Profit Share vs 60/40: Why Payouts Feel Different (And More Consistent)

Why Two Owners Can Get Paid Different Amounts

This is something most owners don’t realize until they’ve already tried renting.

Two people can have:

  • the same number of points
  • the same ownership tier
  • the same type of inventory

And still get paid different amounts.

That’s not because something went wrong.

It’s because of how the traditional model works.


How the 60/40 Model Works

Most rental companies follow some version of this:

They book a reservation
They rent it out
They split the revenue

Typically:

  • 60% to the owner
  • 40% to the company

On paper, that seems fair.

But there’s a problem.


Each Booking Stands on Its Own

In a 60/40 setup, every reservation is treated individually.

That means:

  • pricing can vary
  • demand can shift
  • timing matters

So even if two owners contribute the same points, their bookings might land differently.

One might get:

  • high-demand dates
  • strong pricing

The other might get:

  • slower periods
  • lower pricing

Same input. Different outcome.


60/40 Model Example

Two owners with the same points can earn different amounts depending on how each booking performs.


Why This Feels Inconsistent

From the outside, it looks random.

One month looks good.
Another doesn’t.

That’s because you’re depending on:

how each individual booking performs

Not the overall system.


How Profit Share Changes That

Instead of evaluating every reservation on its own, everything is grouped together.

All bookings across similar owners are averaged.

Then payouts are based on that average.


Profit Share Model

All bookings are averaged across similar owners, creating more stable and predictable payouts.


A Simple Way to Understand It

Think of it like this.

Instead of:

  • 10 separate bookings with 10 different outcomes

You have:

  • one combined result across all bookings

That result gets averaged out.

So instead of highs and lows, you get something more stable.


What This Means for You

If you and another owner both assign:

  • the same number of points
  • the same tier

You should land in roughly the same range of payouts.

Not identical down to the dollar.

But close enough that it feels consistent.


Why This Matters More Than It Sounds

Most owners aren’t looking for:

  • the absolute highest possible booking
  • a one-time spike

They’re looking for:

  • something they can plan around
  • something that doesn’t swing wildly month to month

That’s what this approach is built for.


What Still Affects Payouts

This doesn’t remove the market completely.

Things still vary based on:

  • demand
  • seasonality
  • inventory

But instead of those factors hitting one booking at a time, they’re spread across everything.

That’s the difference.


Model How It Works Result
60/40 Split Each booking stands alone Inconsistent payouts
Profit Share Bookings are averaged More stable payouts

What This Is Not

It’s not:

  • a guaranteed fixed return
  • the exact same payout every time
  • something disconnected from the market

There’s still movement.

It’s just less volatile.


A Quick Example

If the average yield for a month is:

  • $10 per 1,000 points

Then:

  • 1,000,000 points → ~$10,000
  • 500,000 points → ~$5,000

That’s the baseline.

Instead of guessing per booking, you’re working off an average.


Final Thought

The traditional model focuses on individual outcomes.

This model focuses on the overall result.

That’s why one feels unpredictable, and the other feels easier to plan around.

If you’ve ever had rentals that felt all over the place, this is usually why.

What the 45-Day Payout Window Actually Means

Why You Don’t Get Paid Immediately

This is one of the first things people notice.

You hear:

“You get paid after the stay”

And then:

“There’s a 45-day window”

Naturally, the question is:

“Why?”

It’s a fair question.

And the answer is pretty straightforward once you see how the process actually works.


The Short Answer

You get paid after checkout because that’s when the reservation is complete.

The 45-day window exists to:

  • allow for any issues to be resolved
  • make sure all payments are finalized
  • keep everything consistent across all bookings

That’s it.


1 Guest Stay
2 Checkout
3 +45 Days
4 Payout

What Happens After a Guest Checks Out

Once the guest leaves the property, a few things happen behind the scenes.

There’s a short window where:

  • guests can report issues
  • refunds (if needed) can be processed
  • reservations are finalized

This isn’t specific to timeshares.

It’s standard across travel platforms.


The 12-Day Window Most People Don’t See

After checkout, there’s typically about a 12-day period where a guest can raise any concerns.

This could be:

  • something with the unit
  • something during the stay
  • anything that might affect the final charge

In most cases, nothing happens.

