Buying Timeshare Resale in 2026: Why Prices Are 70-90% Below Developer (And When It’s Actually a Good Deal)

TimeShare Deals editorial team · Updated May 2026 · ~12 min read

Buying Timeshare Resale in 2026: Why Prices Are 70-90% Below Developer (And When It’s Actually a Good Deal)

Buying a timeshare on the secondary market means paying a fraction of what the developer charges for the same product. A 7,000-point Marriott Vacation Club package that the developer sells at $40,000 can be bought resale for $4,500-$8,000. That’s the math that makes resale buying compelling. But the math also has caveats: certain perks don’t transfer, maintenance fees are the same regardless of how you bought, and not every timeshare is worth owning even at zero. This is the practical 2026 buyer’s guide: when resale is a great deal, when it isn’t, and how to evaluate any specific contract before you bid.

Why resale prices are 70-90% below developer prices

The discount isn’t a glitch. It’s structural. Timeshare developers price their products with three large costs baked in:

1. Sales-presentation marketing

Developers spend roughly 50-60% of every developer-side sale on marketing and incentives: free hotel stays for tour attendees, gift cards, sales commissions, the rented presentation rooms with free coffee and pressure-cooker pitches that last 4-7 hours. None of that cost is reflected in the underlying value of the timeshare itself.

2. Developer financing margins

Developers commonly finance the purchase at 12-18% interest rates over 7-10 years. These finance margins add another layer of revenue that has nothing to do with the actual property. A buyer paying cash on the secondary market doesn’t carry that overhead.

3. Brand premium for the “experience” of buying

Developer presentations sell an experience: VIP rooms, “today only” pricing, certificates and welcome kits. That experience has marketing value but no resale value. The moment you walk out of the presentation with the contract, your asset value is whatever the secondary market will pay tomorrow.

The practical translation. When you buy timeshare resale, you skip the entire developer marketing and financing apparatus and pay closer to the underlying value of the contract. Same week, same resort, same booking system as the buyer-next-door who paid 8x more two years ago. The mathematics overwhelmingly favor resale for buyers whose primary goal is actually using the timeshare.

When resale is a genuinely great deal

The math on resale is most compelling in these specific situations:

You vacation at the same resort or region every year

If you and your family take the same week at Lake Tahoe or Maui or Marbella every summer, owning that week resale lets you book it reliably for a fraction of what hotels would cost over a 10-15 year horizon. Annual cost: $1,500-$3,000 in maintenance fees. Equivalent hotel cost: $4,000-$10,000+ for the same week at peak season. Net savings of $2,500-$7,000 per year, plus equity in a transferable asset.

You want flexibility within a points network

Buying a 7,000-point Marriott Vacation Club Destination Points contract for $20,000-$28,000 resale gives access to the entire MVC network: Hawaii, Aruba, Marbella, Lake Tahoe, Newport Coast, etc. Equivalent variety in hotels every year would cost $5,000-$8,000 per week at peak. The points let you mix one-week stays at premium destinations with shorter stays at cheaper ones.

You’re buying European resorts from the US (or vice versa)

European MVC resorts (Marbella Beach Resort), HGV resorts (Coylumbridge in Scotland, Tuscany Village), Pierre & Vacances and Pestana properties trade at deep discounts on the secondary market because most US buyers don’t look there. A summer week at Marriott’s Marbella Beach Resort that costs €18,000 from the developer trades resale at €3,500-€7,000. For US-based buyers who want a European base, this is one of the most underpriced markets in the timeshare world.

You’re buying for the rental yield

Some specific resort/week combinations rent out for $3,000-$8,000 per week at peak season. If the resale purchase is $5,000 and annual MFs are $1,800, the contract pays for itself in year one through rental income alone. This is a niche buyer profile but the math works for select Hawaii oceanfront, Aspen ski weeks, Lake Tahoe winter, and a handful of Caribbean properties.

You’re replacing an existing developer-priced contract

If you already own a developer-priced contract and want to upgrade to a different resort or larger points package, buying that upgrade resale instead of paying the developer’s upgrade price typically saves $20,000-$60,000.

When resale is a bad deal regardless of price

Resale isn’t universally good. Avoid these traps:

You won’t actually use the timeshare 3+ times in the next 5 years

Annual maintenance fees ($1,200-$3,500) compound. If you buy a $1 contract and use it once over five years, you’ll pay $6,000-$17,500 in MFs for that single use. Pure economic loss. The math only works if you’ll actually book at least 3 times in the first 5 years.

The annual MF exceeds 30% of the equivalent hotel cost

If your week costs $1,800/year in MFs and an equivalent hotel week at the same resort and season costs $2,500, you’re saving $700/year for the privilege of being locked into one specific week. Once you factor in flexibility (or lack thereof), the math is marginal at best. Look for contracts where MF is under 30% of equivalent hotel cost.

The resort is older with deferred maintenance

Some older resorts have hidden capital problems — pending special assessments, planned renovations, infrastructure issues. Buyers who don’t check the HOA financial history can inherit a property where MFs jump 30-50% within 2 years to fund overdue work. Always ask for the resort’s recent special assessment history before buying.

