Hilton Grand Vacations Resale 2026: Real Prices, Process & What HGV Owners Need to Know Before Selling

TimeShare Deals editorial team · Updated May 2026 · ~13 min read

Hilton Grand Vacations Resale 2026: Real Prices, Process & What HGV Owners Need to Know Before Selling

Hilton Grand Vacations is the second-largest timeshare brand in the United States by membership, and after the Diamond Resorts acquisition in 2021 the resale landscape changed for hundreds of thousands of owners. This is the practical 2026 guide: real resale prices by resort, the actual process if you sell privately, the ROFR rules, and the warning signs that separate a real buyer from a scam.

The Hilton Grand Vacations resale market in 2026

Hilton Grand Vacations — ticker NYSE:HGV after the spin-off from Hilton Worldwide — manages roughly 525,000 owner contracts across 154 resorts in the US, Mexico, Caribbean, Europe, and Japan. After the 2021 acquisition of Diamond Resorts International, total membership crossed 700,000 owners, making HGV the second-largest timeshare brand in the world after Marriott Vacations Worldwide.

The resale market is active and well-documented. Closed transactions in the past 12 months show the same pattern as Marriott: resale prices on HGV contracts run 60% to 90% below what HGV sells the same package for in their developer presentations. The reason is identical — developer prices include extensive marketing, sales-presentation incentives, and tour commissions that the secondary market simply doesn’t carry.

For sellers in 2026, the good news: HGV points packages are some of the most liquid timeshare assets in the US secondary market. A reasonably priced 7,000-point HGV Max contract typically sells in 30 to 90 days. Premium Hawaii week deeds sell faster, often in under 30 days. The bad news: developer-side promises that “your timeshare will gain value” never materialized, and any seller who anchors expectations to the 2008-2018 purchase price will be disappointed.

Quick reality check. If a company calls you saying they have a buyer who will pay full developer price for your HGV contract — and just need a few thousand dollars upfront for “paperwork” or “tax registration” — this is a scam targeting HGV owners specifically. We cover the seven variants in section 6.

Real resale prices by resort and points package (2026)

The numbers below come from closed transactions on the public secondary market over the past 12 months. They are honest medians, not asking prices. If you’re benchmarking your own HGV contract, anchor here, not on the developer’s “estimated value.”

Top-tier deeded weeks

Resort & week typeAnnual MF (USD)Resale median 2026Time to sell (median)
Grand Waikikian by Hilton Grand Vacations — ocean view$2,800 – $3,400$24,000 – $42,00030 – 60 days
Hilton Hawaiian Village — Lagoon Tower, peak week$2,400 – $2,900$18,000 – $32,00045 – 75 days
Hilton Grand Vacations Las Vegas Strip — peak week$1,400 – $1,800$3,500 – $9,00060 – 120 days
Elara, a Hilton Grand Vacations Club — Las Vegas$1,500 – $1,900$4,000 – $11,00060 – 90 days
Hilton Grand Vacations Orlando, SeaWorld — off-season$1,200 – $1,500$1 – $2,00090 – 180 days

HGV Club Points packages

Points packageAnnual MF (approx)Resale price 2026 ($/point)
3,400 HGV points$1,500 – $1,800$1.80 – $3.20 per point
5,000 HGV points$2,000 – $2,400$2.20 – $3.80 per point
7,000 HGV points$2,800 – $3,400$2.40 – $4.20 per point
14,000+ HGV points (premium)$5,400+$2.80 – $4.80 per point

HGV Max points (post-Diamond merger)

HGV Max is the unified loyalty program HGV launched after acquiring Diamond. Owners with HGV Max access can book at both Hilton-branded and former-Diamond-branded resorts. Resale-side, an HGV Max points contract typically commands a 10-20% premium over equivalent legacy HGV points because of the broader resort network.

HGV Max packageResale 2026 ($/point)
5,000 HGV Max points$2.50 – $4.20 per point
10,000 HGV Max points$2.80 – $4.80 per point
20,000+ HGV Max points$3.20 – $5.20 per point
Pricing guidance. Anchor your asking price at the high end of recent comparable closes for the same resort and similar week tier. Listings priced 30%+ above market median sit dormant for 6+ months and ultimately close at median anyway after price cuts that signal weakness. Realistic from day one almost always nets you more cash and a faster close.