But the window needs to exist so everything can be settled properly.


Why Payments Aren’t Sent Right Away

Even after that initial window, there’s still processing involved.

At scale, this includes:

  • thousands of reservations per month
  • payments coming from different platforms
  • accounting checks to make sure everything lines up

That’s where the rest of the timeline comes in.


The Monthly Processing Cycle

Instead of sending payments one by one, everything is grouped into a monthly cycle.

Example:

If your reservations check out in October:

  • they’re finalized through November
  • payments are processed
  • funds go out by mid-December

It’s structured.

Not random.


Example Timeline

October checkout → mid-December payout

Reservations that check out in October are typically paid by mid-December, based on the normal payout cycle.

October Checkout
December Payout

Why This Is a Good Thing

At first, the delay can feel like friction.

But it’s there for a reason.

It prevents:

  • incorrect payouts
  • missing adjustments
  • inconsistencies across bookings

It also creates something most owners don’t get elsewhere:

predictability

You know:

  • when payouts happen
  • how they’re grouped
  • what to expect each cycle

What You’ll Receive With Each Payment

Every payout comes with a statement.

It shows:

  • which reservations were included
  • where the stays happened
  • the dates
  • the average nightly rates
  • your yield

So you’re not guessing where the number came from.


Common Misunderstanding

Some people hear “45 days” and assume:

“They’re holding my money.”

That’s not what’s happening.

The timeline exists because:

  • bookings have to be completed
  • platforms need to settle payments
  • everything needs to be verified

It’s part of keeping the process clean.


A Simple Way to Think About It

Instead of thinking:

“Why is it delayed?”

It’s better to think:

“This is when the booking is fully closed.”

Once it’s closed, it gets paid.


Final Thought

The payout timing isn’t there to slow anything down.

It’s there to make sure everything is accurate, consistent, and predictable.

Once you understand how the timeline works, it stops feeling like a delay.

It just becomes part of the process.

How Much Can You Make Renting Timeshare Points?

This is usually the first real question people ask.

Not how it works. Not the process.

Just:

“What does this actually pay?”

Fair question.

The answer depends on a few things, but it’s not as unpredictable as people think.


The Simple Way to Think About It

Instead of guessing per booking, everything comes down to one number:

How much you earn per 1,000 points.

Once you understand that, everything else becomes easy to estimate.


How Earnings Are Measured

Your income is based on how much you earn per 1,000 points.

Example: $8 per 1,000 points

What That Looks Like in Real Terms

Let’s say the average payout is around:

  • $7–$10 per 1,000 points (varies by tier and timing)

If you assign:

  • 500,000 points → ~$3,500 to $5,000
  • 1,000,000 points → ~$7,000 to $10,000

That’s not a projection pulled out of nowhere.

That’s based on actual averages across bookings.


What Affects How Much You Earn

There are a few factors, but none of them are complicated.

1. Your Point Volume

This is the biggest one.

More points = more bookings = more total payout.

Nothing surprising there.


2. Your Ownership Tier

Different tiers (Platinum, Founders, Presidential, etc.) tend to earn slightly different averages.

That’s based on:

  • booking flexibility
  • availability
  • benefits tied to your ownership

3. Timing of Your Points

Points don’t all convert at the same time.

Some may rent quickly. Others may be spaced out over a couple months depending on demand.

But the key difference here is:

You’re not relying on a single booking to hit.

You’re averaging across many.


Why Most Owners Get Confused About Earnings

A lot of owners have tried renting before.

What they usually experience is:

  • one booking does well
  • another barely rents
  • another doesn’t rent at all

So the income feels random.

That’s because the model they used was based on:

“Make a reservation and hope someone books it.”

That’s where things break down.


How This Becomes More Predictable

Instead of each booking standing on its own, everything is averaged.

Think of it like this:

You’re not depending on one reservation.

You’re spreading your points across many bookings, and the payout gets averaged out.

That’s how you go from:

  • random results
    to
  • something you can actually estimate ahead of time

Points Assigned Estimated Yield ($8 / 1k)
300,000 $2,400
500,000 $4,000
1,000,000 $8,000

A More Practical Way to Estimate Your Income

You don’t need a complicated calculator to get a rough idea.

