How to Value Your Timeshare in 2026: A Real Pricing Framework Based on Closed Sales
If you’re asking what your timeshare is worth in 2026, the answer is not what you paid for it — not even close. Original purchase prices from developer sales presentations have almost no relationship to current resale value. This guide walks you through a five-factor framework that experienced resale brokers and private buyers actually use, with real 2026 closed-sale data and a clear formula you can apply to your own week today.
What you’ll find in this guide
- The hard truth about original purchase price
- The five factors that actually drive resale value
- The valuation formula (with worked examples)
- Brand multiplier: 2026 reference data
- Season & week-number multiplier
- Maintenance fees: the silent value destroyer
- Tools and data sources to verify your number
- Pricing mistakes that cost you the sale
- FAQ
The hard truth about original purchase price
Walk into a developer sales presentation in 2026 and a 2-bedroom red-week deeded contract might be priced at $32,000 or $48,000. Walk into the resale market the same afternoon, and that same week trades hands for $1,800–$5,500. The gap is not because the secondary market is undervaluing the product. The gap exists because:
- Developer pricing covers sales-staff commissions of 30–50%, marketing costs, and the cost of running a presentation operation. None of that creates value for a future buyer.
- Buyers in the resale market compare your week to thousands of identical weeks already listed. They have leverage. The market has supply.
- The product depreciates the moment you walk out, the same way a car loses 20% the moment you drive it off the lot — except more, because timeshares come with permanent maintenance obligations.
This is not bad news. It just means the right starting point for valuing your week is current resale comparables, not your contract.
The five factors that actually drive resale value
Every realistic timeshare valuation in 2026 reduces to five factors. Get these right and your price will be within 15% of what a buyer will actually pay.
Factor 1: Brand & resort
A 2BR week at Marriott’s Maui Ocean Club is not the same product as a 2BR week at an unbranded mid-size Florida resort, even if both have identical square footage. Brand reputation, resort quality, and exchange-network access all carry monetary weight. We’ll quantify this in section 4.
Factor 2: Season & week number
A red-week with a fixed week number (Christmas, July 4, peak ski) is worth 2–5x what an off-season float week is worth at the same resort. Buyers searching for “week 26” or “week 52” are looking for that specific date and will pay accordingly.
Factor 3: Unit size & view
Studio < 1BR < 2BR < 3BR. Inland < pool view < partial ocean < oceanfront. The unit-view premium can be 30–80%. Penthouse and lock-off units carry their own premium because they offer flexibility (split into two stays, for example).
Factor 4: Annual maintenance fee
This is the most underestimated factor. Two identical weeks at the same resort can have very different resale values if their maintenance fees differ. A buyer is not buying your contract — they are buying your annual obligation. A 2BR week with a $1,100 annual fee will sell faster and for more than the same week with a $1,500 fee.
Factor 5: Ownership type (deeded, points, right-to-use)
Deeded weeks at named resorts retain the most value because they are real estate with recorded deeds. Points programs lose 15–30% on resale because of restricted benefits to second-owners. Right-to-use contracts with finite terms (20, 30, 50 years) lose value as the term shortens. A 30-year RTU with 8 years remaining is worth a fraction of one with 28 years remaining.
The valuation formula
Here is the framework that actually works in 2026. Start with a base value for your unit type and resort tier, then apply multipliers.
Step 1: Base value by unit type and resort tier
| Unit type | Tier 1 base | Tier 2 base | Tier 3 base |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studio | $3,500 | $1,500 | $400 |
| 1 bedroom | $5,500 | $2,400 | $700 |
| 2 bedroom | $8,500 | $3,800 | $1,200 |
| 3 bedroom | $13,000 | $5,800 | $2,000 |
| Penthouse / 4BR+ | $18,000 | $8,500 | $3,200 |
Tier 1: Hawaii (any island), Aspen, Vail, Park City, Lake Tahoe, Cabo San Lucas, Maui, Kauai, Big Island. Premium beachfront in Florida (Marco Island, Sanibel). The very best Disney resorts.