How a private HGV resale actually closes — step by step

The process is structurally identical to selling a small condominium. Here is the full sequence and what each step costs in 2026.

Step 1 — Pull your HGV documentation

Before listing anywhere, gather:

  • Your HGV deed or club membership certificate — available in your owner account or by request to HGV Owner Services.
  • Last paid maintenance fee invoice — required by every serious buyer and by the closing company.
  • Mortgage payoff statement if you financed through HGV. Deeds cannot transfer with an outstanding loan; buyer funds at closing pay it off.
  • Estoppel letter from HGV stating the contract is in good standing, fees current, and confirming the use year. The closing company will request this; HGV charges $50–$150 for it.

Step 2 — List on a real marketplace, not a “listing service”

This is where many HGV owners lose money before they sell anything. The difference between the two:

Real marketplace“Listing service” (avoid)
Cost to list$0$399 – $4,800 upfront
AudienceActive timeshare buyersOften a static page no one finds
Commission on saleFree, alwaysNone — but they don’t actually sell
Refunds if no saleN/A — you didn’t payAlmost never honored despite promises

Reputable real marketplaces in 2026 for HGV resales: TimeShare Deals, Redweek, MyResortNetwork, Selling Timeshares. Free listing, paid only on closed sale.

Step 3 — Receive offers and answer the boring questions

Serious buyers ask the same things every time:

  • Is this a fixed week or a points package? If points, exactly how many?
  • Is this legacy HGV or HGV Max? (HGV Max commands a premium.)
  • Are maintenance fees current? Through what use year?
  • Is there an outstanding loan, special assessment, or pending fee increase notice?
  • What is the use year (anniversary date)? Have current-year points been used or are they still available?
  • How is the closing handled and who pays which fees?

Owners who answer these clearly in the first email convert 3-4x more than owners who don’t. Spend an hour preparing answers before listing.

Step 4 — Sign a purchase agreement

One-page agreement specifying parties, deed or contract identifier, points or week, agreed price, deposit (10-20% common), closing timeline (45-60 days typical), and which party pays each closing cost. Free templates from licensed timeshare closing companies are sufficient.

Step 5 — Closing through a licensed timeshare closing company

Real licensed timeshare closing companies handle:

  • Title search and clearance
  • Preparation of the new deed (or contract assignment for points-only)
  • Recording with the county where the resort sits (deeded weeks only)
  • Transfer notification to HGV Owner Services
  • Escrow of buyer funds until deed records and any seller loan is paid off

Total closing cost in 2026: $450 to $750, often split. Reputable companies operating in HGV transactions: LT Transfers, Timeshare Transfer Inc., First American Title’s timeshare division. Avoid any closing company recommended by someone who cold-called you about your “buyer.”

Step 6 — ROFR review by HGV (often)

Most HGV deeded weeks include a Right of First Refusal. We cover this in detail in the next section.

Step 7 — Recording, transfer, payment to seller

Once ROFR is waived (or the period expires) and the deed records, escrow releases buyer funds: pays off any remaining seller loan first, then wires the balance to you. Transfer to the new owner’s HGV account completes within 30-60 days. Net proceeds typically arrive in your bank 5-10 business days after deed recording.

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ROFR — the Hilton Right of First Refusal explained

HGV deeded contracts (and many points contracts on the secondary market) include a Right of First Refusal. Here is how it actually works in 2026.

What ROFR does

When you and a buyer agree on a price and sign a purchase agreement, the closing company sends the contract details to HGV. HGV has 30 days to either:

  1. Waive ROFR — the sale proceeds with your private buyer.
  2. Exercise ROFR — HGV matches the offered price exactly and buys back the contract from you. You still get your money, just from HGV instead of the private buyer.

From the seller’s perspective, ROFR is essentially neutral: you receive the agreed price either way. The buyer is the party that loses time and effort if HGV exercises, which is why pricing close to market median minimizes ROFR exercise risk.

HGV ROFR patterns 2024-2026

HGV historically exercises ROFR more aggressively than Marriott does, because HGV uses repurchased inventory to fuel its high-margin developer sales channel. Observed patterns:

  • Hawaii oceanfront and Manhattan Club deeded weeks priced under $0.55 per dollar of annual maintenance fee → ROFR exercised ~50% of the time.
  • Las Vegas Strip premium weeks priced under $4,000 → ROFR exercised frequently.
  • Mid-tier weeks at market median pricing → ROFR exercised ~15% of the time.
  • Off-season Orlando and Las Vegas weeks priced for $1 to escape MFs → ROFR rarely exercised.

