Archive for August, 2009

Anatomy of a Timeshare Vacation

Monday, August 31st, 2009
I was in serious need of a vacation and I had a couple of timeshare weeks banked with both RCI and Interval International.  I wanted a Gold Crown or Premier resort somewhere in the mountains to get out of the heat of Scottsdale, AZ; and I wanted it in the next 2 weeks.

I first checked RCI and found the The Club at Glacier, an all inclusive spa at the gate of Glacier National Park in Montana.

The Club at Glacier Timeshare Resort

The Club at Glacier Timeshare Resort

I like to drive so I Map Quested it only to find out that it would take 21 hours from my home in Scottsdale.  That was out of the question so I started checking flights.  I figured that I’d fly into a major hub and drive from there to save on airfare.

Flights to Salt Lake City, UT are plentiful and only about $250 round trip but that still left a 10 1/2 hour drive so I next checked flying into Spokane, WA.  It looked to be a great drive and only 6 1/2 hours but the flights were at inconvenient times and cost $350.  Helena, MT was about the same driving time and price but the flying time with lay overs was too long.

While looking at the map I noticed that Calgary, Alberta Canada looked fairly close and I was surprised to find it  only a 3 1/2 hour drive.  Now we’re talking.  But I figured the international airfare would be more than I wanted to spend.    Wrong again!  The airfare was only $287 round trip and I could get non-stop flights on both legs of only 3 hours in length.

I’ve traveled the world but I’ve never been to Glacier Park so the trip was very intriguing to me.  Here’s what I would have paid for that timeshare exchange: $525 for 7 days meals (the all inclusive fee of $75/day), $287 for the flight, about $400 for car rental and gas for a total of $1012.  It’s amazing how fast you can spend $1000 these days and that didn’t include my HOA and exchange fees.

I decided to do a search in Interval International to see what I could find.  I’ll talk about that in the next post.

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Jeff Pierce, The Timeshare Expert, has taught thousands of timeshare owners the secrets to getting the best exchanges with both RCI and Interval International for over 21 years.

His two books, The Timeshare Exchange Bible – RCI Weeks Edition, and The Timeshare Exchange Bible – Interval International, are the only books of their kind in the timeshare industry and designed to help you  master at the very complicated art of getting good exchanges.

I would love to have you share your opinions and personal insights on this blog.

For 10 FREE videos on getting a better exchange in RCI and II, go to TheTimeshareExpert.com.

7 Tips for Exchanging Your Timeshare to Hawaii

Monday, August 24th, 2009

View of Hanalei Bay

View of Hanalei Bay

It’s been a couple of years since I’ve been to Hawaii but I used to exchange there frequently.  In fact, for 7 consecutive years I used my timeshares there to get 2 weeks back to back – usually one week on Kauai and the other on Maui.  I even lived on Maui at one time.

I’m sure, to many of you, so many timeshare exchanges to the same place may seem like overkill.  But there is something special about the Hawaiian Islands that keeps me coming back.  I’ve traveled extensively – from the Great Wall of China, Europe, Guatemala, Tahiti, most of Mexico and South America and of course most of the good old U.S of A. but Hawaii is one of the few places I’ll continually return to.  Another is Jackson, Wyoming.

So here are 7 tips when doing a timeshare exchange to Hawaii with either RCI or Interval International.

1. Book early
It can’t be said too often.  Hawaii always has much more demand than there is supply so you need to put in your request at least 1 year in advance.

2. Give multiple resort choice
Many timeshare exchangers only give RCI or Interval International 3 or 4 choices when putting in a request.  If you own a very powerful exchanging timeshare, and are putting in your request at least a year in advance, that’s fine.  If not, then make sure you request 10 or more resorts.

3. Find out how many timeshare units are in each resort you request
Not all of the timeshares pictured in the RCI and II directories contain 100% timeshare units.  Especially the resorts listed in RCI.  Some resorts are mixed use containing whole ownership, hotel and timeshare units.  What is pictured in the exchange directories as a large resort may contain only 4 timeshare units.  If this is the case you’ll want to add additional resorts to your request.  The best way to find out how many timeshare units are in a resort is to call it directly since this important fact isn’t mentioned in either directory.

Hanalei Valley Overlook

Hanalei Valley Overlook

4. Don’t go in September
If you really want to be safe you shouldn’t exchange to Hawaii anytime during hurricane season.  But that takes out the months of May through October.  It’s the month of September, however, that you’ll most likely encounter a hurricane or tropical storm.  And a big tropical storm can ruin your vacation just as fast as a hurricane.

