Buying a Timeshare in Mexico in 2026: Cabo, Cancún, Puerto Vallarta — Resale Prices, Legal Reality & What US Buyers Need to Know

TimeShare Deals editorial team·Updated May 2026·14 min read

Buying a Timeshare in Mexico in 2026: Cabo, Cancún, Puerto Vallarta — Resale Prices, Legal Reality & What US Buyers Need to Know

Mexico is the most-traveled timeshare destination for US buyers outside the continental United States. Cabo San Lucas, Cancún and Puerto Vallarta together host over 200 timeshare resorts, many sold under brands American buyers recognize: Hyatt Ziva, Marriott, Hilton, Westin, Vidanta. The 2026 resale market for Mexican timeshares has its own legal structure, currency exposure, and pricing logic that’s very different from buying a US-based week. This guide covers everything a US buyer needs to know before sending money across the border.

Why Mexican timeshare resale is attractive in 2026

For a US buyer comparing Mexican resale to US developer pricing, the math in 2026 is striking:

  • Resale prices in Mexico are 70–90% below original developer pricing, the same pattern as the US, but in absolute terms a far better entry point because original prices were extreme. A $35,000 developer week at Vidanta can resell for $4,500–$8,000.
  • Maintenance fees are typically lower than equivalent US oceanfront resorts. A 2BR oceanfront week at Cabo’s Hacienda del Mar carries $1,400–$1,900 in fees vs $2,200–$3,200 for similar US oceanfront.
  • The vacation product is genuinely premium. Mexican resorts often deliver larger units, more amenities, and better staff service per dollar than equivalent US properties.
  • USD-denominated pricing for most major resorts insulates US buyers from peso volatility. Many fees and resale prices are quoted and paid in dollars.
The trade-off you accept. You don’t own real estate. You own a use-right (Spanish: derecho de uso) under Mexican law — a contract that gives you weeks at a property for a defined term, typically 25–50 years. This is structurally different from a US deeded week. It’s not worse, but it’s different. Section 2 explains.

Foreigners cannot directly own real estate within Mexico’s “restricted zone” (50 km from the coast or 100 km from international borders). All major beach resort timeshares sit inside this zone. Several legal structures work around this:

Fideicomiso (bank trust)

Many premium Mexican resorts — particularly fractional ownership and luxury programs at Cabo, Punta Mita, Mayakoba — use a fideicomiso: a Mexican bank holds title in trust for the foreign owner. You become the beneficiary. Trusts are 50 years, renewable indefinitely. This is the legal mechanism for any “deeded” equivalent ownership in coastal Mexico. The trust setup costs ~$700–$1,200 and an annual maintenance of ~$500–$700 paid to the trustee bank.

Right-to-use (RTU) contract

Most standard Mexican timeshares use a simpler structure: a long-term use-right contract directly between you and the resort developer. No fideicomiso. You own a contract, not a property interest. Term typically 30–50 years from contract inception, with the clock running.

Always check the remaining term. A 50-year RTU contract signed in 2002 has 26 years remaining in 2026. Resale value reflects remaining years, not original term. Don’t pay 60% of original price for a contract with 30% of its term left.

Membership / club programs

Some operators (Hilton Grand Vacations, Marriott Vacation Club, Westin) sell Mexican properties as part of their points-club programs. You own points usable in Mexico AND across the brand network. Resale of these contracts behaves like the US version of the same brand — same restrictions on resale-tier benefits.

Cabo San Lucas: market, prices, top resorts

Cabo (Los Cabos) is the premium end of Mexican timeshare resale. The market is mature, prices firm, and renter demand consistent through the year thanks to Cabo’s near-perfect winter weather and US-friendly infrastructure.

ResortUnit / seasonResale range 2026Maint. fee
Pueblo Bonito Sunset Beach2BR oceanview, peak winter$8,500–$15,000$1,650
Pueblo Bonito Pacifica1BR adults-only, peak$5,500–$9,500$1,400
Hacienda del Mar Los Cabos2BR golf-view fixed$6,500–$11,000$1,750
Hyatt Ziva Los Cabos1BR all-inclusive (week 1–14)$5,000–$9,500$1,800 + AI fee
Sandos Finisterra2BR oceanfront fixed$3,500–$7,000$1,300
Worldmark Los Cabos2BR float$1,800–$4,500$1,250
Diamond Cabo Azul Resort2BR oceanview$2,500–$6,000$1,450
Marina Fiesta Resort & Spa1BR marina-view$1,200–$3,500$1,150

Cabo’s premium properties (Pueblo Bonito, Hacienda del Mar) hold value because of limited inventory in the most desirable beachfront locations. Mid-tier properties trade at clear discounts.

Cancún & Riviera Maya: market, prices, top resorts

Cancún has the largest volume of timeshare inventory in Mexico but also the deepest discounts on resale. The Caribbean coast (Riviera Maya, Playa del Carmen, Tulum) has stronger pricing thanks to lower inventory and higher demand.