Tier 2: Orlando major brands (Marriott, Disney non-deluxe, HGV), Las Vegas Strip, Branson Missouri, Williamsburg, Smoky Mountain near Gatlinburg, Hilton Head, Myrtle Beach, Carolinas mountain resorts.
Tier 3: Inland or older resorts, lesser brands, off-network properties, coastal resorts in mid-tier markets.
Step 2: Apply multipliers
Use the reference values in sections 4–6 to multiply your base. Worked example below.
Worked example: Marriott Aruba Surf Club 2BR oceanfront, week 8 (President’s Day), $2,100 maintenance fee
- Base (Tier 1, 2BR): $8,500
- Brand multiplier (Marriott): ×1.15 = $9,775
- Season multiplier (red, fixed week 8 in February at a Caribbean resort): ×1.20 = $11,730
- View multiplier (oceanfront): ×1.30 = $15,250
- Fee adjustment ($2,100 vs $1,400 reference for tier): ×0.92 = $14,030
- Ownership type (Marriott deeded weeks): ×1.00 = $14,030
Real-world closed sales of this exact unit at the Aruba Surf Club in Q1 2026 ranged $13,200–$15,800. The framework lands inside that range.
Worked example: Westgate Lakes Orlando 2BR float, off-season, $1,180 maintenance fee, deeded
- Base (Tier 2, 2BR): $3,800
- Brand multiplier (Westgate): ×0.55 = $2,090
- Season multiplier (float off-season): ×0.50 = $1,045
- View multiplier (standard): ×1.00 = $1,045
- Fee adjustment (close to reference): ×1.00 = $1,045
- Ownership type (deeded): ×1.00 = $1,045
Real-world Westgate Lakes float weeks closed at $300–$1,500 in Q1 2026. The framework lands solidly in that range.
Brand multiplier: 2026 reference data
This is where many private valuations go wrong. Brand matters more than owners realize, and the gap between top-tier and mid-tier brands has widened in 2026 as resale buyers pay premiums for trusted names.
| Brand | Multiplier | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Disney Vacation Club (DVC) | 1.40–1.60 | Strongest resale market in the industry. Buyers actively seek DVC. |
| Marriott Vacation Club (MVC / Abound) | 1.10–1.20 | Premium brand, broad exchange network |
| Hilton Grand Vacations (HGV) | 1.00–1.15 | Strong network, recent expansion absorbed Diamond |
| Hyatt Residence Club | 1.05–1.20 | Smaller portfolio but high-quality resorts |
| Wyndham Destinations / Club Wyndham | 0.75–0.95 | Largest US points network but oversupply pressures price |
| Bluegreen Vacations | 0.65–0.85 | Mid-tier, owner-friendly resorts but limited brand premium |
| Holiday Inn Club Vacations | 0.70–0.90 | Mid-market, decent rental potential |
| Diamond Resorts (now HGV Max) | 0.85–1.05 | Recovery underway after HGV absorption in 2021–2024 |
| Westgate Resorts | 0.50–0.75 | Heavy resale supply, especially Florida properties |
| Vidanta / Mayan Palace (Mexico) | 0.70–1.10 | Wide range; Mexican beach properties retain value |
| Independent / unbranded | 0.40–0.65 | No exchange-network premium, trade on resort quality alone |
Season & week-number multiplier
This is the easiest factor to apply because most resorts publish their season calendar publicly. Pull yours, identify your week, and apply:
| Week / season | Multiplier | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed peak (Christmas / NYE) | 1.50–2.20 | Week 51, 52 |
| Fixed peak (July 4 / spring break) | 1.30–1.80 | Weeks 12–15, 26–28 |
| Fixed peak (winter ski) | 1.40–2.00 | Weeks 1–9 at ski resorts |
| Red float | 1.10–1.30 | Top-tier float access |
| White / shoulder season | 0.85–1.05 | Mid-spring, fall |
| Blue / off-season | 0.40–0.65 | Hurricane season, deep winter at non-ski |
| Float (any season) | 0.50–0.85 | Resort dictates which week you actually get |
Maintenance fees: the silent value destroyer
This is where most owners over-estimate their week’s value. Run this exercise: take your annual maintenance fee, divide it by the typical rental price for an equivalent week from a third-party site (Airbnb, VRBO). If your maintenance fee is more than 70% of what the same week rents for on the open market, you have negative carry as an owner. A buyer doing this same math will refuse to pay much.
