Timeshare Buyer Due Diligence Checklist 2026: 12 Items Every Smart Buyer Verifies

TimeShare Deals editorial team·Updated May 2026·10 min read

Timeshare Buyer Due Diligence Checklist 2026: 12 Items Every Smart Buyer Verifies

Buying a timeshare on the resale market in 2026 is straightforward when you know what to verify. Skipping these 12 due diligence items is how buyers end up with surprise special assessments, locked-in arrears, points-tier restrictions they didn’t know about, or contracts they thought they understood but didn’t. This guide is the actual checklist sophisticated buyers run before signing a purchase agreement.

1. Deed and ownership type

Ask for: copy of the recorded deed (for deeded weeks) or current ownership certificate (for points or RTU)

Verify: ownership type matches what was advertised. Deeded weeks have recorded deeds; points contracts have membership certificates; RTU has a contract with explicit term length.

Red flag: seller can’t produce ownership documentation, or claims it “was lost”.

2. Maintenance fee status (estoppel)

Ask for: estoppel letter from the developer (typically requested by closing company)

Verify: maintenance fees paid through current year, no arrears.

Red flag: outstanding fees of any amount. Either the seller pays them off before closing, or buyer assumes them at closing through escrow.

3. Special assessment history and pending

Ask for: HOA budget for current year + last 3 annual reports

Verify: any special assessments in the past 5 years, any pending or anticipated assessments in next 24 months.

Red flag: pending special assessment outstanding (you’re on the hook), or pattern of repeated assessments suggesting underfunded reserves.

4. HOA financial statements

Ask for: most recent annual financial statements (some HOAs publish online; others require request)

Verify: revenues vs expenses, reserve balance, debt level, any unusual line items.

Red flag: chronic deficit, low cash reserves, undisclosed long-term debt.

5. Reserve fund status

Ask for: most recent reserve study (every 3–5 years for most HOAs)

Verify: reserve balance vs target. Industry guideline: reserves should equal 70–100% of projected 30-year capital expenses.

Red flag: reserves at 30–50% of target — future special assessments highly likely.

6. Points contract restrictions (if applicable)

Ask for: clear documentation of resale-buyer restrictions for your specific brand and contract

Verify: which network access you retain, which is restricted, what booking lead-times apply.

Red flag: brand has heavy restrictions on resale points (some DVC, Wyndham programs). Adjust expected use accordingly.

7. Use year (DVC) or season designation

Ask for: the specific use year (DVC) or season designation (week-based)

Verify: matches your travel pattern. February use year credits points each February. April UY credits in April. Different planning timing.

Red flag: October-December use year on a contract where current points are already used — you wait 9–11 months for fresh points.

8. Current year points / week status

Ask for: current usage statement showing what points or weeks are still available for current and future use years

Verify: enough usable inventory to plan a meaningful first stay.

Red flag: zero current-year points/weeks available; you wait an entire year for first usable stay.

9. ROFR exercise pattern

Ask for: recent ROFR exercise data for the brand (publicly available for DVC, less for others)

Verify: typical exercise rate at your offered price range

Red flag: pricing well below recent ROFR threshold — high probability of exercise.

10. Outstanding liens or loans

Ask for: title search at the appropriate county courthouse

Verify: no outstanding mortgage, no liens, no judgment liens

Red flag: any outstanding lien must be satisfied before closing through seller payoff or escrow.

11. Transfer fees

Ask for: transfer fee from the developer (typically disclosed during ROFR review)

Verify: amount, who pays. Most US deals: buyer pays. Range: $150–$2,500 depending on brand.

Red flag: transfer fee unusually high for the brand. Verify with brand directly.

12. Closing company licensing

Ask for: state licensing verification, BBB profile, E&O insurance proof

Verify: licensed state title company or attorney; reasonable BBB record; E&O policy in force.

Red flag: closing company recommended only by seller, no verifiable licensing, no E&O.

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FAQ

How long does proper due diligence take?
2–4 weeks for the major items (estoppel, HOA financials, reserve study). Closing company handles the operational pieces in parallel with your review.
Should I get a real estate attorney for due diligence?
For high-value transactions ($25,000+), yes. For typical timeshare deals, the closing company plus your own diligence is usually sufficient.
What if the seller refuses to provide some of these items?
Walk away. Sellers with nothing to hide provide documentation freely. Sellers who refuse are signaling problems.
How do I get HOA financial statements as a buyer?
Some HOAs publish online for owners. As a prospective buyer, request through the closing company — they typically have access. Some HOAs charge a small fee ($50–$200) for buyer-prospect financials.
What about appraisal?
Generally not necessary. The market price (recent comparable closed sales) is the appraisal. Formal appraisals cost $200–$500 and add little for typical timeshare transactions.
How do I check ROFR data?
DVC: published owner forums and DVC member sites have recent exercise statistics. Other brands: less public data; ask the closing company for guidance.
What about Mexico-specific due diligence?
Mexican fideicomiso transfers add: bank trustee verification, contract translation, Mexican notary process. Use a closing company specializing in Mexican timeshare for these specific items.
Can I do this myself or do I need a closing company?
Use a closing company. Doing this yourself means handling 12 separate verifications, escrow, deed prep, and county recording — all functions a closing company specializes in. The $400–$700 fee is a fraction of the risk reduction.

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About this guideThe TimeShare Deals editorial team works with US-licensed closing companies and tracks recurring buyer issues. Last updated May 2026.