Top 10 DVC Resale Brokers: An Insider’s Honest Ranking
Top 10 DVC Resale Brokers: An Insider’s Honest Ranking
I spent 13+ years selling DVC directly for Disney. Here’s what I actually look for when evaluating a resale broker, and who makes the cut.
I want to be upfront with you right from the start: I run a DVC resale brokerage. So when I say I’m going to rank my competitors honestly, you’re probably thinking, “sure you are.” Fair enough. But here’s the thing, I spent 13 years on the Disney side of this business. I earned multiple Leadership Circle Awards. I know every broker on this list, I know their strengths, I know their weaknesses, and I respect most of them. I have no reason to tear anyone down.
What I do have is a deep interest in raising the bar for how this industry treats buyers and sellers. The DVC resale market is full of people making $10,000, $30,000, $50,000 decisions. They deserve honest information. So that’s what I’m going to give you.
“The right broker doesn’t just close your deal, they protect you through ROFR, advise you on use year strategy, and make sure you never overpay for a contract that’s worth less than the listing price suggests.”
Before we dive in, let me tell you what I actually care about when evaluating a DVC resale broker. It’s not just inventory size. It’s not just who has the fanciest website. I’m looking at: licensed broker credentials (both Florida and California, where most DVC buyers are concentrated), direct DVC sales experience on the team, ROFR knowledge, transparency around fees, and most importantly, what happens when something goes wrong mid-transaction. Any broker looks great when a deal closes smoothly. The ones worth recommending are the ones who show up when it doesn’t.
One quick note on the new 2026 landscape: Disney added a $500 Contract Administration Fee on all resale contracts signed after January 1, 2026. That’s a buyer-side cost that changes the math a bit on smaller contracts. A good broker should be explaining this fee proactively, not burying it in closing documents. I’ll flag which ones seem to be doing that well.
Quick Comparison: Top DVC Resale Brokers (2026)
The Full Rankings
Each entry below includes my honest take, pros, cons, and who each broker is actually best suited for.
Look, I’m not going to pretend I don’t have a stake in this one. But I’ll tell you exactly why I built this brokerage the way I did, and you can decide if it makes sense for you.
After 13 years selling DVC directly for Disney, earning multiple Leadership Circle Awards along the way, I walked away from the direct side because I genuinely believe the resale market gives most buyers a better financial outcome. I watched families overpay by $20,000 to $50,000 on contracts they could have purchased resale at a fraction of the cost. That bothered me. So I got licensed in both Florida and California, built a brokerage, and made a commitment to explain this market honestly.
What separates us from the other brokers on this list: I understand the product from the inside. I know the Disney Member Services process, I know how ROFR decisions get made, I know what the point charts really mean for booking, and I know which resorts actually deliver the best value for which types of families. That’s not something you can learn from reading forum threads. That’s 13 years of daily immersion.
We’re a smaller, more personal operation than DVC Resale Market or Fidelity. If you want to talk to someone who will give you a straight answer, whether that means buying resale, buying direct, or deciding not to buy at all, that’s us.
Strengths
- ✓ 13+ yrs direct Disney DVC experience
- ✓ Licensed in CA and FL
- ✓ Highly personalized service
- ✓ Honest, no-pressure approach
- ✓ Deep use year strategy knowledge
- ✓ Full fee transparency upfront
Consider This
- – Smaller inventory than largest brokers
- – Boutique scale (personal attention, not volume)
Bottom line: Best for buyers who want expert guidance from someone who’s lived inside the DVC sales process, not just brokered deals through it. If you’re buying your first contract or want a second opinion before signing, start here.
DVC Resale Market is the largest broker in this space by volume, and they’ve earned that position. Nick Cotton and LaToya Cotton have built a team of 21 former DVC Cast Members, which is genuinely impressive. When you call them, you’re talking to people who know what a use year means, why the June use year tends to move faster at certain resorts, and how to negotiate an offer that won’t get ROFR’d.
They have the biggest inventory, the most name recognition in the DVC community, and a transaction process that’s been refined over hundreds of deals. Their blog is one of the better resources in the industry, their monthly price-per-point reports are something I read myself to track market trends.
The trade-off is scale. They handle a high volume of transactions, and some buyers report feeling like a number in a queue rather than a client. Their commission runs around 10% for sellers, which is industry standard.
Strengths
- ✓ Largest inventory in the industry
- ✓ 21 former Disney Cast Members
- ✓ Excellent market data / blog
- ✓ Streamlined transaction process
- ✓ Strong community reputation
Consider This
- – High volume = less personal attention
- – ~10% seller commission
Bottom line: Best for buyers who want maximum inventory selection and trust brand recognition. If you’re buying resale for the first time and want to browse the widest selection, DVC Resale Market is a logical starting point.