ResortUnit / seasonResale range 2026Maint. fee
The Royal Sands Cancún2BR oceanfront fixed$4,500–$8,500$1,400
The Royal Caribbean Cancún2BR all-inclusive$4,000–$7,500$1,350 + AI fee
The Royal Mayan2BR fixed$2,800–$5,500$1,250
Westin Lagunamar Ocean Resort (Cancún)2BR oceanfront fixed$5,500–$9,500$1,800
Marriott Cancún Resort timeshare1BR oceanview$3,500–$6,200$1,500
Hyatt Ziva Cancún1BR all-inclusive$4,200–$7,800$1,650 + AI fee
Mayan Palace / Vidanta Riviera Maya2BR garden-view$4,500–$8,000$1,500
Mayan Palace / Vidanta Riviera Maya3BR oceanfront luxury$8,500–$15,000$2,400
Grand Mayan Riviera Maya2BR fixed$5,500–$10,000$1,650
Cancún Bay Resort2BR float$1,200–$3,000$1,100
Solaris (Olé / Allegro / Crown Paradise)2BR all-inclusive$1,500–$3,800$1,200 + AI fee

Riviera Maya properties tend to outprice Cancún hotel-zone equivalents by 20–40% in resale. The reason is buyer preference shifting toward Tulum/Playa boutique experiences over the Cancún hotel zone.

Puerto Vallarta & Riviera Nayarit: market, prices, top resorts

Puerto Vallarta and the Riviera Nayarit (Punta Mita, Bucerías, Sayulita) form the third major Mexican timeshare market. The mix of legacy properties downtown and luxury developments to the north creates a wider price band than other regions.

ResortUnit / seasonResale range 2026Maint. fee
Velas Vallarta2BR oceanview, peak$5,500–$9,000$1,500
Grand Mayan Nuevo Vallarta2BR fixed$4,800–$8,500$1,550
Grand Luxxe Nuevo Vallarta (Vidanta)2BR luxury$10,000–$18,000$2,200
Marriott Puerto Vallarta Resort1BR oceanview$3,200–$5,500$1,400
Hyatt Ziva Puerto Vallarta1BR all-inclusive$3,500–$6,500$1,500 + AI fee
Westin Resort & Spa Puerto Vallarta2BR fixed$4,500–$7,800$1,650
Pueblo Bonito Vallarta2BR oceanview$2,500–$5,500$1,250
Lindo Mar Resort2BR oceanfront$1,800–$4,200$1,100
Krystal Vallarta (legacy)1BR float$700–$2,200$950
St. Regis Punta Mita Resort fractional2BR luxury$22,000–$40,000$5,500

The Riviera Nayarit luxury segment (Punta Mita, Mayakoba, Vidanta Grand Luxxe) commands premium pricing because of limited inventory and the fideicomiso structure that approximates real estate ownership.

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The buyer’s process: what closing actually looks like

  1. Identify the resort and contract type. Confirm whether the seller has a fideicomiso, a right-to-use contract, or a club-program membership. Each transfers differently.
  2. Verify the seller’s standing with the resort. Request a current statement showing maintenance fees paid through the calendar year and no special assessments outstanding. The resort issues this on request — usually called an estado de cuenta.
  3. Negotiate price and sign a purchase agreement. Most reputable resale agreements for Mexican timeshares are written in English with Spanish translation, signed by both parties, with funds held in escrow.
  4. Use a US-based or international closing company specializing in Mexico transfers. Cost typically $500–$1,200, paid by buyer. The closing company coordinates with the resort’s membership/transfer department, the bank trustee (if fideicomiso), and the Mexican notary public (notario público) for any deed-equivalent registrations.
  5. Pay the resort’s transfer fee. Most Mexican resorts charge a transfer fee of $400–$2,500 to register the new owner. This fee is in addition to the closing company’s charge and is paid by the buyer.
  6. Receive the resort’s confirmation. Once registered, the resort issues a new owner certificate or membership card. For fideicomiso properties, the bank issues an updated trust certificate.

Realistic timing: 45–90 days from agreement to ownership confirmation. Slightly faster for RTU contracts; slower for fideicomiso transfers.

8 mistakes US buyers make in Mexico

1. Wiring funds directly to the seller

Always close through escrow with a licensed closing company. Wire fraud and fake-listing scams are common in cross-border transactions. Escrow protects both parties.

2. Skipping the estado de cuenta verification

Some sellers list weeks while owing thousands in unpaid maintenance. The resort will refuse to register the new owner until arrears are settled. Verify status with the resort directly, in writing, before sending any money.

3. Confusing the developer with the resort

Some Mexican brands (Vidanta, Mayan Palace, Grupo Vallartaland) operate multiple resorts under similar names. The contract you’re buying may be for use at any property in the family, OR for one specific resort. Read the contract carefully.