You’re buying for “investment” expecting appreciation

Timeshares almost never appreciate. The sellable resale value of a contract typically declines 5-10% per year. If your goal is investment, buy something else — literally anything else. Resale buying makes sense as a usage decision, not as an investment.

The contract has VIP-tier perks that don’t transfer to you

If you’re paying a premium because the listing emphasizes “Platinum tier” or “VIP Gold,” verify those perks transfer. In most timeshare brands they don’t. You’ll inherit the points but not the elite-status benefits, which means you’re overpaying for a feature you won’t actually receive.

Which perks transfer to a resale buyer and which don’t

This single table is one of the most important pieces of information for resale buyers in 2026. Always verify with the brand before purchasing:

BrandPoints/weeks transfer?VIP-tier benefits transfer?Exchange company access (RCI, II)?
Marriott Vacation ClubYesNo (Vistana/Sheraton/Westin tiers don’t transfer)Yes, Interval International typically included
Hilton Grand Vacations / HGV MaxYesNo (Elite Plus/Premier tiers don’t transfer)Yes, RCI typically
Wyndham DestinationsYesNo (VIP Silver/Gold/Platinum/Founders don’t transfer)Yes, RCI included
Diamond Resorts (legacy)YesNo (Standard/Gold/Platinum don’t transfer)Yes, RCI/II
Hyatt Residence ClubYesPartial (some tiers transfer; verify per contract)Yes, II typically
Pierre & VacancesYesGenerally noLimited
Disney Vacation ClubYes (with caveats)No (DVC perks/discounts don’t transfer for resales after 2011)Yes, but limited
Disney DVC special note. Disney implemented restrictions on resale DVC contracts purchased after January 2011. These contracts can’t book at certain newer DVC resorts (Riviera, Cabins at Fort Wilderness) and lose access to certain perks. If you’re considering a DVC resale, the limitations are real and worth carefully checking before purchase.

How to evaluate any specific resale listing

Use this checklist for every contract you’re considering. Listings that pass all 10 are worth pursuing; failures on 3+ items mean walk away.

Checklist (10 items)

  1. Resort and week/points clearly identified. If the listing is vague about which resort or how many points, the seller doesn’t know — or hopes you don’t.
  2. Maintenance fees current and disclosed. Last paid MF receipt should be available. Buy from sellers who upload this proactively.
  3. No outstanding loan from the seller. Or the loan is being paid off at closing from buyer funds. Confirm in writing.
  4. No pending special assessments at the resort. Ask the seller and verify with the resort directly.
  5. Listed price within 30% of recent comparable closes. Ask the seller for recent comps; or check resale forums (TUG2, Redweek price database). If price is way above market, walk — or counter low.
  6. Use year and points balance specified. Banked points add value; borrowed (already-used) points subtract. Be precise.
  7. Closing through a licensed timeshare closing company. Buyer chooses, not seller. Verify the closing company’s license directly with the state regulator.
  8. ROFR risk understood. If the contract has Right of First Refusal (Marriott, HGV, some Wyndham), the developer can match your offer and take the deal back. This delays the close 30 days but doesn’t cost you money.
  9. Seller hasn’t asked you to wire money upfront. Ever. For any reason. Real closings have buyer funds wire to escrow, not buyer funds wire to seller.
  10. Total all-in cost calculated: purchase price + closing costs + first-year MFs + estoppel letter fee + transfer paperwork. Make sure the all-in number is what you intended.

The “would I rent this for 10 years” test

Take the all-in cost (purchase + 10 years of MFs minus residual resale value at year 10) and divide by 10. That’s your annual cost. Compare it to the equivalent week at a hotel of similar quality during the same season. If your annual cost is 20-50% of the hotel cost, you’re winning. If it’s 70%+, you’re marginally better off renting per-trip.

The resale buying process step by step

Mechanically, buying timeshare resale is structurally similar to buying a small condominium.

Step 1 — Browse listings on a real marketplace

Multiple marketplaces in 2026 (TimeShare Deals, Redweek, MyResortNetwork, Selling Timeshares). Each has slightly different inventories — check 2-3 to see the breadth of what’s available.

Step 2 — Contact the seller through the platform

Real marketplaces route inquiries through their team to filter scammers. The seller responds via the platform, not directly to your personal email until both sides are committed.

Step 3 — Negotiate price and terms

Initial offer typically 10-20% below asking price for non-premium contracts. Premium contracts (Hawaii oceanfront, peak season Manhattan Club) often sell at or near asking with multiple offers. Don’t lowball premium contracts — you’ll lose to faster, fairer offers.

Step 4 — Sign a purchase agreement and provide a deposit

10-20% deposit to a licensed escrow account. Never to the seller’s personal account. Never via wire that the seller can withdraw before closing — only to a real escrow.

Step 5 — Closing company handles the transfer

Buyer typically chooses (or both parties agree on) the closing company. Title work, deed (or contract assignment) preparation, county recording where applicable, transfer notification to the brand. Buyer pays balance to escrow at this step.

Step 6 — ROFR period (if applicable)

30 days for the developer to exercise Right of First Refusal. If exercised, your deposit is returned and the deal ends; if waived, the deal proceeds.

