Timeshare Selling
Selling Timeshare – Recent Posts
- Avoid Timeshare Fraud | How to Sell Your Timeshare
- Don’t Get Frauded When You Have a Timeshare for Sale
- Timeshare Resale Fraud News Cast
- Scam Warning for People Wanting to Get Out of Timeshares
- Sell Timeshare for Free-Don’t Get Stuck Paying Maintenance for Life
- Have a Timeshare to Sell? Look Out for Scammers
- Do You Have a Timeshare to Sell? Beware of Timeshare Reseller Scam
- You Beautiful Doll – a CAPPELLA Barbershop Quartet Multitrack One Man Ttbb – Trudbol (Julien Neel)
- How to Get Out of MyTimeshares
- How to Get Rid of a Timeshare. Can’t Sell, Give or Donate Your Timeshare?
- How to Sell My Timeshares
- ♥ How to Get a FREE Vacation Timeshare ♥
- Timeshare Not an Investment,Abc News, www.howtogetoutofmytimeshares.com.mp4
- How to NOT Get Timshare Scammed
- How to Sell on Social Media
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Watch where you buy your membership as some of them can be very expensive. The salesman who sell these memberships most likely have sold timeshares in the past. You can tell this by watching their sales tactics.
If you think about it, if everyone who bought a camping membership went camping on the same day, there would not be enough camp sites for everyone. The possibility of this happening is nil. While I belonged to All Seasons Resorts, out of Orlando, I did see over 100 campers show up and no sites for them. This was in the Winter, when all the Snowbirds come down.
Coast to Coast is a pretty good deal. They are where you reserve your camp site, not the resort where you join. You purchase points from Coast to Coast, 100 points for $1.00, and use them at some afilliated resort or campground. It costs 800 points per night plus tax, so you’re looking at $8.50 to $9.50 per night camping through Coast to Coast.
The resort where you purchase can be your largest expense. I have seen people pay more than $10,000.00 for a membership, plus over $800.00 yearly maintenance fees. Then you must pay Coast to Coast a yearly fee. I joined a plain simple campground, in Georgia, for $99.00 and pay them $75.00 per year maintenance fees. Then I pay Coast to Coast $79.00 per year membership dues. As I said, be very careful where you purchase your membership.
Campground memberships are a good deal for fulltime RVers. These are the people who will get their monies worth. How many nights a year are you going to camp? Will the membership plus Coast to Coast fees be more or less than your actual camping?
Be careful.
yes it is worth it . has alot of things t ofer and its loads of memories
Believe Arthur, he has hit the nail on the head. If your expenses, purchasing a campground membership, yearly maintenance fees, Coast To Coast dues and camping costs are greater than what you would pay without the benefit of Coast To Coast then it’s a waste.