4. Assuming “all-inclusive” is included for life

Many Mexican resorts (Hyatt Ziva, Solaris, some Royal Resorts) offer all-inclusive food/beverage as an add-on with mandatory annual fees of $1,200–$3,500 per stay on top of the maintenance fee. Confirm whether AI is mandatory, optional, or not part of the resale offering.

5. Not checking remaining term on RTU contracts

A 30-year RTU signed in 2003 has 7 years remaining in 2026. Resale value should reflect remaining usage, not the original term.

6. Believing the “closing company” the seller suggests

If a seller insists on using a specific closing company, run a credibility check. Independent escrow with a US-based licensed firm is the safer path.

7. Not budgeting for the bank trustee fee (fideicomiso)

If your purchase is a fideicomiso property, you take over the trust — including the annual ~$500–$700 trustee bank fee on top of maintenance. This is recurring forever. Budget for it.

8. Buying from a developer presentation while on vacation

This is not really a buyer mistake about resale — it’s the original mistake. Mexican developer presentations are notorious for high pressure and prices 5–10x what resale buyers pay for the same week. If you’re tempted, walk out, take 30 days, and shop the resale market for the same property. You’ll save 70–90%.

Tax, currency and remittance basics

US tax position

Buying a Mexican timeshare doesn’t create a US tax liability at purchase. If you rent it out, the rental income is US-reportable on Schedule E. Mexican-source maintenance fees may be partially deductible against rental income.

Mexican tax position

For RTU contracts, no Mexican tax obligation arises from holding the contract. Resorts collect VAT (IVA) on maintenance and stays, included in the fee. For rental income earned in Mexico, you may have a Mexican filing obligation if the rental is structured through a Mexican entity — rare for casual owner rentals.

Currency and payments

Most major Mexican resorts denominate fees in USD for foreign owners. Smaller properties may quote in pesos. If you pay in pesos, monitor the FX cost — spreads at retail banks are often 3–5%. Wise, Revolut, and US bank wire-with-quote services typically have better FX than retail.

Remittance and FBAR

If you hold the property through a fideicomiso AND the trust holds significant US-equivalent value, US owners may have FBAR / FinCEN 114 reporting obligations. For typical timeshare-scale fideicomiso interests this is generally not triggered, but consult a tax preparer if your trust holds a major fractional or whole-ownership interest.

FAQ

Can a US buyer really own property in Mexico?
Yes — through fideicomiso (bank trust) for properties in the restricted zone, or directly outside the zone. Foreign ownership through trust is fully legal, secure, and used by tens of thousands of US, Canadian and European owners. The trust is 50 years renewable indefinitely.
What’s the difference between a Mexican timeshare and a US timeshare?
Two main differences. First, the legal structure: Mexican is typically right-to-use or fideicomiso, US is typically deeded ownership. Second, the resort experience: Mexican resorts often emphasize all-inclusive options and larger units, US resorts emphasize exchange-network access and brand consistency.
Is a Mexican timeshare a real-estate investment?
No. RTU contracts are use-rights, not appreciating real estate. Even fideicomiso properties typically depreciate as a timeshare interest because the secondary market is small and price-sensitive. Buy for vacation use, not investment return.
Can I rent my Mexican timeshare to recoup costs?
Yes, the rental market for Mexican beach weeks (Cabo winter, Cancún spring break, PV holidays) is strong. A 2BR oceanview week at Cabo can rent for $2,500–$4,500 in peak season — covering maintenance with margin. Check your contract for any restrictions on commercial-scale rentals (almost all permit occasional owner rentals).
What if the resort changes ownership or the developer goes bankrupt?
In RTU contracts, your rights survive a change of management as long as the property continues operating. In fideicomiso, your trust beneficiary status is independent of the developer. The risk is genuine but rare for major branded resorts (Hyatt, Marriott, Hilton, Westin, Vidanta).
How do I avoid the Mexican timeshare resale scams?
Three rules: never wire money directly to a seller, always use a US-based licensed closing company, always verify estado de cuenta with the resort directly. Almost every cross-border timeshare scam fails one of these three checks.
Are all-inclusive timeshares worth it?
It depends on usage. AI fees of $1,500–$3,500 per stay can be cheaper than a la carte if you have a large family that eats and drinks at the resort. For couples who plan to dine off-property regularly, AI is often a poor value. Check the AI policy before purchase.
Is the resale market for Mexican timeshares regulated?
PROFECO (Mexico’s consumer protection agency) regulates timeshare sales contracts at the developer level, including a mandatory cooling-off period for new buyers. Resale transactions between private parties are governed by general Mexican civil contract law, with US-based closing companies typically managing the documentation.

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About this guideThe TimeShare Deals editorial team monitors completed Mexican timeshare resale transactions through multiple cross-border closing companies and direct seller reports. We are not legal or tax advisors — for property structuring, fideicomiso setup, or large fractional purchases consult a Mexican abogado or US tax professional with cross-border expertise. Last updated May 2026.