If you own a timeshare you can't use, can't sell, and can't afford — you've already fallen into the first trap. If someone has charged you thousands of dollars to "get you out" and nothing happened — you've fallen into the second. This page explains exactly how both traps work, and what actually has legal standing to address them.
The single most important thing to understand about timeshare ownership is that your annual maintenance fee is not fixed. It increases every year, and the resort sets the rate. Over a typical ownership period of 15—25 years, the total cost of "owning" a timeshare — which in most cases has zero resale value — often exceeds the cost of simply booking comparable vacations at market rates.
Use the calculator below with your actual maintenance fee to see what your obligation looks like projected forward.
Average maintenance fees increase 5—8% annually. This calculator uses 6% — a conservative industry average. Adjust your starting fee to see how obligations compound over time.
These are maintenance fees only. Most owners also pay mortgage/loan payments, special assessment fees, exchange membership fees, and booking fees. The total annual cost of ownership is typically 40—60% higher than the maintenance fee alone.
These patterns appear in virtually every FTC enforcement action against exit companies. If you see any of them — from any company, including ours — walk away.
There is one mechanism that has legal standing to compel a resort developer to release an owner from a timeshare contract: identifying real statutory violations in the sale or contract itself, and using those violations as the basis for legal action.
This is not a guarantee. Not every contract has violations. Not every case qualifies. But when violations exist — and in our experience, they exist in the majority of cases we review — an attorney can build a real case with a real legal basis.