Bottom line for sellers: if your buyer is uncomfortable with the ROFR risk and wants to renegotiate the price up to reduce that risk, that’s a sign the price was too low to begin with. Stay close to median, accept the 30-day calendar item, and you’re fine.

If you own a Diamond Resorts contract converted to HGV Max

The 2021 HGV-Diamond merger created two operational realities for former Diamond owners:

  • HGV Max-eligible contracts: these can use the unified booking system that includes both former Diamond resorts (Sedona, Lake Tahoe, Williamsburg, etc.) and HGV-branded resorts (Hawaii, Las Vegas, Orlando). Resale value is typically 10-20% higher than legacy Diamond points alone.
  • Legacy Diamond points contracts not yet converted to HGV Max: these still trade actively but at lower per-point prices ($1.20-$2.80) and typically only book at the former Diamond resort network.

If you’re a former Diamond owner not sure which category you’re in, log into your HGV account or call HGV Owner Services. Knowing this changes your asking price by 15-25%. List it in your description either way — buyers who specifically want HGV Max will pay the premium, and buyers who just want Diamond resort access will know they’re getting good value.

5 pitfalls that drain HGV sellers (and what protects you)

Pitfall 1 — The upfront-fee scam targeting HGV owners

The most expensive mistake in the industry. A polite stranger calls or emails saying they have a buyer ready to pay $35,000 for your HGV Hawaii week. All you have to do is wire $4,800 for “tax registration” or “Mexican notary fees” or “transfer escrow.” The buyer never appears. The wire is gone.

The protection rule. In a legitimate US timeshare resale, the seller never wires money upfront for any reason. Closing costs are paid out of the buyer’s funds at closing, or split at closing — never paid by you in advance. Anyone who reverses this rule is selling you a service, not running a real transaction.

Pitfall 2 — Confusion between HGV Club, HGV Max, and Legacy Diamond

Sellers who don’t correctly describe their contract type lose buyers. Pricing an HGV Max contract as if it were legacy HGV undersells you 15-20%. Pricing a legacy Diamond contract as HGV Max is misleading and will cost you the deal at the closing-company verification step. Be precise: pull your contract documents, list exactly what you own, and the right buyer will find you.

Pitfall 3 — Ignoring HGV’s annual fee increases

HGV maintenance fees have averaged 4-7% annual increases over the past five years. A buyer doing diligence will ask about your last three years of MF history. If you can show that increase has been at or below the brand average, that builds trust. If your MF jumped 20% in one year because of a special assessment, disclose it — hidden surprises kill deals at the closing stage.

Pitfall 4 — “Guaranteed exit” companies promising to “get you out of HGV”

You’ll see these on TV: “We’ll get you out of your timeshare in 12 months guaranteed, money back if we fail.” Their actual model is collecting $4,000-$10,000 upfront, then sending letters that HGV ignores or rejects. State attorneys general have shut down dozens of these operations — and very few owners ever recover their fees, even when courts rule in their favor. If a company guarantees an outcome before doing any work, walk away.

Pitfall 5 — Listing only in English on US-only sites

HGV owns multiple European resorts — Tuscany Village, Marbella Beach Resort, the Coylumbridge in Scotland. British, German, French, and Italian buyers actively search for these properties in their own language. Listing only on US-English sites cuts your buyer pool by 30-40% for European HGV properties. List in a marketplace that translates your description automatically (TimeShare Deals translates to 5 languages by default).

How TimeShare Deals handles HGV listings

We built TimeShare Deals as the “Idealista of timeshare” — a real estate-style marketplace that accepts listings from any owner of any brand, with no upfront fees and no developer affiliation. For HGV owners specifically:

  • 100% free for owners. No upfront fees, no commissions on sale, no listing fees ever. Owner and buyer close the deal directly.
  • Your contact data stays private. Email, phone, and address are never published. Every buyer inquiry is screened by our team before being forwarded; we filter out scammers, exit-company solicitations, and obvious bots.
  • International buyer pool. Listings are searchable in English, Spanish, French, German, and Italian. European HGV properties (Marbella Beach, Tuscany Village, Coylumbridge) reach buyers who would never find a US-only listing.
  • Verified ownership. Sellers upload last paid maintenance receipt and ownership document. Verified listings get more inquiries; buyers know they’re looking at real contracts, not phantom listings.
  • Sale or rent or both. Many HGV owners run a parallel rental listing while the sale listing is live, covering the maintenance fee with peak-week rentals while waiting for the right buyer. We support this in a single listing flow.
  • SEO-optimized listing pages. Each approved listing gets an indexable page with structured data. Buyers searching “Grand Waikikian resale” or “HGV Marbella” find your listing organically.