Just do this:

Take your total points
Divide by 1,000
Multiply by an average rate

That gives you a ballpark.

Example:

  • 800,000 points
  • ÷ 1,000 = 800
  • × $8 = $6,400

It won’t be exact, but it’ll be close enough to plan around.


What This Income Is Usually Used For

Most owners aren’t looking to replace their job with this.

They’re trying to:

  • offset maintenance fees
  • cover part of their ownership cost
  • get something back from unused points

Some go further, but that’s the baseline.


What This Is Not

It’s not:

  • a guaranteed fixed monthly paycheck
  • something that pays instantly
  • something where every booking is identical

There’s still a market behind it.

But compared to how most owners have experienced rentals before, it’s a lot more stable.


Final Thought

If your points are sitting unused, they’re not producing anything.

That’s the real baseline.

Once you start looking at them in terms of:

“What can these generate per 1,000 points?”

It becomes much easier to make decisions.

Not emotional ones. Just practical ones.

If you want to get a more specific estimate based on your points, that’s the next step.

How Timeshare Rentals Actually Work (Step-by-Step)

Most timeshare owners have heard that you can rent out your points.

What’s usually missing is a clear explanation of how it actually works.

Just the real process, step by step.

The Simple Version First

Before getting into details, here’s the entire process in one line:

You assign your points → they get matched to real guest demand → reservations are made → guests stay → you get paid.

That’s it.

If you understand that, you already understand more than most owners.

Assign Points
Match Demand
Reservation Booked
Guest Stay
Payout

Step 1: You Assign Your Points

This is the only real action on your side.

You decide how many points you want to rent out.

Some owners do all of them. Some do a portion. It depends on how much you plan to use personally.

There’s no long-term commitment tied to this. You’re not locking yourself into anything year after year.

You’re just saying:

“Here’s what I’m not using. Let’s put it to work.”

That’s it.

Step 2: Real Guest Demand Comes First

This is where most of the confusion in the industry starts.

A lot of rental companies take your points, make a bunch of reservations they think will rent, and then try to find guests after the fact.

Sometimes it works. A lot of times it doesn’t.

That’s where you get stuck with:

  • bookings that sit
  • pricing that doesn’t move
  • inconsistent payouts

The approach here is different.

Instead of guessing, bookings are made based on actual guest requests.

There are already people searching for specific:

  • dates
  • resorts
  • unit sizes

When your points are assigned, they’re matched against that demand.

So when a reservation is made, it’s already tied to a real guest.

Not a guess.

Step 3: The Reservation Is Made in Your Account

Once there’s a match, the reservation is created directly inside your timeshare account.

Nothing gets booked randomly.

Nothing sits waiting for a renter.

The stay is already connected to someone who plans to check in.

That’s an important difference.

You’re not waiting to see if something happens.

The value is already attached when the reservation is made.

Step 4: The Guest Stays

From your side, nothing changes here.

You’re not:

  • messaging guests
  • coordinating check-ins
  • answering questions

That’s all handled.

The guest checks in, stays at the property, and checks out like any normal booking.

Step 5: You Get Paid

Once the stay is completed, the payout process starts.

Payments are based on completed stays, not bookings.

That’s standard across travel platforms, even outside of timeshares.

There’s a short window after checkout where:

  • any issues can be reported
  • adjustments can be made if needed

After that, everything is finalized and processed.

1 Booking
2 Stay
3 Checkout
4 +45 Days
5 Payout

Why This Feels Different From What You’ve Heard Before

If you’ve looked into renting before, you’ve probably run into some version of this:

  • “List your timeshare online”
  • “Set your own price”
  • “Wait for someone to book it”

On paper, that sounds simple.

In practice, it usually turns into:

  • low visibility
  • pricing guesswork
  • inconsistent results

The biggest difference in how this works comes down to one thing:

Bookings are based on demand first, not assumptions.

Step Typical Rental Company RMT
Booking Books first, hopes it rents Matches real demand first
Risk Inventory may sit unused Bookings tied to real guests
Owner Involvement Often required Hands-off
Payouts Inconsistent More stable

What You Actually Do (And Don’t Do)

This part matters, because a lot of owners assume this is more involved than it is.

