buy a timeshare, timeshare resale, sell a timeshare, timeshare for sale
jump to navigation

Sell Your Timeshare for More with BuyATimeshare.com January 4, 2009

Posted by Bryan Connelly in : ARDA, Fairfield Timeshares, General, Marriott Timeshares, News & Events, Timeshare Rental, Timeshare Resale, Timeshare Resource, Travel, Uncategorized, Wyndham Timeshares , trackback

Websites like 10 Timeshare Secrets can help steer you toward a reputable timeshare marketer to get your timeshare sold.

There companies that spend the money on advertising and the technology necessary to drive timeshare buyers toward your properties. You do not list however, with someone who “already has a buyer.” That should be a red flag anyway (you cannot sell what you do not have). Whether it is a newspaper ad or a spot on Google, everyone will charge upfront. Anyone else will take a cut of the sale and sell it for a small percentage of what you paid, but it will probably get sold. Provided you work with the right company, a listing will reach the type of people you are looking for—buyers.

There are plenty of reasons to follow the piles of bad press on timeshare resale companies and maybe even timeshares altogether. Who can blame you? Timeshares are rife with fees and even if you do use it, it is an expense that requires maintenance and does not appreciate in value. Few owners completely understand the liabilities and benefits of their vacation property, often coerced into ownership by a finely tunes sales professional.

BuyATimeshare.com has the highest rate of success for selling timeshares in the industry. For years people have been finding the right timeshare packages to suit all of their travel needs.

If an owner’s life is not conducive to travel anymore, or if they cannot afford the expense, they typically look to rid themselves of the burden. And unless you are a trained sales agent with the ability to market your own timeshare properties, finding the right means of advertising is your best bet for selling a timeshare for anything close to the inflated price you may have paid from the timeshare developer.

As consumers and businesses are slashing leisure and travel costs, few are going to even consider primary sales, with the resale market gaining speed like it is. After troubles in the stock exchange pummeling big-name developers, stock value has dwindled down to half what they were in 2007. Halting developments and lopping off sales departments, companies like Wyndham have staggered, with shares down 70 percent, Marriott down 46%, and Starwood shares down 62 percent—just to put things in perspective.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print this article!
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Comments»

no comments yet - be the first?