How to Rent Out Your Timeshare Week in 2026: The Owner’s Practical Guide

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

How to Rent Out Your Timeshare Week in 2026: The Owner’s Practical Guide to Covering (or Beating) Your Maintenance Fee

If you can’t use your week this year — or you’re tired of paying the maintenance fee for a vacation you’re not taking — renting it out is the fastest path to making the math work. In 2026, owners with peak weeks at well-known resorts routinely net $1,500–$4,000 per week after costs. This guide explains exactly how to do it: pricing, where to list, how to handle the booking, taxes, and the eight pitfalls that cost rookie landlords money every season.

Why renting beats letting your week sit empty

Your maintenance fee is paid whether you use the week or not. The week is your most expensive asset that can sit completely unused. Renting changes the math:

  • You recover the maintenance fee, often with money to spare.
  • You keep the week — no irreversible deed transfer, no permanent decision.
  • You learn the rental market, which informs whether to keep the week long-term or sell.
  • You preserve resale optionality: a week that has rented successfully has documented value when you eventually sell.

Here is what realistic rental math looks like in 2026 for representative weeks:

Resort / unitAnnual feeRealistic rentalNet (before tax)
Marriott Grande Ocean (Hilton Head) 2BR oceanfront, July 4 fixed$1,950$3,800–$4,800+$1,850 to +$2,850
Westgate Park City 2BR ski week (week 7)$1,650$3,200–$4,500+$1,550 to +$2,850
HGV Las Vegas Strip 1BR (week 49 NFR rodeo)$1,300$2,000–$2,800+$700 to +$1,500
Wyndham Bonnet Creek 2BR red-week (Easter)$1,420$1,900–$2,600+$480 to +$1,180
DVC Bay Lake Tower studio, March break$1,150$1,800–$2,400+$650 to +$1,250
Bluegreen Smoky Mountain 2BR float (off-season)$1,100$650–$950−$450 to −$150
Mid-tier Orlando 2BR float (off-season)$1,180$550–$850−$630 to −$330

Two patterns leap out. Peak weeks at known resorts produce real net income. Float weeks at mid-tier resorts in off-season often barely cover the fee, or run negative. Knowing where you fall on this spectrum determines whether renting is worth your time.

Is renting your week even allowed?

Yes, in nearly every case. Almost all major US developer contracts permit owner-to-occupant rentals. What is forbidden is “commercial” rental at scale — you cannot rent out 30 weeks a year as a business operation.

BrandOwner rentals allowed?Notes
Marriott Vacation ClubYes, occasionalPersonal use must remain primary purpose
Hilton Grand VacationsYes, occasionalHGV monitors heavy renters; occasional rental fine
Disney Vacation ClubYes, occasionalDVC explicitly allows guest stays via points reservation
Wyndham / Club WyndhamYes, with limitsWyndham caps rental volume per account; reasonable usage fine
Westgate ResortsYesPermitted under standard contract
Bluegreen VacationsYesPermitted; check program rules for points
Holiday Inn Club VacationsYes, occasionalPersonal-use primacy expected
Hyatt Residence ClubYes, occasionalBoutique program, light enforcement
Diamond Resorts (HGV Max)YesAligned with HGV rules post-merger
What “occasional” means in practice. Renting your one week per year is universally fine. Renting a points contract that gives you 8 weeks a year, four of which you rent, is also fine. Booking 50 reservations across multiple resorts and re-renting them all at markup is what triggers commercial-use rules. You are nowhere near that line.

Pricing your week: 2026 rental data by resort type

The right price for your rental sits where (a) it covers your maintenance fee with margin, and (b) it’s competitive with comparable Airbnb / VRBO listings for the same week and area. Use this two-step approach:

Step 1: Floor price — cover your fee

Your absolute floor is the maintenance fee divided by usable nights. If your fee is $1,400 and the week has 7 nights, your nightly floor is $200. Don’t list below this for rentable weeks — you’re subsidizing someone else’s vacation.

Step 2: Market price — check comparable open-market listings

Open Airbnb/VRBO and search for your specific week of dates at hotels and condos within 3 miles of your resort. Note the average nightly rate for 2BR units of similar quality. Set your nightly rate 10–25% below the average — that price differential is what motivates a renter to choose your week over a hotel.

Why under-cut? Because timeshare weeks have rigid check-in/check-out dates (almost always Saturday-to-Saturday or Friday-to-Friday). Renters lose the date flexibility a hotel offers, so they expect a discount in return.

