If you’re asking what the long-term financial risks of keeping a timeshare really are, the honest answer is that most owners don’t find out until the costs have already compounded for years. Most timeshare buyers remember the presentation, the free gift, and the salesperson’s promise of a lifetime of affordable vacations. What they don’t remember, because nobody showed them, is the financial spreadsheet waiting on the other side of that signature. The purchase price is only the opening bid. The real cost compounds quietly, year after year, long after the excitement of ownership fades.
Lonestar Transfer has spent 15 years helping American families escape timeshare contracts they no longer wanted or could afford, completing more than 40,000 exits over that period, according to company records. In that work, one pattern appears repeatedly: owners who held on too long, underestimating just how much staying was actually costing them. This article lays out those costs in plain numbers so you can make a fully informed decision about what holding your timeshare is really worth.
What Are the Long-Term Financial Risks of Keeping a Timeshare? Start Here
What the average owner pays today vs. a decade ago
According to data from the American Resort Development Association (ARDA), the average annual timeshare maintenance fee reached approximately $1,260 in 2024. A decade ago, that same average sat around $900, a 40% increase over ten years, driven by labor costs, property upkeep, insurance premiums, and ongoing amenity expenses. The 2023 year-over-year increase alone was 8%, well above the historical norm of 3, 5% annually.
Real cost projections at 10, 20, and 30 years
At a conservative 4% annual increase rate, the cumulative math becomes hard to ignore. Over 10 years, an owner starting at $1,260 per year pays roughly $15,000 in maintenance fees alone. At 20 years, that total climbs past $37,000. At 30 years, the cumulative cost exceeds $70,000. These are not worst-case figures. They assume a rate below recent historical averages, and higher starting points push the 30-year total closer to $90,000.
Why the fee doesn’t stop when you stop going
Deeded timeshare contracts impose a legal obligation to pay maintenance fees regardless of whether the owner uses the property. You pay because you own, not because you vacation. Owners who stop traveling due to health, financial hardship, or simply changing preferences discover quickly that the invoice arrives on schedule every year, unconditionally.
Special Assessments: The Financial Wildcard Most Owners Don’t See Coming
How special assessments work and when they get billed
Maintenance fees are predictable. Special assessments are not. When a resort faces major repair costs, disaster recovery needs, or capital renovation projects that exceed reserve funds, the management association levies a one-time charge across all owners. Owners typically have limited recourse, pay the bill or face penalties, collections, and potential legal action. Depending on the resort’s governance structure, individual owners may have little to no influence over how those funds are spent. For an overview of how these special assessments for timeshares operate and owners’ rights, consult a focused guide on the topic.
Real examples of what owners have been charged
These aren’t hypothetical risks. In 2025, documented cases include a $969 charge levied on owners at a Las Vegas resort for structural renovation work and a $2,400 assessment billed to owners at a Hawaii property to supplement hotel income shortfalls. These charges appear on top of standard annual fees, with no warning and no opt-out. For owners already stretched by rising maintenance costs, an unexpected multi-thousand dollar bill can be genuinely destabilizing.
Why they’re becoming more frequent at aging properties
As resort properties built in the 1980s and 1990s age, deferred maintenance becomes unavoidable capital renovation. Roofing, plumbing, HVAC systems, and structural work require large-scale investment that reserve funds rarely cover fully. The cost gets distributed across the entire owner base, and the frequency of these charges is increasing as more properties reach the age where major work can no longer be postponed.
The Resale Myth and the Mortgage Interest Trap
What your timeshare is actually worth on the secondary market
The idea that a timeshare can be sold to recover costs is one of the most persistent misconceptions in personal finance. Most timeshares sell for 0% to 20% of their original developer price on the secondary market, with many listed for as little as $1. A $20,000 developer purchase typically recovers $1,000 to $4,000 on resale, if it sells at all. Premium brand exceptions exist: Disney Vacation Club properties have historically averaged $11,000 to $15,000 in resale transactions. But those represent a small fraction of the overall market, and even they trade at a significant discount to retail purchase prices.
How timeshare financing costs far more than buyers realize
Timeshare developers typically charge 14% to 20% interest on in-house financing, with some cases reaching even higher. Compare that to a conventional home mortgage, which has historically run well below 10%. A $20,000 timeshare financed at 16% over 10 years generates substantial interest on top of a purchase that will depreciate to near zero in resale value. Many owners who believe their timeshare is “paid off” actually spent far more than the sticker price when total financing costs are factored in, and the asset they own today is worth a fraction of what they spent to acquire it.
What Happens to Your Finances If You Stop Paying
The escalation timeline from missed payment to collections
Some owners reach a point where they simply stop paying, believing abandonment is a quiet exit. It isn’t. A missed maintenance fee payment triggers late fees and interest within days. After 60 to 90 days, the account moves to collections. The resort or management company may pursue a lawsuit for the outstanding balance. On deeded properties, a lien is placed against the ownership interest, and foreclosure follows if the debt remains unresolved. The process is methodical and legally grounded, it does not go away on its own.
How timeshare delinquency damages your credit for years
A timeshare foreclosure carries the same weight on a credit report as a residential home foreclosure. Negative marks remain for up to seven years from the date of the first missed payment, affecting loan approvals, interest rates on new credit, and your overall financial standing for nearly a decade. A missed maintenance fee that spirals into foreclosure typically results in a 100-point or greater credit score drop, with consequences that outlast the timeshare ownership itself by years.