Fidelity has held the “Disney Recommended Resale Broker” designation since 2005, which is a meaningful signal. Disney doesn’t hand that out casually, and it speaks to Fidelity’s operational reliability and professionalism. They are a high-volume, professionally run shop with a strong track record, they claim over 90% of their listings sell within 30 days, which, if accurate, is genuinely impressive.
Their primary strength is on the seller side. Their marketing reach, established buyer relationships, and streamlined process mean your listing gets in front of more qualified buyers faster. For sellers with a clean, well-priced contract, Fidelity is one of the best options available.
On the buyer side, I’d describe them as solid but less personalized. They handle a large volume of transactions, which means service quality can vary. I’ve also seen buyer clients feel slightly rushed through the process. Still, a legitimate and well-respected brokerage that belongs near the top of any honest list.
Strengths
- ✓ Disney’s recommended broker since 2005
- ✓ 90%+ sell within 30 days
- ✓ Strong seller-side marketing
- ✓ No upfront fees for sellers
Consider This
- – High volume; buyer experience varies
- – Less emphasis on buyer education
Bottom line: Excellent choice if you’re selling a DVC contract. Their speed-to-sale track record and Disney’s endorsement make them a top-tier seller’s broker. Buyers can absolutely use them, just come prepared with your own research.
DVC Store, operating under The Timeshare Store parent brand, is the oldest DVC resale operation in the industry, founded in the mid-1990s when DVC resale was barely a concept. That longevity means something. They’ve been through every market cycle, every Disney policy change, every ROFR wave. Their institutional knowledge is real.
They have a loyal client base that returns to them repeatedly, and their reviews reflect genuine satisfaction. Their agents tend to be experienced and attentive. The trade-off: they’re not entirely DVC-exclusive, which means their team’s expertise spans the broader timeshare market rather than being laser-focused on Disney’s ecosystem. For buyers who want someone with purely DVC-deep knowledge, that can sometimes feel like a gap.
Still, 30 years in this business is hard to argue with. They’ve earned their reputation the slow way, by not cutting corners.
Strengths
- ✓ 30+ years of industry experience
- ✓ Strong client retention
- ✓ Attentive, personal agents
- ✓ Solid institutional knowledge
Consider This
- – Not exclusively DVC-focused
- – Website less polished than newer competitors
Bottom line: A reliable, time-tested choice for both buyers and sellers. If longevity and proven track record matter to you, DVC Store delivers.
Vacation Club Life is a family-owned brokerage based minutes from Walt Disney World, and that proximity to the product shows in how their team talks about it. They’ve been in the DVC-specific resale business for over 25 years, and their client reviews consistently call out exceptional communication and transaction management, two things that genuinely separate good brokers from great ones in this space.
Rachel and Glenn, who appear throughout their reviews, have developed a loyal following precisely because they treat clients like people rather than transaction line items. If the largest brokers sometimes feel like calling a call center, Vacation Club Life feels like calling someone who actually knows your file.
Their inventory doesn’t match the giants, but their service reputation is as strong as anyone on this list. Worth serious consideration, especially for buyers who value communication above all else.
Strengths
- ✓ Exceptional communication reviews
- ✓ Family-owned; personal touch
- ✓ 25+ years DVC-specific experience
- ✓ Central Florida proximity to WDW
Consider This
- – Smaller inventory than top-3 brokers
- – Less digital/tech infrastructure
Bottom line: Best for buyers who prioritize consistent, personalized communication and want to feel like a real client rather than a ticket number.
DVC Sales stands out in one very specific way: they publicly advertise a 6.9% commission rate, which they call the lowest in the industry. I’ll tell you, that’s a meaningful number. On a $20,000 contract, the difference between 6.9% and 10% is $620 in your pocket. On a $50,000 contract, it’s $1,550. For sellers who are sensitive to net proceeds, that’s real money worth considering.
Their team includes former Disney Vacation Club Cast Members with over 25 years of direct Disney experience, and they’ve built an AI-assisted platform that makes listing and contract intake faster than most competitors. Their reviews from sellers are consistently strong.
The slight caveat: at a lower commission, you’ll want to verify that their marketing reach is sufficient for your specific resort. A low commission doesn’t help if your listing sits for 90 days. For popular resorts, Grand Floridian, Beach Club, Boardwalk, that’s unlikely to be an issue. For slower-moving resorts like Vero Beach or Hilton Head, I’d ask them directly about their buyer pipeline.
Strengths
- ✓ Publicly disclosed 6.9% commission
- ✓ Former Disney Cast Members
- ✓ AI-assisted listing platform
- ✓ Strong seller reviews
Consider This
- – Lower fee = verify buyer pipeline depth
- – Less name recognition than top-3
Bottom line: A smart consideration for sellers at popular resorts who want to maximize net proceeds. Do your due diligence on their buyer demand for your specific property.