Resort type / locationNightly rate (2BR)Weekly target
Premium ski (Park City, Vail, Lake Tahoe), peak week$450–$700$3,200–$4,800
Hawaii oceanfront (Maui, Kauai, Big Island), peak$500–$800$3,500–$5,500
Florida beach (Marco, Sanibel, Naples), peak$320–$500$2,200–$3,500
Orlando major brand, peak$220–$380$1,500–$2,600
Las Vegas Strip 1BR, event week (F1, NFR, CES)$280–$450$1,950–$3,150
Smoky Mountain holiday weeks$280–$450$1,950–$3,150
Mid-tier resort, red-week$140–$250$980–$1,750
Mid-tier float, off-season$80–$150$560–$1,050

Where to list (and what to avoid)

Best places to list in 2026

  • A no-upfront-fee owner-to-renter marketplace dedicated to timeshare rentals. Free to list, buyers actively searching for the resort and week. The path of least resistance.
  • VRBO / Vacation Rentals by Owner: still strong for timeshare rentals despite their fee structure. Buyer pool is large.
  • Airbnb: works for hotel-branded properties (Marriott, Hilton, etc.) but their model is friction with timeshare check-in dates — review carefully whether the rigid Saturday-to-Saturday format works on the platform.
  • TUG (Timeshare Users Group) marketplace: free for members, very engaged community of buyers and sellers.
  • Owner-specific Facebook groups: every major resort has one or two; many allow rental posts. Free, instant reach to people who already love the resort.

What to avoid

  • Anyone asking $499 to “market” your rental. Same scam as the resale upfront-fee fraud, repackaged. No legitimate platform charges upfront for rental listings.
  • Cold-call “we have a buyer ready” calls. Particularly common in Q1 each year. The buyer never materializes; the company keeps your fee.
  • Listing on multiple paid platforms simultaneously without a calendar lock. Double-booking a single week is the fastest way to get sued by a renter.

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The 6-step rental process

  1. Confirm your reservation is locked in your name. Log in to your owner portal. Confirm the week is reserved at your resort with your name on the reservation. Without a confirmed reservation, you have nothing to rent.
  2. Set your price using the two-step method above.
  3. Write a clear listing: photos of the actual unit (or representative resort photos with a clear note), check-in / check-out dates as the headline, sleeping capacity, what’s included (kitchen, washer/dryer, pool access, beach access).
  4. Field inquiries and screen renters: ask the renter their travel reason, group size, ages. Decline anyone who pressures for off-platform payment or seems vague about who is staying.
  5. Sign a simple rental agreement: 1–2 pages with dates, total cost, deposit terms, cancellation rules, and a clear statement that the renter receives a guest reservation under the owner’s account. Templates are widely available.
  6. Transfer the reservation to a guest reservation: most major brands allow this through the owner portal. The renter checks in under their own name. You are not on-site, but the reservation is properly linked to the renter.

Payments & deposits: protecting yourself

This is where most rookie owner-landlords get burned. Two best practices:

Take 50% deposit at booking, balance 30 days before check-in

The deposit ensures the renter is committed. The balance close to arrival reduces fraud risk — a fake renter won’t pay 30 days out for a week they have no intention of using.

Use payment methods with chargeback protection (for both sides)

Payment methodRecommended?Why
Credit card via VRBO / AirbnbYesPlatform mediates disputes
PayPal Goods & ServicesYes (with caution)Both sides protected; renter can chargeback within 180 days
Zelle / Venmo Friends & FamilyNoZero protection if dispute arises
Wire transfer / cashier’s checkOnly with written contractNo reversal possible — risky in either direction
CryptocurrencyAvoidIrreversible; common scam vector
Watch for the “overpayment” scam. A renter sends a check or wire for $4,500 against a $2,000 rental, then asks you to wire the “extra” back to a third party. Their original payment bounces a week later. You’re out the wire amount. Never refund overpayments by wire — if a payment exceeds the agreed amount, return the entire payment and ask them to resubmit at the correct amount.

Tax basics for US owner-landlords

This is general information. Your situation may be different — consult a tax professional for your specific facts.

Income reporting

Rental income from a timeshare week is generally reportable on Schedule E of your federal return as rental real-estate income. If you also use the week personally (typical for owners), special “mixed-use” rules apply.

The 14-day rule

If you rent your week for 14 days or fewer per year AND personally use it for more than 14 days OR more than 10% of total rental days, the income may be entirely tax-free under IRS Section 280A. This is the “Augusta rule” commonly cited for vacation properties. Most single-week timeshare owners fall squarely into this category — meaning your one-week rental income may be entirely tax-free if your personal use of any vacation property meets the threshold. Verify with your tax preparer.