5. Don’t get too much sun the first day
Many first time visitors to Hawaii don’t understand how intense the sun really is in the lower latitudes.  The first time my friend and I went we already had great tans from being young and living in California.  Thinking we were safe we used very little sunscreen the first day.  That night we wandered into the local bar glowing red from our day in the sun.  The bartender took one look at us and said, “You boys are from California, aren’t you?”  We acknowledged the fact and asked how he knew.  He said that Californians always got sunburned because thought they already had a tan.

So always wear the most powerful sunscreen you can find and take it easy the first day.  Getting too much sun the first day can ruin the rest of your trip.

6. If it’s your first trip, don’t go to Oahu

Sorry Oahu.  It is a lovely island with many things to do but for your first trip try Kauai, Maui or the Big Island to get a better feel of what the islands, and the aloha spirit, are all about -especially if you go to Kauai.  Kauai is the easiest to exchange to followed by The Big Island and Maui.

7. Don’t believe what you hear about Kauai
It’s been said many times that there’s not enough to do on Kauai.  If shopping’s your thing then you’d be better off on Maui or Oahu.  But other than that there is plenty to keep you busy for a week.  It’s the oldest and prettiest of the islands and the least commercial.  Unlike Maui and Oahu, known for their long stretches of uninterrupted sand, Kauai has many smaller, palm ringed, crescent beaches tucked away all over the island.  For the most part, many of them are uncrowded and visited mainly by locals.

Lumanai Beach, Kauai

Lumanai Beach, Kauai

So pack your bags and enjoy a piece of paradise.

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Jeff Pierce, The Timeshare Expert, has taught thousands of timeshare owners the secrets to getting the best exchanges with both RCI and Interval International for over 21 years.

His two books, The Timeshare Exchange Bible – RCI Weeks Edition, and The Timeshare Exchange Bible – Interval International, are the only books of their kind in the timeshare industry and designed to help you  master at the very complicated art of getting good exchanges.

I would love to have you share your opinions and personal insights on this blog.

For 10 FREE videos on getting better timeshare exchanges in RCI and II, go to TheTimeshareExpert.com.

Join me on:

Twitter: My Space

Why is There Never Any Availability When I Request an Exchange

Monday, August 17th, 2009

ambergris-caye

Your salesperson made it seem like doing a timeshare exchange was so simple – just like getting a hotel room. Pick up the phone, call RCI or Interval International with your request, and you’d be instantly confirmed into a 1 or 2 bedroom villa on a beachfront resort in Hawaii for less than $200 for the week. He said you’d feel far more intelligent than all the rest of the people at the resort that were paying $300-$500 per night.

If you’re like most timeshare owners one of the major reasons you purchased it was to exchange it to other resorts worldwide. And like most timeshare owners, you’ve probably heard the words “not available” nearly every time you’ve tried to exchange it. About now you’re starting to feel scammed.

The 2 words, “not available” combined with the less than realistic explanation of how a timeshare exchange really works by the salesperson has given rise to a seething, angry cauldron of timeshare owners that feel helpless and frustrated. Unfortunately, nothing can be done about what you were told regarding how easy a timeshare exchange would be, but plenty can be done about the “not available” issue.

1. You must understand that “not available” in timeshare speak really means that there’s a waiting list of people who have already requested the EXACT same thing as you.

2. Just because you’re request isn’t available the day you ask doesn’t mean it won’t become available at a later date. So whenever you hear “not available” you should immediately ask to be put on the waiting list. RCI and Interval International call that doing a pending search or request.

3. There will ALWAYS be a waiting list for the best resorts and/or peak travel periods.

On the beach in Cabo

On the beach in Cabo

With that in mind, here are the key things you’ll want to remember about getting on RCI or Interval International’s waiting list that will help you understand how a timeshare exchange really works and thereby increasing your chances of getting what you want:

• You can’t exchange into a resort unless someone exchanges out of that resort. Seems simple enough, right? But many timeshare owners don’t understand this concept because they equate doing a timeshare exchange as the same as doing a hotel reservation. Since a hotel knows its availability in advance and because most hotels average only 65-70% occupancy, it’s much easier to get a reservation.

But neither RCI nor Interval International own any of the resorts in their portfolios. They are third party exchange services and must wait until the individual timeshare owner deposits or banks the week they own before they can make it available to another exchanger. The best resorts and or peak travel periods always have more timeshare exchange requests than there is availability so a waiting list is established.