DVC Resale Experts markets heavily on their combined 130+ years of Disney Vacation Club experience across their team, and that’s a legitimate credential. Their agents are former Disney DVC Guides (the same role I held), and that insider background shows in how they handle nuanced situations: ROFR navigation, contract valuations on unusual contracts, point availability negotiations.
They claim over $400 million in closed transactions, which places them among the higher-volume operations in this space. Their commission rate runs 10-12%, which is on the higher end of the market, particularly in an environment where DVC Sales and others are advertising below 10%. What you’re paying for is proven experience and a team that genuinely knows the Disney ecosystem from the inside.
One note: their brand name is similar to a common phrase buyers use when searching. That’s a smart SEO move on their part, but don’t let the name create confusion, they are one brokerage among several with former-Guide pedigree, not the only one.
Strengths
- ✓ 130+ years combined Disney experience
- ✓ $400M+ in closed transactions
- ✓ Strong ROFR and pricing expertise
- ✓ Transparent net proceeds estimates
Consider This
- – 10-12% commission above market average
- – Brand name can cause search confusion
Bottom line: A strong seller’s broker if you’re willing to pay a premium commission for deep expertise. Buyers can use them effectively, but compare their active inventory against other brokers before deciding.
I want to be clear that DVC For Less isn’t actually a broker in the traditional sense, it’s an aggregator platform that pulls listings from multiple brokers and shows them side by side. You still close with the underlying broker; DVC For Less is the search layer on top.
For buyers, that’s genuinely useful. Their “Deal Score” ranks listings by value relative to comparable contracts, accounting for resort, points, contract size, and banking/borrowing status. That’s sophisticated analysis that saves buyers hours of manual comparison.
The limitation: you’re still ultimately doing business with whatever broker holds the listing. DVC For Less provides transparency and comparison tools; it doesn’t replace the need for a skilled broker guiding you through offer, ROFR, and closing.
Strengths
- ✓ Aggregates all major broker inventory
- ✓ Deal Score for value comparison
- ✓ Strong market data resources
- ✓ Useful for initial market research
Consider This
- – Not a broker, aggregator only
- – Still need a broker for transaction
- – No seller services
Bottom line: Use DVC For Less to do your market research and identify great-value contracts across brokers. Don’t use it as a substitute for having a knowledgeable broker represent you in the actual transaction.
Similar to DVC For Less, DVC Market is an aggregator that compiles listings from every major broker in one place, with real-time updates every 10 minutes. Their platform is well-built, their blog is solid, and their market analysis is useful for buyers trying to understand the resale landscape before engaging a broker.
Their filters, by resort, points, price, use year, are intuitive and help buyers narrow options efficiently. For someone just entering the DVC resale market, spending 30 minutes on DVC Market or DVC For Less is a smart first step before you ever call a broker.
Again: this is a research and discovery tool, not a brokerage. The actual transaction happens with the listing broker, not with DVC Market.
Strengths
- ✓ 1,100+ listings from all major brokers
- ✓ Real-time updates every 10 minutes
- ✓ Excellent filtering tools
- ✓ Well-written educational blog
Consider This
- – Aggregator only, not a broker
- – Transaction quality depends on listing broker
Bottom line: An excellent first stop for buyers doing market research. Use it to understand pricing, identify target resorts, and shortlist contracts, then engage a licensed broker to represent you through the transaction.
The DVC resale market attracts smaller, regional brokerages and individual agents beyond the names listed above. Some of them are excellent, boutique operations run by former Disney employees who offer genuinely personalized service at competitive rates. Others… less so.
The thing I want buyers and sellers to understand is that DVC resale is real estate. In Florida, that means your broker must hold a Florida real estate license. In California, California license. If someone is soliciting DVC resale transactions in your state without the appropriate license, that is a legal problem, for them and potentially for your transaction’s validity.
Before you engage any broker not on this list, I’d ask: Are you a licensed real estate broker (not just a salesperson) in the relevant state? How many DVC resale transactions has your team closed in the last 12 months? What’s your process if Disney exercises ROFR? Do you have relationships with reputable DVC title companies? The answers will tell you quickly whether you’re talking to someone with real expertise or someone playing in a market they don’t fully understand.
Potential Upsides
- ✓ May offer highly personalized service
- ✓ Some have deep niche expertise
- ✓ Potentially competitive rates
Risks to Verify
- – Must verify real estate licensure
- – DVC-specific experience may be limited
- – Transaction volume may be low
- – Title company relationships matter
Bottom line: Not all boutique brokers are bad, some are excellent. Do your homework: verify licensure, ask for transaction references, and make sure they know DVC specifically, not just timeshares generally.
Frequently Asked Questions
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