Sell my timeshare
Direct P2P marketplace · Real buyers in 5 languages · Zero upfront fees
Selling a timeshare in 2026 works — but not the way it did fifteen years ago. The resale market is more efficient, buyers are better informed, and prices have become realistic. Here is what works today: real prices, average timelines, mistakes to avoid, and how to publish your week to actual buyers.
The 2026 resale reality, in plain numbers
The price you paid the developer ten or fifteen years ago has almost nothing to do with the price you will sell at today. Resale and primary are two separate markets.
A Canary Islands two-bedroom sold new in 2009 for $20,000 resells today between $1,000 and $5,500 depending on week, resort, size and fee status. Pricing it at $14,000 means it sits unsold for years. The good news: priced realistically in the right channel, most weeks sell in 3 to 6 months.
Pricing your week to actually sell
Price is the single most important variable. Our pricing procedure:
1. Check the same week in your resort
Look at active and recently sold listings of the same resort, same unit type, same week. This is the most reliable data point.
2. Apply seasonal coefficients
| Period | Week category | Relative value |
|---|---|---|
| Dec 26 – Jan 6 | Prime (Christmas/New Year) | 100% (benchmark) |
| Easter weeks | Prime | 90-100% |
| July-August | High season | 70-85% |
| June, September | Shoulder | 50-65% |
| May, October | Mid-season | 35-50% |
| January-March (excl. Easter) | Low | 15-25% |
| November | Very low | 10-15% |
3. Subtract any debt
If maintenance fees are in arrears, the buyer will deduct them from the price. It is usually better to settle them before publishing. If you cannot, declare them openly — transparency converts better than hidden problems.
4. Factor in remaining contract years
A deeded timeshare with 25+ remaining years is worth more than one with 5 years left. A perpetual or “right-to-use forever” contract sits in the middle: more years of use but also more years of fees.
Documents to prepare before publishing
- Original purchase contract with all annexes
- Maintenance fee statement for the last 3 years
- “Paid current” certificate from the resort management
- Any notarial documents from purchase or inheritance
- Current identity document
- SSN/Tax ID and bank account for receiving payment
- 5-10 photographs of the apartment (stock photos of the resort are acceptable)
Where to publish: the three channels that work
Specialised P2P marketplaces
Platforms dedicated to the secondary timeshare market. Direct contact with real buyers, no upfront fees. Examples: TimeShare Deals, RedWeek, Timeshare Resale Brokers. Average sale time: 3-6 months.
Facebook groups of owners at your resort
Almost every major resort has a Facebook group of owners (search “Owners [resort name]”). These groups have the most qualified audience possible: people who already know and love that resort. Average sale time: 1-4 months when it works.
The resort itself
Some operators offer “buy-back” or substitution programs. Almost always low prices (or zero), but it is a fast channel if you just want to free yourself from annual fees.
Common mistakes that prevent sales
- Pricing based on what you paid instead of current market
- Photos of the landscape only without showing the actual apartment
- Description built on slogans (“unique opportunity”, “must-see”) with zero concrete data
- No fee information in the listing — buyers will ask anyway, declare upfront
- 48-72 hour reply lag to first contacts loses 60% of interested buyers
- Demanding upfront wire transfer from a buyer you have never met — serious buyers prefer escrow or a closing company
- Not specifying the exact week (week number or date range)
Average sale times by category
| Category | Average time | 12-month probability |
|---|---|---|
| Prime week (Christmas/Easter) at market price | 2-4 months | ~85% |
| High season (Jul/Aug) at market price | 3-6 months | ~75% |
| Shoulder season | 6-12 months | ~55% |
| Low season | 9-18 months | ~35% |
| Any week with fee arrears | +50% on times above | -20% |
Closing and transfer
The closing process varies by jurisdiction:
- Spain, France, Portugal, Germany, Italy: notarial deed required. Cost: €800-2,500 to buyer. The notary handles registration at the property registry.
- USA, Caribbean: closing via deed transfer or title transfer handled by a title company. Cost: $250-600.
- Points-based timeshares: transfer handled directly by the operator. Cost: $100-400 transfer fee.
In all cases the contract must include: identification of buyer and seller, exact description of the week (number, year of use, unit type), price, payment terms, warranty against prior debts, rescission clause for hidden defects.
Publish your timeshare on TimeShare Deals
Specialised P2P marketplace. Real buyers in 5 languages. Zero upfront fees.
Publish for freeFrequently asked questions
Can I sell with fee arrears?
Yes, but it is almost always better to settle them first. If you cannot, declare them openly — some buyers accept taking them on in exchange for a discount.
How long do buyer contacts stay warm?
Our experience: 24-72 hours. After that, interest drops sharply. Reply fast, even with a short message (“Got it, full details by tonight”).
Should I cut the price if it doesn’t sell in 3 months?
Yes, if the listing is well built and you have received no contacts. Price is the key lever. A 15-20% cut often unblocks the market.
Can I sell to an agency in one day?
Almost always yes, but the offered price is 20-40% of the market value. Only worth it if you urgently need to be rid of the annual fees.
What if the buyer doesn’t pay?
With escrow or a closing company, risk is zero — funds release only after title transfer completes. With direct wire, real risk exists — avoid alternative payment schemes (PayPal F&F, crypto, Western Union).