What you do:

  • Decide how many points to assign
  • Keep whatever you want for personal use

What you don’t do:

  • Find renters
  • Create listings
  • Manage pricing
  • Handle guests
  • Track bookings

Once your points are assigned, the rest is handled.

A Quick Way to Think About It

If your points are sitting unused, they’re not doing anything.

They’re just there.

This process gives them a job.

Either you use them, or they get turned into income.

It doesn’t need to be more complicated than that.

Final Thought

Most of the confusion around timeshare rentals comes from how the industry has handled it in the past.

Too much guessing. Too much manual work. Not enough consistency.

When you strip it down, the process itself is simple.

Assign your points.
Match them to real demand.
Complete the stay.
Get paid.

That’s all you really need to understand.

If you want to see what your points could realistically generate, you can start there.

Why Your Timeshare Points Lose Value Every Year (And How to Reverse It)

Why Your Timeshare Points Lose Value Every Year (And How to Reverse It)

Every year, millions of timeshare owners experience the same frustration:
their points lose value—fast.

They expire, get restricted, roll over with limitations, or simply sit unused because life gets busy. Meanwhile, maintenance fees rise, booking windows shrink, and the cost of making your timeshare “worth it” becomes harder and harder to justify.

But here’s the truth most owners never hear:

Timeshare points don’t just lose value because you aren’t using them.
They lose value because the system is designed to make them harder to maximize.

Fortunately, there is a way to reverse the decline and turn your points into consistent financial return.

In this blog, we break down exactly why your points lose value—and how RMT helps owners regain control and turn unused points into real income.

1. Points Expire Faster Than Most Owners Realize

Points are marketed as flexible and convenient, but behind the scenes, expiration rules are strict:

  • Use them this year or lose them
  • “Banking” them still limits future use
  • Restrictions reduce where and when you can book

The result?

Expired points = lost money.

Once they expire, the value disappears completely—no credit, no refund, no recovery.

RMT solves this by converting upcoming points into income before they lose value, ensuring they generate a return instead of disappearing.

2. Rising Maintenance Fees Lower Your Point Value Over Time

Every year, maintenance fees go up:
5%, 7%, sometimes even 10%.

But the number of points you own stays the same.

That means:

Your cost per point increases every year—even if you don’t use them.

If your points aren’t used efficiently, the financial gap widens:

  • More money spent
  • Less value received
  • More pressure to “use or lose”

RMT offsets this financial burden by generating predictable payouts that can help cover maintenance fees or, in some cases, surpass them entirely.

3. Limited Availability Decreases Point Value

Trying to book a holiday week?
A popular destination?
A school break vacation?

Good luck.

Resorts often restrict owners during high-demand periods or release inventory extremely late. When you can’t book the dates you want, your points lose practical value.

But with RMT, value isn’t tied to your ability to travel.

We use your points to book stays that renters want—even during peak demand—so you don’t lose value due to lack of availability.

4. The System Is Designed to Make Points Harder to Maximize

The points system was built to:

  • Reduce unused room inventory
  • Encourage owners to buy more points
  • Keep owners paying annual fees

This creates a natural depreciation cycle:

More owners + smaller inventory = less booking power.

That’s why your points buy fewer nights today than they did years ago.

But the rental market works differently.

Renters pay high rates for resort stays—meaning your points can gain monetary value even as booking value declines.

That’s the opportunity RMT taps into.

5. Owners Don’t Have Time to Navigate the Complex System

Even the most dedicated owner struggles to track:

  • Booking windows
  • Point calendars
  • Banking deadlines
  • Exchange networks
  • Upgrade opportunities

It’s a lot.

And when owners don’t have time to maximize their points, those points naturally lose value through inactivity.

RMT removes the burden entirely by managing everything for you—turning unused points into income without requiring your time, travel, or effort.

How to Reverse Point Depreciation With RMT

The solution is simple:
Stop letting points sit, expire, or lose value—and convert them into income instead.

Here’s how RMT helps owners regain control:

1. Convert Points Into High-Value Stays

We book stays that perform well in the rental market.

2. Handle All Listings and Pricing

We manage the entire rental process professionally.

3. Manage Guest Communication and Support

No stress, no messaging, no coordination on your part.

4. You Stay in Full Control of Your Points

Use the points you want; monetize the rest.

5. Earn Predictable Monthly Income

Your points finally work for you—not the other way around.