Healthy ratio: under 0.50 (you can profitably rent it)
Borderline: 0.50–0.70
Unsellable at meaningful price: above 0.85
Worked example. You own a 2BR week at a Florida resort with a $1,400 annual maintenance fee. Equivalent 2BR rentals for a non-peak week run $850–$1,100 on the open market. Your ratio is 1.27–1.65 — meaning the maintenance fee exceeds the rental value. Buyers will not pay much for this week, regardless of brand. The realistic price is $300–$1,200.
Same example, week 26 (peak July 4) with rental rate $2,400. Ratio drops to 0.58. Now your week is sellable at $2,500–$5,000.
Fee adjustment table
| Annual fee vs tier reference | Multiplier |
|---|---|
| Significantly below reference (−25%) | 1.10–1.20 |
| Around reference | 1.00 |
| Above reference (+15%) | 0.92 |
| Above reference (+30%) | 0.80 |
| Above reference (+50%+) | 0.60 or unsellable |
Tier reference fees in 2026: Tier 1 ≈ $1,800–$2,400. Tier 2 ≈ $1,200–$1,600. Tier 3 ≈ $900–$1,200.
Tools and data sources to verify your number
Don’t trust any single valuation, including this framework. Triangulate. Here’s what professional resale brokers use in 2026:
- TUG (Timeshare Users Group) marketplace and forums: closed-sale reporting from owners. Free read access. Best source of truth for completed transactions.
- Redweek and SellMyTimeshareNow listings: list prices, not closed prices. Adjust down 20–35% from posted price for realistic value.
- Owner forums for your specific brand: DVC fans (DIS Boards), MVC owners (TimeshareForums), HGV owners (Hilton Grand Vacations subreddit). Recent sale anecdotes are gold.
- County recorder offices: search by resort name and recent dates. Public records of recorded deeds show actual sale prices in many states.
- Active marketplaces with no upfront fees: see what comparable units are listed at right now — and importantly, which ones get sold versus which sit for months.
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Publish my listing →Pricing mistakes that cost you the sale
Anchoring to your purchase price
Buyers don’t care what you paid. Markets reward sellers who price to what their week is currently worth, not what they wish they hadn’t paid years ago.
Ignoring closed-sale data and quoting list prices
Listed price ≠ sold price. Many weeks listed at $8,000 close at $4,200 after months on market. Pull recent closed transactions, not active listings, when calibrating.
Listing without paid-up maintenance fees
An estoppel showing arrears reduces your effective price by the amount of arrears, plus a hassle premium that buyers will demand. Pay current.
Not accounting for closing costs in your asking price
If you net $1,200 after $400 closing costs and the buyer assumes you’ll cover them, the deal feels worse to you. Most US deals have buyer paying closing — just be clear in your listing who pays what.
Treating your week as a real-estate investment
Real estate generally appreciates. Timeshare contracts depreciate. Don’t price expecting to recover your purchase — price expecting to find a buyer who values the use of the week, not the asset.
FAQ
What’s my timeshare worth if I owe money on it?
How accurate is online “timeshare valuation” software?
Should I get a professional appraisal?
My week appraised at $25,000 by the developer. What does that mean?
How do I find recent closed sales for my specific resort?
Does the time of year I list affect my price?
What if my week is in an old resort with declining quality?
Is there a market for fractional ownership and luxury timeshares?
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