to ownership (e.g.,
use of this year’s week?) and what you get (payment amount
and terms) and when. Although you should consider the possibility
of engaging an attorney to assist you, the cost to do so might
be prohibitive, depending on the price of your transaction.
Timesharing Today has a Resale Document Kit [http://www.tstoday.com/shop/docKits.aspx],
which you can purchase for about $30, or even less if you choose
to download the kit. Instructions, fill-in-the-blank forms, sample
letters, loan documents, etc. Easy to follow. A kit from My Resort
Networkhttp://www.myresortnetwork.com/timeshare-sales-contract/index.asp#[]
sells for under $10, but might not include legal language required
if the timeshare or one of the two parties is in Florida.
If you want to be somewhat secure in the closing
process after you have negotiated a written deal, consider using
one of the low-cost timeshare closing services such as Timeshare
Transfer
[
http://www.timesharetransfer.com/timesharetransfer/
] or JRA Services
[
http://timeshareresaleclosings.com/
] so that neither the money nor the deed is disbursed until both
are in the hands of the closing company. Your buyer might insist
on using such a service. Fees are typically $300-$350 depending
on what services you utilize. TimeTravel Traders
[http://timetraveltraders.com/
] will handle the closing for about $100, but the fee does not
include escrow handling of purchase price funds. Or for $119
and a lot of paperwork, if you are comfortable with the details,
you can be guided through a self-closing at TurboClose
[
http://www.turboclose.com/index.cfm
] .
Whether you or the buyer pay such closing fees is
a matter of negotiation between you and the buyer. Using such
a service is not a substitute for having a contract with the
buyer. Another reason for using a closing company: Keep in mind
that you are responsible for the timeshare maintenance
fees until the resort is properly notified of the title change,
along with payment of the resort's transfer fee, if applicable.
Donate Rather than Sell?
If you believe it would be too much trouble to sell
your week, consider donating your week and claiming a tax deduction
for it. See this TUG Advice article
[
http://www.tug2.net/advice/TS_abandon.htm
] for information on donating and the 'Donating' part of this
TUG Advice article
[
http://www.tug2.net/advice/TUG_Taxes_and_Timeshares.htm
] for information on the tax aspects of your donation. Also see
this link
[
http://www.timesharetrap.com/donate_a_timeshare_to_charity.html
] for a good description of the practical aspects of donating
and a separate more comprehensive list (link in the first paragraph
of the linked page) of charities that accept timeshares. (Warning:
Some of the charities listed in both places apparently no longer
accept timeshare donations.)
Conclusion
Selling a timeshare week takes effort, patience and
diligence (to avoid a scam). But the effort, if you are realistic
in your expectations, will pay off.
Why become a TUG member?
There is an extended TUG resort reviews database here on this
web site available only to TUG members. There are over 4000 resorts
covered by this database now and growing weekly. The reviews
also include pictures of the resorts, general resort information
and a list of owners' email addresses who are willing to answer
additional questions regarding the resorts not covered by the
detailed reviews. This is a quick way to see how our members
rate the resorts which they have actually stayed at. It has become
a valuable source of information to use when planning for exchanges.
Send comments/feedback by email to:
Timeshare Users Group
PO Box 1442, Orange Park, Fl 32067
Phone: (904) 298-3185
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