Your Points Don’t Have to Lose Value — Unless You Let Them

Timeshare points depreciate because the system is structured to favor the resort, not the owner.
But with the right strategy, owners can reverse that trend entirely.

RMT gives owners a simple, hands-off way to:

  • Stop point expiration
  • Offset rising maintenance fees
  • Increase point value through rentals
  • Generate reliable passive income
  • Finally get REAL return on their timeshare investment

Instead of losing value every year, your points can become a consistent source of financial gain.

The Hidden Economy Behind Timeshare Points: What Most Owners Never Realize

The Hidden Economy Behind Timeshare Points: What Most Owners Never Realize

For many timeshare owners, points feel like a complicated currency—easy to earn, hard to use. Every year, millions of points go unused, expire, or get pushed into “banked” status because life gets busy, availability is limited, or booking rules get in the way.

But what most owners don’t realize is this:

Those points have real market value.
There is an entire hidden economy built around renting them out.
And until recently, almost no one knew how to access it.

This article breaks down that hidden economy, why so many owners miss out on it, and how companies like RMT are making it possible for owners to turn unused points into reliable income.

The Truth: Your Timeshare Points Are an Asset — Not a Liability

If you’re like most owners, you bought your timeshare for one reason: convenience. Guaranteed annual vacations. Beautiful resorts. Quality time with family.

But the timeshare system evolved. Points replaced fixed weeks. Rules became more complex. And suddenly, what was supposed to be simple became time-consuming.

Yet behind that complexity is a valuable reality:

Timeshare points behave like a rental commodity.

Travelers want resort stays.
Vacation clubs have high demand locations.
Your points are the currency that unlocks those stays.

When owners can’t use their points, instead of letting them expire, those points can be converted into real cash through the rental marketplace.

Most owners have no idea this opportunity exists.

Why Owners Don’t Tap Into This Hidden Value

There are three main reasons:

1. The industry doesn’t openly talk about it.

Rental demand for timeshare stays is huge, but resorts prefer owners to book their own vacations—not treat it like a rental business.

2. Renting points manually is confusing and high-effort.

Owners must figure out:

  • Where to list
  • How to price
  • How to handle guest communication
  • How to manage bookings
  • How to avoid cancellations or guest issues

Most owners simply don’t have the time.

3. They don’t realize the value of what they already own.

A significant percentage of owners assume their points are “use them or lose them.”
But in reality, they are an underutilized asset.

The Hidden Rental Market Most Owners Never See

Behind the scenes, there is constant demand for:

  • Resort-style accommodations
  • Spacious suites
  • Family-friendly travel
  • Last-minute getaway stays
  • Vacation club properties

Travelers are willing to pay for these experiences—often at premium rates.

This creates a behind-the-scenes ecosystem where points are converted into stays, stays generate revenue, and owners can receive predictable income.

This is the part owners rarely get access to.

How RMT Opens the Door to This Hidden Economy

RMT’s role is simple:
They bridge the gap between unused points and the rental market that wants them.

Here’s what RMT does for owners:

Converts your points into rentable stays

• Lists those stays on the right platforms
• Manages pricing for maximum earnings
• Handles all guest communication and support
• Covers every step of the booking process

Owners don’t need to become rental experts.
RMT does the work.
Owners get paid.

And most importantly:

Owners stay in full control of their points.

There are no long-term contracts.
No hidden terms.
No giving up ownership.

Just a simplified system that unlocks the value owners never realized they had.

Why This Matters Now More Than Ever

The rental demand for resort-style accommodations is at an all-time high.
Families want more space.
Remote workers want longer stays.
Travelers want home-style comfort with hotel-level amenities.

Timeshare owners unknowingly sit on a resource that perfectly fits this demand.

The only problem has been accessibility—until services like RMT stepped in.

Final Thoughts: Your Points Are Worth More Than You Think

Timeshare owners often feel frustrated, stuck, or unsure of how to get real value from their points.
But the truth is:

Your points have always had value.
You just needed the right system to unlock it.

The hidden economy behind timeshare points is real—and growing.
For owners ready to take advantage of it, RMT offers a transparent, effortless way to turn unused points into predictable monthly income.