We’re not in the timeshare exit business. We help happy or resigned owners hand off their week or points to a new owner or renter.

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Listings live within 24-48 hours of submission and review. Photos and documentation optional but accelerate buyer trust.

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Frequently asked questions

What’s the difference between selling HGV Club points and HGV Max points?
HGV Max points have access to the unified post-merger booking system that includes both former Diamond Resorts and HGV-branded properties. Legacy HGV Club points only access the original HGV resort network. HGV Max contracts typically command a 10-20% premium per point on the resale market. Be precise about which category your contract falls into — the closing company will verify and a mismatch can kill the deal.
How long does an HGV resale take to close?
Premium Hawaii and Manhattan Club deeded weeks priced near market median: 30-60 days. Mid-tier weeks (Las Vegas, Orlando peak): 60-120 days. Off-season inland weeks at $1 nominal pricing: 90-180 days. HGV Club points packages priced realistically: 30-90 days from listing to closed contract.
Can I sell my HGV contract if I still owe HGV on a loan?
Yes, but the deed or contract assignment cannot complete until the loan is paid off. Standard solution: buyer funds at closing pay off the loan first, balance released to you. Request a payoff statement from HGV and provide it to the closing company. If your loan balance exceeds market resale price, you bring cash to closing or wait for the balance to shrink.
What does HGV charge for the estoppel letter?
HGV typically charges $50-$150 for the estoppel letter required by the closing company. This is a standard pass-through cost, often paid by the buyer. Confirm the fee in writing before listing so you can negotiate who pays it in your purchase agreement.
Should I include my unused points in the sale?
If you have current-year points unused and the buyer can use them in the same use year, this is a strong selling point and justifies a 5-10% price premium. Specify in the listing exactly how many points are available and the use-year deadline. Banked points from a prior year that transfer also add value if the buyer can use them before they expire.
Will Hilton exercise ROFR on my contract?
It depends on resort and price. Hawaii oceanfront and Manhattan Club deeds priced significantly below market median: ROFR is exercised ~50% of the time. Mid-tier weeks at market median: ~15%. Off-season inland weeks at low prices: rarely. Pricing close to market median is the practical way to minimize ROFR risk and keep your buyer in the deal.
Can I rent my HGV week while waiting for a buyer?
Yes, and it’s a smart financial move. A peak summer or holiday week at a premium HGV resort rents for $3,500-$10,000, which more than covers the annual maintenance fee. Rental income during the listing period creates positive cash flow while you wait for the right sale offer. Rentals do not interfere with the sale; the buyer takes possession for the next available year.
What if my buyer is in another country?
Cross-border HGV resales are common, especially for the European resorts (Marbella Beach, Tuscany Village, Coylumbridge). Mechanics are identical: licensed closing company handles deed transfer and recording. International wires take 1-3 business days extra. The closing company may request additional ID verification from the buyer; this is standard.
Is buying HGV resale a good deal for buyers?
Resale prices are typically 60-90% below developer prices for the same package. The trade-offs: resale buyers may not receive certain elite-status perks that come with developer purchases (priority booking windows, complimentary upgrades), depending on the contract. The math heavily favors resale for buyers whose primary use case is actual vacation booking, not status accumulation.
What documents will HGV require from me to close?
Your deed or membership certificate, last paid MF invoice, mortgage payoff statement (if applicable), estoppel letter (purchased from HGV), and the new owner’s information for the deed/contract. The closing company coordinates all of this; you don’t personally submit to HGV.
TS

TimeShare Deals editorial team

We are the team behind timeshare.deals, an independent timeshare resale and rental marketplace. We do not sell timeshare exits, do not charge upfront listing fees, and have no developer affiliation. Data in this article reflects observed market activity from listings closed on our platform and across the public US secondary market in 2024-2026.