Each time RCI or Interval International receives a deposit of a highly demanded week, it is instantly confirmed to the next person on the waiting list and so on and so on. The waiting list for prime timeshare weeks may get smaller, but it will never completely go away and is the reason you’re told it’s “not available”.

• The closer it is to the date that you want to take your vacation, the longer the waiting list. If you wait until May to request an August week you will be facing a much larger waiting list than if you would have placed that request in January.

• The closer it is to the date that you want to take your vacation, the fewer remaining available weeks. If you wait until May to request an August week, the majority of the August weeks will have already been deposited and confirmed to other timeshare exchangers on the waiting list leaving less for you.

• Neither RCI nor Interval International will tell you where you’re at on the waiting list. You’re position on the waiting list changes from day to day. If you’re 10th on the list and another timeshare owner requests after you, you may be bumped down to the 11th position if his timeshare resort is better or if he has maximized his exchange power. If RCI or II told you that you’re now number on the waiting list when you were number 8, you’d give up. They then would lose both the annual dues and the exchange fees.

The waiting list is a fact of life when doing a timeshare exchange and always will be. Now that you understand this, always request as far in advance as possible and learn what you can do to get the most exchange power from what you own.

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Jeff Pierce, The Timeshare Expert, has taught thousands of timeshare owners the secrets to getting the best exchanges with both RCI and Interval International for over 21 years.

His two books, The Timeshare Exchange Bible – RCI Weeks Edition, and The Timeshare Exchange Bible – Interval International, are the only books of their kind in the timeshare industry and designed to help you  master at the very complicated art of getting good exchanges.

I would love to have you share your opinions and personal insights on this blog.

For 10 FREE videos on getting better timeshare exchanges in RCI and II, go to TheTimeshareExpert.com.

Join me on:

Twitter: My Space http://twitter.com/TimeshareExpert

Do RCI and Interval International Give Preference to Big Timeshare Companies

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Many timeshare owners are frustrated with exchanging their timeshare with RCI or Interval International. There has been a lot of speculation that if you don’t own a timeshare with one of the big companies like Disney Vacation Club, Hyatt, Hilton, Westin, Marriott Vacation Club, or Diamond, that you can’t get good exchanges.

Disney's Old Key West Resort

Disney's Old Key West Resort

The theory is that RCI and II hold out the best timeshare exchange inventory to give to the owners in these high end properties. Also, if the owners in the high end properties don’t use or exchange their weeks, they rent them out – so nothing good ever gets to the rest of us.

Interval International seems to get the worst press regarding this, so I looked at my last 10 timeshare exchanges with them to get a better perspective.

The fixed week I exchange in II is a 2 bedroom on Hilton Head Island,  SC at the Swallowtail at Sea Pines Resort. Hilton Head has good exchange power but the Red week I own in October is one of the weakest exchanging Red weeks. The resort is 30 years old and although it has been updated and is in good condition, it no longer has the 5 Star rating it once had.

It was built, like many of the older timeshare resorts, more like a full ownership condominium project than a “resort”. It has a swimming pool, tennis court and a few bar-b-ques but that’s it. It certainly doesn’t compare to the newer resorts like Disney’s Hilton Head Island Resort or Marriott’s Grand Ocean Resort, but it is a very pleasant place to stay.

Golf on Hilton Head

Golf on Hilton Head

Today, Interval International has 3 ratings for the resorts affiliated with them. They are Premier, Select and all the rest. My resort fall into the “all the rest” category. Based on all the criteria of my timeshare, you wouldn’t think I’d be able to get good timeshare exchanges. Especially if you believed that only owners of high end properties do.

Here’s a list of my last 10 II timeshare exchanges:

Capistrano Surfside Inn, San Juan Capistrano, CA, Labor Day Week, 1 Bedroom unit
Westin Kaanapali Beach, Maui, HI, Week 50, Studio unit
Hanalei Bay Resort, Princeville, HI Week 7, 1 Bedroom AND Sands of Kahana, Maui HI, Week 8, 2 Bedroom unit
Marriott’s Ocean Point, Singer Island, FL Week 18, 2 Bedroom unit
Grand Timber Lodge, Breckenridge, CO, Week 37, 3 Bedroom unit
Westin Kierland Villas, Scottsdale, AZ, Week 18 1 Bedroom unit
Marriott’s Newport Coast, Newport Beach, CA, Week 19 2 Bedroom unit
Marriott’s Summit Watch, Park City, UT Wk 23 2 Bedroom unit
Marriott’s Cypress Harbor, Orlando, FL, Week 23 2 Bedroom unit

