When you bought your timeshare, you were probably shown a carefully crafted calculation — something like "this vacation costs you less than $200 per night for the rest of your life." It sounded reasonable. It might have even sounded like a bargain.
But that calculation was designed to sell you the timeshare, not to tell you the truth. The real cost of timeshare ownership over 20 years is dramatically higher than what the sales presentation suggested — and when you see the full picture, it changes everything.
The Numbers Most Owners Never See
Let's build a realistic 20-year cost model using industry averages. We'll use conservative figures — your actual costs may be higher depending on your resort, location, and contract terms.
Starting Assumptions
- Purchase price: $22,000 (the current industry average per ARDA)
- Financing: 60% financed at 14.9% APR over 10 years (typical timeshare loan terms)
- Annual maintenance fee: $1,120 (current average per ARDA)
- Annual fee increase: 5% per year (conservative — some resorts increase by 8%+)
- Special assessments: $1,500 total over 20 years (conservative estimate)
- Exchange fees: $200 per year (if using RCI, Interval International, or similar)
The 20-Year Cost Breakdown
| Cost Category | 20-Year Total |
|---|---|
| Purchase Price (Down Payment) | $8,800 |
| Loan Payments (Principal + Interest) | $20,280 |
| Maintenance Fees (20 Years at 5% Annual Increase) | $37,066 |
| Special Assessments | $1,500 |
| Exchange Fees | $4,000 |
| Closing Costs (Original Purchase) | $1,200 |
| TOTAL 20-YEAR COST | $72,846 |
That's nearly $73,000 for one week of vacation per year over 20 years. And remember — these are conservative estimates. Many owners face higher purchase prices, steeper fee increases, larger special assessments, and additional costs we haven't even included (travel expenses, dining, activities).
💡 Per-night reality check: At $72,846 for 20 weeks of vacation (one week per year for 20 years), you're paying approximately $520 per night. That's the same or more than a luxury hotel room in most vacation destinations — without the flexibility, the loyalty points, or the ability to choose a different destination each year.
Year-by-Year Maintenance Fee Growth
One of the most deceptive aspects of timeshare ownership is how maintenance fees compound over time. Here's what a $1,120 annual fee looks like with a 5% annual increase:
| Year | Annual Maintenance Fee | Cumulative Total Paid |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $1,120 | $1,120 |
| Year 3 | $1,234 | $3,508 |
| Year 5 | $1,361 | $6,186 |
| Year 7 | $1,501 | $9,177 |
| Year 10 | $1,738 | $14,091 |
| Year 15 | $2,218 | $24,133 |
| Year 20 | $2,831 | $37,066 |
By year 20, your annual maintenance fee has more than doubled — from $1,120 to over $2,800. And that's just maintenance fees. It doesn't include the purchase price, financing costs, special assessments, or any other fees.
What That Money Could Do Instead
The opportunity cost of timeshare ownership is staggering. Here's what $72,846 could fund over the same 20-year period:
Option 1: Independent Luxury Vacations
At $3,642 per year (the annual average timeshare cost), you could book a full week at a luxury resort or vacation rental in most destinations — with the freedom to choose a different location every year, no long-term contract, and no annual obligation if your circumstances change.
Option 2: Investment Growth
If you invested $3,642 per year in a diversified index fund earning an average 7% annual return, after 20 years you would have approximately $149,000. That's more than double the amount you would have spent on timeshare costs — and it's money you actually own.
Option 3: Home Improvement or Debt Reduction
$72,846 could renovate a kitchen and two bathrooms, pay off a car loan and credit card debt, or fund a significant portion of a child's college education. These are investments that build equity and reduce financial stress — the opposite of what a timeshare does.
Every month you continue owning your timeshare, you're adding to that 20-year total. Find out what it would take to stop the cycle.
Get Your Free ConsultationThe Costs They Don't Mention
Our $72,846 estimate is actually conservative because it doesn't include several real costs that many owners face:
- Travel expenses — Airfare, rental cars, and transportation to get to your timeshare can add $1,000–$3,000 per trip
- Upgrade fees — Many resorts charge fees to book larger units, better locations, or preferred dates
- Guest certificates — Want to send a family member instead? That's often an extra fee
- Parking and resort fees — Some resorts charge daily resort fees on top of your maintenance fees
- Owner events and presentations — "Owner update" presentations that are really high-pressure sales pitches to buy more points or upgrade
- Stress and time — The hours spent trying to book, exchange, rent, sell, or exit your timeshare have real value
Why Getting Out Sooner Saves You More
Because timeshare costs compound over time — maintenance fees increase annually, and you continue paying whether you use the timeshare or not — every year you delay exiting adds to your lifetime cost.
Consider this: if you exit your timeshare at year 10 instead of year 20, you save approximately $23,000 in maintenance fees alone (the difference between 10 and 20 years of compounding fees). Add in exchange fees and potential special assessments, and the savings grow even larger.
The cost of a legal timeshare exit is almost always a fraction of what you'll pay in future maintenance fees if you continue owning. It's not an expense — it's an investment in your financial freedom.
The Bottom Line
Timeshare ownership is one of the most expensive ways to vacation — and the true cost is deliberately hidden behind low per-night calculations and monthly payment framing. When you see the full 20-year picture, the math is clear: most owners would be significantly better off vacationing independently.
If you're ready to stop adding to that total and start putting your money toward vacations you actually choose — or investments that actually grow — a timeshare exit consultation is the first step.