Why People Like Timeshare Rentals: Comfort, Value, and Resort-Style Living

Planning a vacation today involves more than just picking a destination. Travelers want space, comfort, predictability, and value. That’s why timeshare rentals are becoming an increasingly popular alternative to traditional hotel stays. Whether you’re a family needing multiple bedrooms, a couple seeking resort-style amenities, or a traveler looking to save money without sacrificing quality, renting a timeshare often provides a superior experience.

In this guide, we’ll break down the key reasons people choose timeshare rentals, how they compare with hotel bookings, what to expect in terms of cost and value, and where to find the best deals.

1. More Space and Comfort

One of the biggest reasons people love timeshare rentals is simple: space.
• Full kitchens mean you can cook breakfast in your pajamas or prepare a family dinner instead of eating out every night.
• Multiple bedrooms give parents and kids their own space, which is nearly impossible in a standard hotel room.
• Separate living areas allow everyone to spread out, relax, and feel at home. A recent Forbes report highlights how timeshares offer “condo-style living” that far exceeds the comfort of a traditional hotel room. For families or groups traveling together, this extra space is invaluable.

2. Predictability and Trusted Brands

Another draw of timeshare rentals is the consistency that comes with major resort brands. Companies like Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, and Wyndham operate branded vacation ownership properties worldwide. With these names, travelers know they can expect: • Clean, well-maintained accommodations • Reliable service and customer care • Standardized amenities such as pools, gyms, and concierge services For those wary of booking private rentals through platforms like Airbnb or VRBO—where quality can vary—branded timeshare rentals provide peace of mind.

3. Resort-Style Amenities

Timeshare resorts are designed for full vacation experiences.
They often include:
• Multiple swimming pools and water parks
• Organized activities for kids and families
• On-site restaurants, bars, and cafes
• Fitness centers, spas, and golf courses
• Entertainment like live shows or seasonal events

Instead of just a room to sleep in, you’re renting a lifestyle—complete with everything you’d expect from a top-tier resort.

4. Hotel Loyalty and Rewards

For frequent travelers, hotel loyalty programs matter. Booking directly with a major timeshare brand (such as Marriott Vacation Club or Hilton Grand Vacations) can sometimes earn:
• Loyalty points redeemable for future stays
• Elite night credits toward higher membership tiers

That said, third-party bookings or owner-direct rentals typically don’t qualify for these perks. Still, many travelers find that the savings from owner-direct rentals outweigh the value of hotel points.

5. Cost and Value Benefits

Vacations can get expensive fast—but timeshare rentals often deliver exceptional value.
• Nightly rates are frequently lower than hotels, especially for longer stays of 4+ nights.
• Kitchens cut down food costs by letting families cook some meals instead of dining out.
• Larger units mean groups don’t need to book multiple hotel rooms.

For example, a family of five might need two adjoining hotel rooms costing $350 each per night. A two-bedroom timeshare unit with a kitchen could run $400 total, saving hundreds over the course of a week.

6. Where and How to Rent

When it comes to booking a timeshare rental, travelers have several options:
• Hotel & Resort Websites: Booking directly with Marriott, Hilton, or Wyndham provides reliability, elite credits, and easy customer service.
• Owner-Direct Platforms: Sites where owners rent out unused weeks often provide the lowest prices, though cancellation policies may be stricter.
• Membership Programs: Travel clubs and membership services sometimes offer discounted access to timeshare properties.

Each option has trade-offs, so it’s worth weighing whether you prefer savings, flexibility, or loyalty benefits.

7. When Timeshares May Not Be Ideal

While timeshare rentals offer plenty of perks, they’re not perfect for every traveler. Some limitations include:
• Cancellation policies: Typically stricter than hotels, especially for owner-direct bookings.
• Limited elite perks: Unlike hotels, don’t expect complimentary breakfasts or free upgrades.
• Availability: Timeshares may not always align with your exact travel dates or destination.
• Upfront costs: Many rentals require deposits or prepayment. If your travel style demands last-minute flexibility, traditional hotels may still be a better fit.