Hanalei Bay Resort

Hanalei Bay Resort

So part of the theory at least – that you can’t exchange into the high end resorts unless you own one – is proved false in my case. All of the resorts listed are ranked by Interval International as Premier Resorts, the highest rank they give, while my resort is ranked the lowest. The other part of the speculation about exchanging into high end resorts, that all of the Prime weeks are used, rented out or given to other high end timeshare owners for exchange, can’t be so easily determined by my exchanges. That’s because other than 2 back to back, prime winter weeks in Hawaii (the very definition of a difficult exchange), the rest of my timeshare exchanges were in the off peak times. This was, however, by design on my part and not just taking anything that became available. I generally avoid traveling during peak season.

Many timeshare owners don’t realize that success in exchanging a timeshare is determined by actions they have power over as well as the built in exchange power of where and when they own. 2 people owning the exact same thing in the same resort can experience completely different results when exchanging in either RCI or Interval International. To get a look what you can do significantly enhance your exchange power and get better exchanges, go to http://TheTimeshareExpert.com

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Jeff Pierce, The Timeshare Expert, has taught thousands of timeshare owners the secrets to getting the best exchanges with both RCI and Interval International for over 21 years.

His two books, The Timeshare Exchange Bible – RCI Weeks Edition, and The Timeshare Exchange Bible – Interval International, are the only books of their kind in the timeshare industry and designed to help you  master at the very complicated art of getting good exchanges.

I would love to have you share your opinions and personal insights on this blog.

For 10 FREE videos on getting better timeshare exchanges in RCI and II, go to TheTimeshareExpert.com.

Join me on:

Twitter: My Space http://twitter.com/TimeshareExpert

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How To Exchange A Timeshare: The 2 Most Misunderstood Words

Thursday, August 6th, 2009
Concepcion Bay

Concepcion Bay

There are 2 words that many timeshare owners fail to understand that keeps them from getting good exchanges with RCI and Interval International.

Many people interpret “not available” to mean that it will never be available.  So they hang up the phone thinking that the exchange process doesn’t work and the whole thing is a scam.

Their frustration stems from the fact that their salesperson made it sound like doing an exchange would be just as easy as reserving a hotel room. But it’s not! It’s much easier getting hotel rooms because there are so many of them and they are generally only 65% occupied. More importantly, hotels know their availability in advance unlike RCI and Interval International.

But doing a timeshare exchange isn’t the same as reserving a hotel. As timeshare owners we trade off the ease, availability and expense of reserving a hotel room to get larger more comfortable condos for our family. And when a timeshare exchange is done right, we get to stay in really nice resorts for a fraction of what we would normally have to pay.

But neither RCI nor Interval International know the availability of any timeshare resort in advance. They have to wait until the owners in the timeshare resorts deposit their weeks into their exchange pools before they can offer it us. If every timeshare owner deposited their weeks on or before Jan 1 of each year, then doing a timeshare exchange would be easier and more like making a reservation in a hotel.

But in the real world both exchange companies receive deposits throughout the entire year and not all at one time. That’s the reason that owners are told that their request is “not available” nearly every time they want to do a timeshare exchange. The important thing to understand is that just because you’re request isn’t available the day you ask doesn’t mean it won’t become available at a later date. You see “not available” in timeshare speak really means that there’s a waiting list of people who have already requested the EXACT same thing as you.

So whenever you hear “not available” you should immediately ask to be put on the waiting list.  RCI and Interval International call that doing a pending search or request.  Now, WHETHER your request becomes available will depend on WHERE you come in on that waiting list and is another very important aspect of doing a timeshare exchange.

So one of the keys to getting a good timeshare exchange is in understanding that there will ALWAYS be a waiting list for the best resorts and/or peak travel periods. Rather than being frustrated with it, accept it and learn how to work it to your benefit. Frankly, the more people that don’t understand what “not available” really means, the better your chances of getting what you want on exchange.

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Jeff Pierce, The Timeshare Expert, has taught thousands of timeshare owners the secrets to getting the best exchanges with both RCI and Interval International for over 21 years.

His two books, The Timeshare Exchange Bible – RCI Weeks Edition, and The Timeshare Exchange Bible – Interval International, are the only books of their kind in the timeshare industry and designed to help you  master at the very complicated art of getting good exchanges.

I would love to have you share your opinions and personal insights on this blog.

For 10 FREE videos on getting a better exchange in RCI and II, go to TheTimeshareExpert.com.