Step 7 — Recording and account activation

Deed records (deeded weeks) or contract is transferred (points). Brand activates the contract under your name. Typical total timeline: 60-90 days from initial offer to using the timeshare.

Browse verified resale listings on TimeShare Deals

Listings from owners across all major brands and resorts, screened to filter scammers and exit-company solicitations. International audience in 5 languages.

Browse listings →

Browsing resale on TimeShare Deals

We built TimeShare Deals as a buyer-friendly resale marketplace specifically because the existing options often optimize for sellers and listing services. For resale buyers in 2026, here’s how the platform works:

  • No paywall to browse. Search any resort, any brand, any week or points type without registering.
  • Full transparency on each listing. Maintenance fee, last paid year, ownership type, photos, full specifications. We require sellers to upload last paid MF receipt before approval.
  • Verified ownership. Sellers upload deed or contract documentation. Listings without verification are clearly marked.
  • Translated descriptions. Every listing is searchable in English, Spanish, French, German, and Italian. European resorts (Marbella, Tuscany Village) get the cross-border audience they deserve.
  • Filtered communication. When you contact a seller, our team screens the conversation in both directions. Sellers who attempt to wire-fee scams are blocked. Buyers who appear to be commercial harvesters are flagged.
  • No exit-company business. We don’t partner with timeshare exit companies. The marketplace exists to match real buyers with real sellers, full stop.

Frequently asked questions

Is buying timeshare resale really legal and safe?
Yes. Resale is a normal secondary market for ownership rights, fully legal and well-established. The closing process uses licensed closing companies, recorded deeds, and standard escrow procedures. The “danger” everyone mentions is scams targeting buyers and sellers, not the resale market itself. With basic due diligence (verify the closing company, never wire upfront), buying resale is safer than many real estate transactions.
Why are resale prices so much lower than developer prices?
Three reasons: developers bake 50-60% marketing/sales-presentation costs into developer pricing; developers add 12-18% financing margins on multi-year payment plans; brand-premium “experience” of buying at the developer presentation has marketing value but no resale value. Resale skips all three layers and pays closer to the underlying ownership value.
Will I get the same room, week, and booking experience as a developer buyer?
Yes for points, room access, and standard booking. No for elite-tier perks (VIP Silver/Gold/Platinum) which typically don’t transfer in most brands. If your priority is actually using the timeshare for vacations, the resale experience is essentially identical to a developer buyer’s experience, at a fraction of the cost.
What about Disney Vacation Club resale?
DVC resale is a special case. Contracts purchased after January 2011 have restrictions: cannot book at certain newer DVC resorts (Riviera, Cabins at Fort Wilderness), and lose access to certain DVC member perks. Pre-2011 DVC resale contracts retain full access. If considering DVC resale, the year of original purchase matters significantly — verify before bidding.
Will the developer try to stop my resale purchase via ROFR?
Possibly, depending on brand and price. Marriott, Hilton, and some Wyndham contracts include Right of First Refusal — the developer has 30 days to match your offer and take the deal. From your perspective as the buyer, ROFR exercise just means your deal collapses and your deposit returns; it doesn’t cost you money. ROFR is more likely on aggressively underpriced premium contracts; pricing closer to market median minimizes the risk.
What if the seller has unpaid maintenance fees?
Don’t close until those fees are settled. The closing company won’t record the deed transfer or process the contract assignment with unpaid fees outstanding. Either the seller pays them out of pocket, or the unpaid balance comes out of your purchase price at closing. This is a normal closing-mechanic adjustment, not a deal-breaker if you account for it.
Should I buy resale or rent the same week each year?
Depends on horizon and frequency. If you’ll vacation at the same resort/week 3+ times in 5 years, resale ownership beats per-trip rentals on price (typical 30-50% cumulative savings). If you’ll go 1-2 times in 5 years, per-trip rental wins. The math also depends on whether you have the asking price upfront or need to finance — financing erodes most of the resale advantage.
Are there hidden ongoing costs after I buy resale?
Yes — the same costs every timeshare owner pays: annual maintenance fees, club dues (where applicable), special assessments when the resort needs major work, and exchange company fees if you swap weeks via RCI/Interval International. None of these are hidden — they’re standard for all timeshare owners regardless of how the contract was purchased. Budget for $1,500-$3,500 in MFs per year depending on your specific contract.
Can I finance a timeshare resale purchase?
Yes, but it’s harder than financing developer-side. Some specialty timeshare lenders (LightStream, Monera) offer personal loans to fund resale purchases. Rates 8-15%, terms 3-7 years. Most resale buyers in 2026 pay cash because the resale prices are low enough ($1,500-$30,000 range typically) that cash purchase is feasible. Avoid using credit cards if possible — the interest erodes the resale price advantage.
What happens if I want to sell what I just bought?
You can sell again at any point. Resale contracts trade freely in the secondary market just like any deeded or contract ownership. You may need to hold for 1-3 years before selling for a comparable price (not because of any rule, but because resale prices generally decline 5-10% per year). Plan your purchase around actual usage, not flip potential.
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 the public US secondary market in 2024-2026.