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Home :: Timeshare Ads :: Scams
How To Avoid Timeshare Resale Company Scams
There are literally hundreds of timeshare scams circulating
today. Here are a few of the main scams associated with timeshare
resale companies and the tricks used to snare potential owners looking
to sell or rent. Read through this list and make yourself aware
before you fall victim to one of these timeshare scams. If you are
trying to sell a timeshare then
perhaps you might want to Play
Your Own Scam on the resale company, or learn how these timeshare
resales really get sold.
- The Infamous Buyer Waiting - Do not, under any circumstances,
ever let a sales representative tell you they have a buyer waiting
for your timeshare. Unless you have the ONLY timeshare for sale
at a given resort, why would your unit be the one this buyer is
looking for.
- The Crystal Ball - No one can tell you when a timeshare
is going to sell! Unless they are in possession of the proverbial
"crystal ball" how in the world can they tell
you approximately, or even with any degree of certainty, when
a piece of vacation property will sell for sure?
- Sales Representatives Don't Sell Timeshare - They sit
in a boiler room type environment soliciting other owners to sell
or rent their unit. They are not brokers or agents. Don't let
them fool you. By law they cannot show your timeshare to anyone
or charge a commission on the sale. All they are able to do is
put your advertisement online and wait for an interested party
to find it. You can do that by yourself and save hundreds of dollars.
- Inventory Manager Close - This is where the sales representative
hands the phone off to an "inventory manager" who then
proceeds to tell you how much they need your property in their
inventory and offer you a deal if you get this property listed
today. The point is to hurry you into a sale with pressure.
Do Not Bite!
- Over Valued Scam - With this scam, a sales representative
will tell you your timeshare is worth thousands more than you
paid for it in hopes of getting you to sign up to sell your property
with them. Timeshare is not real estate. If you paid 10K for it
15 years ago, it is still not worth more now and chances are it's
worth less. Don't get caught being greedy!
- Unregulated Fee Scam - Make sure you're not paying too
much for your advertisement. Chances are the sales person is the
one setting your price based on whatever it is they think they
can get away with charging you. This type of unregulated pricing
allows two people with the same advertising to pay different fees.
If they ask you what you do for a living tell them your poor and
you need a discount even if your not.
- The Open House Scam - Some sales people use this tactic
to invoke urgency in the minds of sellers. A rep will tell an
owner that "they will feature their property at an open house
this weekend" and that "there are plenty of vacationing
snowbirds walking in off the streets to inquire about timeshare
just like theirs". This could not be any further from the
truth. Unless the business is located in the "timeshare capital
of the world" this just does not happen. Folks do not just
happen into boiler rooms.
- The Deferred Payment - With this scam, the rep will pass
the phone off or put you on hold while they see if they can get
you "a discount" if you promise to sign up today. They
will then return to the phone and tell you that they could not
get a discount but the manager said you can pay half now and defer
the other half until after the sale. Once again this is a tactic
to hurry you into the sale. This scam works well since the rep
has quoted your advertising fee higher than usual to allow for
the discount.
- Multiple Websites Scam - Some companies will utilize
many different websites, all with similar names, in order to snare
you either coming or going. If you find a company using more than
one website steer away fast. It's just another scammer trying
to relieve you of your hard earned money.
Keep checking back for new and completely different timeshare scams
uncovered by our staff. We post these scams here to inform and make
no reference either written or implied as to the perpetrator of
these scams. Keeping on top of the game is how to stay protected.
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1/29/2006
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Timeshare Rule #1
Never sell your
timeshare with a company that calls you first!
Just Think: If they we're selling
so many timeshares wouldn't people be calling them?
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