- Oct 28, 1999
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I have no doubts that there are cheaper ways to vacation. Or not vacation at all. But the same can be said for eating out, having your oil changed at a dealer, or paying for a haircut.
I'm cheap, I want well accommodated places to stay, I hate hotel rooms, and because I'm cheap I tend to poo-poo traveling and it's been something that has driven my wife batty. I went with a timeshare to sort of address those on different levels.
1) It pretty much forces me to use it. Since I am cheap, I'm not going to let it go unused. But then again I no longer look at the daily cost and constantly try to compare prices from one place to another. I just look at what I have and click on the room size I need for the stay.
2) The Hilton locations are *very* nice. It's a true apartment in most of them with a full kitchen, living room and separate master bathrooms. I have young kids so it's great being able to have full cooked meals there in the room for breakfast and dinner between running out and about for the day.
With the Hilton Grand Vacations I had decent flexibility. Hawaii, Scotland, Vancouver, San Diego, downtown NYC, Orlando, Vegas, Myrtle, Gulf Side of Florida, and a few others are areas Hilton has properties. Plus with the RCI exchange I can hop into a about 4000 different properties fairly easily.
There's other perks...open season can get me rooms in places pretty cheap. If I know I'm traveling somewhere in less than 30 days I can grab a room. That gets me a real nice place in Vegas for $80 a night. Which isn't a terrible rate. Same thing for Florida, I can hit the Seaworld resort and get a 2BR place for $115 a night.
The other nice thing is that I can reserve for family members. Sometimes I just want a place for my parents to be able to get away to and if I have points left over I can get them a couple nights in Vegas "on the house" without being money directly out of my pocket.
It's not going to save money for me, but ultimately it removes analysis paralysis and just makes me commit to something. Which is about 90% of the battle for me
I'm cheap, I want well accommodated places to stay, I hate hotel rooms, and because I'm cheap I tend to poo-poo traveling and it's been something that has driven my wife batty. I went with a timeshare to sort of address those on different levels.
1) It pretty much forces me to use it. Since I am cheap, I'm not going to let it go unused. But then again I no longer look at the daily cost and constantly try to compare prices from one place to another. I just look at what I have and click on the room size I need for the stay.
2) The Hilton locations are *very* nice. It's a true apartment in most of them with a full kitchen, living room and separate master bathrooms. I have young kids so it's great being able to have full cooked meals there in the room for breakfast and dinner between running out and about for the day.
With the Hilton Grand Vacations I had decent flexibility. Hawaii, Scotland, Vancouver, San Diego, downtown NYC, Orlando, Vegas, Myrtle, Gulf Side of Florida, and a few others are areas Hilton has properties. Plus with the RCI exchange I can hop into a about 4000 different properties fairly easily.
There's other perks...open season can get me rooms in places pretty cheap. If I know I'm traveling somewhere in less than 30 days I can grab a room. That gets me a real nice place in Vegas for $80 a night. Which isn't a terrible rate. Same thing for Florida, I can hit the Seaworld resort and get a 2BR place for $115 a night.
The other nice thing is that I can reserve for family members. Sometimes I just want a place for my parents to be able to get away to and if I have points left over I can get them a couple nights in Vegas "on the house" without being money directly out of my pocket.
It's not going to save money for me, but ultimately it removes analysis paralysis and just makes me commit to something. Which is about 90% of the battle for me