Maintenance fees as deductions

If you do report rental income, the portion of your maintenance fee proportional to rental days is generally deductible as a rental expense. So if you rent 7 days and personally use 0, your full annual maintenance fee may be deductible against the rental income.

State and local lodging taxes

Some states (Florida, Hawaii, Tennessee) require collection of state lodging tax on rental income, even for occasional rentals. Check your state department of revenue website. Many platforms (VRBO, Airbnb) collect and remit this for you automatically. Direct rentals require you to handle it yourself or build it into your price.

8 mistakes that cost owner-landlords money

1. Pricing based on what you wish your week was worth

Renters compare to current market rates. Overpriced listings sit empty. An empty week earns zero. Price competitively from day one.

2. Listing 60 days before check-in

Most rentals book 90–180 days in advance for peak weeks, and 30–90 days for off-peak. Listing late means you compete with last-minute discounts and lose pricing power. List 4–6 months ahead of check-in for peak weeks.

3. Photos that look like every other timeshare

Generic resort marketing photos fade into the background. Two or three of the actual unit, even taken with a phone, build trust faster than ten polished marketing shots.

4. Burying check-in / check-out dates in the description

The first thing a renter wants to know is “when are these specific dates?” Lead with them in the headline. “2BR Marriott Maui · July 11–18, 2026 · oceanfront” is much stronger than “Beautiful Hawaii vacation rental.”

5. Accepting the first offer that comes in

The first inquiry is rarely the best. Wait 7–14 days for multiple offers before committing, especially for peak weeks where supply is constrained. Compare offers on price, payment method, and apparent reliability of the renter.

6. Not transferring the reservation properly

If the reservation stays in your name and the renter checks in claiming to be you, security at the resort can refuse entry. Use the brand’s “guest reservation” or “guest certificate” feature to legitimately attach the renter’s name to the reservation.

7. Skipping a written rental agreement

Even for $1,500 deals. Your agreement protects you if the renter damages the unit, if they cancel last-minute, or if a dispute arises about what was promised. Two pages, signed by both, with dates and dollar amounts. Templates are free online.

8. Renting to someone you can’t verify

Ask for a name, phone number, and a quick description of the trip. Decline anyone who refuses to share basic information or pressures you to move payment off-platform. Trust your gut.

FAQ

How early should I list my week for rent?
Peak weeks (Christmas, ski season, summer holidays): list 4–6 months before check-in. Off-peak: 60–90 days. Last-minute (under 30 days) almost always requires discounting 30–50%.
Can I rent for more than one week if I have a points contract?
Yes, if your contract allows multiple weeks per year and your total rental volume stays in the “occasional” range. Most major brands flag accounts that rent more than 6–8 weeks per year as potentially commercial.
What happens if my renter cancels last-minute?
This is what your written agreement protects against. Standard practice: deposit non-refundable, balance refundable up to 30 days before check-in, balance non-refundable inside 30 days. Make sure these terms appear clearly in the listing AND the agreement.
Do I need a business license to rent out my timeshare?
For a single occasional rental, generally no. Some cities (especially in Florida) require short-term-rental licensing for any rental under 30 days — check your city ordinances. Hosting platforms like VRBO and Airbnb often handle this for you.
Do I need landlord insurance?
Most homeowner’s policies do not extend to short-term rental of vacation property. Many platforms (VRBO, Airbnb) offer host protection insurance built in. For direct rentals, consider a stand-alone short-term-rental policy — typically $200–$500 per year.
Can I rent and sell at the same time?
Yes. Many owners rent the upcoming year’s use while listing the underlying contract for sale. The buyer takes over the deed but honors the rental booking that’s already in place. Be transparent in both your sale and rental listings about the timing.
What about international owners renting to US renters?
If you’re based outside the US and renting a US-based timeshare to US renters, the income is US-source income and may require a US tax filing (Form 1040-NR). Use a US-based platform with W-9 collection or work with a US tax advisor on a one-time setup. After the first year, the process is routine.
Are timeshare rentals worth the hassle?
For peak weeks at premium resorts: definitively yes — net income often exceeds the maintenance fee by $1,500–$3,000 per year. For off-season float weeks at mid-tier resorts: marginal — you might net $50–$200 after costs and time. The math depends entirely on where your week falls.

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About this guideThe TimeShare Deals editorial team tracks rental marketplace activity, peak-week pricing, and successful owner-landlord patterns across the major US developers. The pricing data here reflects observed 2026 transactions on multiple rental platforms. We are not a tax or legal advisor — consult your own professionals on tax and licensing questions specific to your situation. Last updated May 2026.