Pros of Timeshare Rentals

Larger units with kitchens, multiple bedrooms, and laundry
• Resort-style perks: pools, fitness centers, activities, dining
• Potential savings, especially for stays 4+ nights
• Predictability and quality from major resort brands
• Loyalty program earnings when booking direct
• Excellent for extended stays or family trips

Cons of Timeshare Rentals

• Limited flexibility for cancellations or changes
• Fewer elite benefits compared to hotels
• No loyalty points on third-party or owner bookings
• Availability may not match your travel dates
• Some rentals require upfront payment
• Private-owner rentals can pose reliability risks

How Our Platform Solves These Problems

Many travelers love the idea of renting a timeshare but hesitate due to risks or restrictions. That’s where our booking platform comes in.

We flip common drawbacks into strengths:
• Cancellation headaches? We simplify the process with a clear cancellation policy that protects both owners and guests.
• Uncertainty with private rentals? Our secure system guarantees payment for owners and confirmed stays for guests.
• No loyalty perks? True, hotels keep their points. But the extra space and full kitchen can save families hundreds compared to booking two hotel rooms and eating out every meal.
• Limited availability? With thousands of reservations across brands like Wyndham, Marriott, Bluegreen, and Hilton every month, our inventory is extensive.

We also absorb surprise costs like guest certificates and housekeeping fees, so both owners and renters avoid unexpected charges.

Final Thoughts: Is a Timeshare Rental Right for You?

For families, groups, and travelers seeking more comfort and value, timeshare rentals can be an excellent choice. With larger accommodations, resort-style amenities, and the backing of trusted brands, they often outperform hotels in both experience and cost savings.

The key is choosing the right booking platform. By eliminating the uncertainty of private rentals, providing transparent policies, and offering access to top resort brands, our service makes timeshare rentals a stress-free, cost-effective alternative for your next vacation.

If you’re ready to book your next trip, consider the advantages of timeshare rentals—bigger spaces, better amenities, and the chance to save while still enjoying a full resort experience.

How to Turn Your Unused Timeshare Points Into Real Cash!

If you’ve ever felt frustrated with your timeshare, you’re not alone. Rising fees, unused points, vacations you couldn’t take — all while your hard-earned investment just sits there. For thousands of owners, this story is all too familiar. That’s exactly why we built RentMyTimeshare (RMT).

Instead of watching your points expire or collect dust, our platform makes it simple to rent them out and turn them into real revenue. No confusing processes, no hidden catches, no stress. Just extra income from the timeshare you already own.

Who We Are
We’re Davie and Kirstie Beckham, the founders of RentMyTimeshare. Davie has over a decade of experience in the timeshare world, helping thousands of families get the most from their ownership. Kirstie leads our operations and service team, making sure everything runs fast and smooth. Together, we’ve helped more than 1,500 owners unlock the hidden value in their points — putting money back in their pockets year after year.

Our Mission
Our mission is simple: unlock the full value of timeshare ownership by turning unused points into effortless income. We believe you shouldn’t have to choose between rising maintenance fees and wasted vacations. With RMT, you finally have a way to cover costs, generate extra cash, and get more freedom from your timeshare.

How It Works
When you join RentMyTimeshare, we handle everything:
• Owner onboarding: We walk you through the process step by step.
• Guest bookings: We find the travelers, set the pricing, and fill the reservations.
• Support: Our service team manages communication, check-in details, and guest needs.
• Payments: You get transparent, direct payouts without the hassle. All you do is log in, watch your points get rented, and enjoy the extra income.

Why Owners Love RMT
1. Real Revenue From Unused Points
No more wasted vacations or expiring points. Every night rented is money back in your pocket.
2. Zero Effort
We manage the marketing, bookings, and guest services. You just sit back and collect payouts.
3. Trusted by Thousands
Over 1,500 owners already use RMT, with 3,000+ guests placed every month.
4. Proven Results
We’ve scaled from $1.4M to nearly $18M in just three years — proof that our system works.

Why Now Is the Time
Timeshare fees aren’t going down. Travel demand is higher than ever. And your points could be working for you right now instead of sitting unused. That’s where RMT comes in.

We’re the rental engine built for real owners who want:
• Less stress.
• More income.
• Zero wasted points.

Get Started Today
Joining is easy, and the results speak for themselves. Don’t let another year of maintenance fees go by without putting your timeshare to work.

Visit RentMyTimeshares.com and see how simple it is to start turning idle points into profit. Because your timeshare should give you more than just vacations — it should give you real value.