The Inheritance Problem: What Your Heirs Will Actually Receive
How deeded ownership transfers at death
A deeded timeshare is real property. It goes through probate, appears in your estate, and transfers to your heirs along with every financial obligation attached to it: annual maintenance fees, special assessments, and any outstanding debt. Without explicit estate planning that addresses the timeshare directly, your heirs automatically receive both the usage rights and the ongoing payment obligations the moment the estate is settled.
Why heirs often can’t simply walk away
Refusing an inherited timeshare is legally possible through a formal Disclaimer of Interest filed with the probate court, typically within nine months of death. But the process varies by state, requires legal assistance to execute properly, and is voided if the heir accepts any benefit from the property before filing. Heirs who accept an estate without reviewing all assets can unknowingly inherit a timeshare they never wanted, along with years of fee obligations they didn’t see coming. Heirs who wish to avoid that outcome should consider developing a solid timeshare exit strategy early in the probate process to limit long-term exposure.
The estate planning complication most families overlook
Families that don’t explicitly address the timeshare in a will or trust force their children into a difficult position. The heir can pay ongoing fees for a property they have no interest in using, pursue the legal disclaimer process on a strict timeline, or start an exit strategy from scratch. This is a legacy planning issue, not just a personal financial one. Older owners who hold on past the point where exit is straightforward risk transferring the entire problem to the next generation.
What Financially Aware Owners Are Choosing Instead
Why the math increasingly favors exit over retention
Measured against a 30-year cost projection that exceeds $70,000 to $90,000 in maintenance fees alone, plus the unpredictable burden of special assessments, the benefits of having a solid timeshare exit strategy include cutting off decades of compounding fees, removing inheritance headaches, and restoring financial flexibility. The one-time cost of a legitimate, guaranteed exit is fixed and finite. The cost of staying is neither. Owners who exit early cut off decades of compounding fees and eliminate the inheritance problem entirely.
How legitimate exit companies resolve contracts
Reputable timeshare exit companies work through a defined process: reviewing the contract for available exit leverage and building a legal strategy tailored to it, then negotiating directly with the resort until a title release or formal cancellation confirmation is secured. When the process is completed correctly, the owner’s legal and financial obligation is permanently removed. The critical distinction is between companies that follow this process with documented results and operators who collect upfront fees and disappear. That distinction shows up clearly in verified reviews, BBB records, and the presence or absence of a written guarantee.
What to look for in a reputable timeshare exit company
The credibility markers that separate legitimate exit services from fraud are specific and verifiable. Look for a written money-back guarantee, a strong and current BBB rating, transparent pricing with no hidden fees, and verified customer reviews from real clients.
Lonestar Transfer meets every standard on that list. According to the company’s BBB profile, it holds a 4.97 rating, carries 317 five-star verified reviews, and has zero unresolved complaints on record. Every exit is backed by a 100% written money-back guarantee. Over 15 years, Lonestar Transfer reports completing more than 40,000 timeshare exits and helping American families eliminate over $500 million in timeshare-related debt, a track record reflected in its public BBB standing and verified client reviews.
The Cost of Waiting Is Measurable
Keeping a timeshare isn’t a neutral choice. Every year of retention adds to a compounding fee total that has grown 40% over the past decade, according to ARDA data, with no indication that trend is reversing. Special assessments add unpredictable spikes on top of that base cost. Near-zero resale value means there’s no financial recovery waiting at the end. And for owners who don’t act, the problem eventually transfers to their children.
The long-term financial risks of keeping a timeshare are not abstract. They’re calculable, documented, and avoidable with the right information. A free consultation with Lonestar Transfer costs nothing and creates no obligation. It gives you a clear picture of your exit options, timelines, and costs so you can make a fully informed decision. For details on the likely expenses involved in formally ending ownership, see Understanding the Costs of Legally Exiting a Timeshare. The sooner you understand your options, the less financial exposure you carry forward.
If your timeshare has stopped making sense financially, you’re not alone, and you’re not out of options. Start with a conversation.
FAQ
Based on a conservative 4% annual increase, an owner starting at the 2024 average of $1,260 per year will pay roughly $37,000 over 20 years and more than $70,000 over 30 years. If fees increase at the more recent 8% rate, these cumulative costs can easily exceed $90,000.
Yes. Because most timeshares are deeded real property, the obligation to pay is tied to ownership, not usage. The resort management will continue to bill you annually regardless of your health, financial status, or travel frequency.
A special assessment is a one-time fee levied by a resort for major capital projects, such as structural repairs, roofing, or disaster recovery. These charges are mandatory for all owners and appear on top of standard maintenance fees. Documented assessments in 2025 have ranged from $969 to over $2,400 per owner, with no option to opt out.
Unfortunately, no. Most timeshares sell for only 0% to 20% of their original developer price on the secondary market. While a developer may sell a unit for $20,000, many are listed on resale sites for as little as $1 because the ongoing fee obligation outweighs the market value of the property.
Yes. Deeded timeshares are considered real property and typically pass to heirs through probate. This includes the responsibility for annual fees and special assessments. While heirs can file a “Disclaimer of Interest” within nine months of the owner’s death to refuse the asset, the process is complex and requires strict adherence to legal timelines.
Stopping payment triggers a methodical legal process. Within 60 to 90 days, the account is usually sent to collections. Eventually, the resort may foreclose on the property. A timeshare foreclosure can result in a 100-point or greater drop in your credit score and remains on your report for seven years, affecting your ability to get loans or favorable interest rates.
Timeshare developers often charge interest rates between 14% and 20% for in-house financing. When combined with a rapidly depreciating asset and rising maintenance fees, the total cost of ownership far exceeds the initial sticker price, leaving many owners in significant debt for a product with near-zero resale value.