Points vs Weeks
How points-based and fixed-week timeshares differ, and which model fits how you actually travel.
Compare the modelsBrand comparison
A neutral, sourced look at how the major timeshare companies stack up on resort counts, regions, points or weeks, exchange networks, and typical annual fees, so you can compare timeshare brands on facts rather than sales pitches.
There is no single best timeshare brand. The right one depends on where you want to travel, whether you prefer points or fixed weeks, the typical annual fees, and the exchange network you would use most. This page helps you compare timeshare brands on objective, sourced attributes rather than marketing claims.
When people search for the best timeshare resorts or the top timeshare brands, they are usually comparing a handful of large developers that sell most vacation ownership in the United States. The brands differ on the size of their resort network, where those resorts are, whether you buy points or a fixed week, which exchange company they affiliate with, and what owners typically pay each year in maintenance fees. The table below compares the major timeshare companies on those points, with each figure drawn from the brand's own disclosures, public filings, or the American Resort Development Association (ARDA).
One thing to know before you read it: brand ownership has consolidated heavily. Several names you may recognize are now operated by a larger parent, which changed their exchange affiliations and club programs. We note those consolidations directly so the figures make sense.
Figures below are approximate and current as of June 2026. Resort counts and exchange affiliations change as companies acquire one another, so confirm any number on the brand's official site before you act on it. Annual fees are per-owner estimates that depend on how many points or weeks you own and at which resort, so treat the ranges as orientation, not a quote.
| Brand | Approx. resorts | Main regions | Points or weeks | Exchange affiliation | Typical annual fee range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marriott Vacation Club (Marriott Vacations Worldwide) | About 90 branded resorts; roughly 120 across the parent portfolio | United States, Caribbean, Europe, Asia | Points (Abound) | Interval International | Roughly $1,000 to $3,000+, by ownership |
| Hilton Grand Vacations | Nearly 200 across the group, about 92 Hilton-branded | United States plus about 40 international | Points (Club) | RCI | Roughly $1,000 to $2,500+, by ownership |
| Disney Vacation Club | 17 | Florida, California, Hawaii, South Carolina | Points | RCI | About $9 to $14 per point in annual dues |
| Club Wyndham (Travel + Leisure Co.) | About 165 Club Wyndham resorts | United States | Points | RCI | Roughly $1,000 to $2,500+, by ownership |
| Hyatt Vacation Club (Marriott Vacations Worldwide) | 18 Hyatt-branded resorts | United States | Points | Interval International | Roughly $1,000 to $2,500+, by ownership |
| Westin and Sheraton (Vistana, now Marriott Vacations Worldwide) | Part of the parent portfolio of about 120 resorts | United States, Caribbean, Mexico | Points and weeks | Interval International | Roughly $1,000 to $3,000+, by ownership |
| Bluegreen Vacations (Hilton Grand Vacations subsidiary) | 60+ | United States, Caribbean | Points | RCI | Roughly $800 to $2,000+, by ownership |
| Holiday Inn Club Vacations | About 25+ | United States | Points | RCI (Interval International where applicable) | Roughly $1,000 to $2,000+, by ownership |
| WorldMark by Wyndham (Travel + Leisure Co.) | About 90 owned resorts | United States West, plus international affiliates | Credits (points) | RCI | Roughly $800 to $2,000+, by credits owned |
| Diamond Resorts (Hilton Grand Vacations subsidiary) | Part of the Hilton Grand Vacations group of nearly 200 | United States, Europe | Points | Interval International (historically), integrating into Hilton Grand Vacations | Roughly $1,000 to $2,500+, by ownership |
The industry average is $1,480 average annual maintenance fee in 2024, up 17.5% in one year, according to ARDA's 2025 State of the Vacation Timeshare Industry report. That figure is a useful yardstick: a brand whose fees sit far above it is worth a closer look before you buy.
Two waves of consolidation reshaped the comparison above, and they matter because the parent company sets the exchange affiliation and club rules:
If you buy on the resale market, the brand on the deed may behave differently from what its current marketing describes, because the program changed under new ownership. Always confirm the current club and exchange rules with the developer.
No brand wins for everyone, which is why a ranked list of the best timeshare companies tends to mislead. A few sourced facts help you match a brand to your own needs:
Most of the major brands have moved owners onto a points system, where you receive an annual allotment and spend it on stays of varying length, season, and unit size. A points program is more flexible than a fixed week, but it adds club rules and booking windows you need to learn. The Westin and Sheraton (Vistana) brands are notable for still carrying legacy fixed and floating weeks alongside their points option. The mechanics of each brand's points are proprietary, so rather than reproduce any company's points chart, we link out to the official one and explain the general model in our how timeshare points work guide.
Annual maintenance fees are the recurring cost that surprises most owners, and they rise every year. Individual brand fees depend on how many points or weeks you own and at which resort, which is why the ranges in the table are wide. Disney publishes per-point dues by resort, roughly $9 to $14 per point for the 2025 dues year, so a 150-point contract runs well over $1,000. For the full picture of upfront and ongoing costs, see our timeshare cost guide and our maintenance fees guide.
Work from your own situation rather than a brand ranking:
There is no universal best timeshare brand, only the brand that best fits your travel goals, budget, and tolerance for annual fees. If you already own with one of these brands and want to leave, see our guides to getting out of a Wyndham timeshare and getting out of a Hilton Grand Vacations timeshare.
The neutral guides that go with this one.
How points-based and fixed-week timeshares differ, and which model fits how you actually travel.
Compare the modelsHow RCI and Interval International work, which brands use each, and what trading costs.
See how exchange worksThe upfront price, annual maintenance fees, and the recurring costs to weigh before you buy any brand.
Break down the costAmerican Resort Development Association (ARDA), 2025 State of the Vacation Timeshare Industry, United States edition (arda.org), industry average annual maintenance fee of $1,480 in 2024, reviewed June 2026. Marriott Vacations Worldwide Corporation, SEC Form 10-Q and 2025 press releases (sec.gov), roughly 120 vacation ownership resorts, an exchange network of more than 3,200 affiliated resorts, and about 700,000 owner families. Hilton Grand Vacations Inc., SEC filings and corporate disclosures (sec.gov, hiltongrandvacations.com), nearly 200 properties including the Diamond Resorts and Bluegreen brands; Bluegreen acquisition completed January 2024, Diamond Resorts acquired 2021. Disney Vacation Club official destinations list and annual dues pages (disneyvacationclub.disney.go.com), 17 resorts and per-point dues for the 2025 dues year. RCI official club pages for Club Wyndham, WorldMark by Wyndham, Bluegreen Vacation Club, and Holiday Inn Club (rci.com). Hyatt Vacation Club and Interval International program pages (hyattvacationclub.com). Brand resort counts and exchange affiliations verified against each company's official site on June 18, 2026; treat all annual fee ranges as approximate and confirm current figures with the developer. Last reviewed June 18, 2026.