Time Share Resale Scams
Have you fallen prey to a ruthless time share
resale scam? If so you are not alone. Everyday
hundreds of people are taken and mislead by resale
telemarketers.
The sad truth is that many of the resale companies
doing business today are not completely honest
about what they tell their potential advertisers.
It seems there is a new scam born every minute.
Most time share owners are looking for some sort
of assurance that their resale will sell. We can't
blame them as this is the question most owners
want answered. The truth is that nobody can
tell you when or if your resale will sell.
Although time share is bought and sold daily
across the nation, nobody knows for sure when
your time share will sell. We have compiled a
list of the most common scams out there today.
Read through our list of resale scams and be wary
when you deal with anyone that calls you first
on the telephone asking you if you would like
to sell your time share resale.
- The Infamous Buyer Waiting - Do not,
under any circumstances, ever let a sales representative
tell you they have a buyer waiting for your
time share.
- The Crystal Ball - No one can tell
you when a time share 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 Time share
- 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
time share 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 time
share is worth thousands more than you paid
for it in hopes of getting you to sign up to
sell your property with them. time share 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 time share just
like theirs". This could not be any further
from the truth. Unless the business is located
in the "time share 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.
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