How to Compare Two Timeshare Offers in 2026: A Practical Decision Framework

TimeShare Deals editorial team·Updated May 2026·9 min read

How to Compare Two Timeshare Offers in 2026: A Practical Decision Framework

When two timeshare resale listings look similar in price and brand, how do you decide between them? The answer is rarely the headline price — it’s typically a combination of subtle factors: maintenance fee differential, view designation, week season, restrictions on resale buyer, and HOA financial health. This guide gives you a practical comparison framework with a worked example.

The 7 factors that matter

  1. Total cost over expected ownership period (purchase + maintenance + special assessments)
  2. Maintenance fee differential (10-year compounding effect)
  3. Week / season designation (rental income potential, personal use fit)
  4. View designation (oceanfront vs garden often $5,000+ difference)
  5. HOA reserve fund balance (predicts future special assessments)
  6. Resale buyer restrictions (some brands strip benefits from resale buyers)
  7. Closing complexity (some properties or international transfers add friction)

The comparison table

Side-by-side comparison helps surface differences that are hard to see in isolated listings.

FactorOffer AOffer B
Asking price$5,500$4,800
BrandMarriottMarriott
ResortGrande Vista OrlandoCypress Harbour Orlando
Week designationRed floatRed float
ViewPool viewGarden view
Maintenance fee$1,800$1,750
Last special assessment20182020
HOA reserve~70% target~85% target
Closing cost (buyer)$500$500
10-year fee escalation~5% annual~4.5% annual
10-year total cost$5,500 + $24,500 fees = $30,000$4,800 + $23,000 fees = $27,800

A worked example

Reading the table above:

  • Offer A is $700 more expensive upfront
  • Maintenance fee is $50 higher annually
  • Over 10 years with similar escalation, total cost differential: ~$2,200 in favor of Offer B
  • HOA reserve is healthier at Offer B (85% vs 70%) — lower future special-assessment risk
  • View designation: pool view (Offer A) is slightly more desirable than garden view (Offer B), perhaps $1,500–$2,500 in resale value differential

Net analysis: Offer B is the better deal financially ($2,200 cheaper over 10 years + healthier HOA), with the trade-off of slightly less desirable view. If your family values the pool view, the $2,200 gap may be worth paying. If pure financial logic dominates, Offer B wins.

Deal-breaker items

Some factors are not negotiable and should kill the comparison:

  • Outstanding maintenance fee arrears: walk away unless seller pays before closing
  • Pending special assessment: walk away unless price reflects the cost
  • Outstanding loan/mortgage: walk away unless seller pays off before closing
  • HOA reserve at 30–50% of target: high future assessment risk
  • Heavy resale-buyer restrictions (e.g., DVC pre-2011 vs post-2011 resale): may strip features you value
  • Right-to-use contract with limited remaining term: depreciating asset
  • Property in active hurricane recovery: future assessments likely

When everything else is equal

If two offers truly are equivalent on the seven factors:

  • Pick the seller who’s more responsive: easier closing process
  • Pick the seller closer to your geographic area: easier coordination
  • Pick the property whose specific unit you’ve seen photos of: avoid surprises
  • Pick the listing with more comprehensive disclosure: signal of seller quality

Compare on the marketplace

Filter, compare, choose. Free marketplace.

Browse listings →

FAQ

How important is the headline price vs maintenance fee?
Maintenance fee compound effect over 10–15 years often exceeds the purchase price difference. A $500 lower headline + $200 higher annual fee = $1,500 worse over 10 years. Always do the total-cost calculation.
What if I want to use the week vs rent it?
Personal use favors view designation and amenities. Rental focus favors maintenance fee, season, and rental market data. Different criteria depending on your goal.
Can I make offers on both and let the seller pick?
Yes — listing on multiple platforms, making competing offers, is standard. Most sellers will choose the highest net offer.
Should I have my closing company review both offers?
Yes — closing companies see thousands of transactions and can spot warning signs in either listing.
What about the seller’s motivation level?
Highly motivated sellers (life change, financial stress) often accept lower offers and close faster. Less motivated sellers wait for full price. Reading motivation helps tactically.
How long should I take to compare?
2–4 weeks is typical for thorough due diligence. Faster if simple deals; longer for cross-border or premium properties.
Should I always pick the cheaper one?
No. The total cost over your expected ownership horizon, plus the qualitative factors (location, view, family fit), should dictate. Cheaper headline doesn’t always win.
What if the seller pulls one offer when I’m comparing?
Common — some sellers won’t wait. Decide quickly if you have a clear preference. If genuinely uncertain, let one go and focus on the other.

Browse and compare

Free marketplace with full filtering and comparison.

Browse listings →
About this guideThe TimeShare Deals editorial team works with buyers comparing multiple offers regularly. Last updated May 2026.