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Timeshare Sales Misrepresentation Review

If you were misled during a timeshare sales presentation, a misrepresentation review helps you document what happened and understand whether it affects your options.

Overview

High-pressure presentations sometimes include claims that do not match the contract — promised buy-back programs, guaranteed rental income, or false urgency. Documenting these details matters.

We help you organize your account of the sale and compare it against your contract. We are not a law firm; whether misrepresentation has legal significance is a question for a qualified attorney.

Eligibility considerations

Whether this path fits depends on your specific circumstances. Common factors include:

  • The specific claims made during your sales presentation
  • What your written contract actually says
  • Documentation, notes, or witnesses to the sale

Potential advantages

Depending on your situation, this route may offer:

  • A structured record of what you were told versus what you signed
  • Clarity on how the discrepancy may affect your options
  • Better preparation for any professional or legal follow-up

Limitations to weigh

It is not right for everyone. Keep these limitations in mind:

  • A review documents your account; it does not adjudicate a claim
  • Legal significance requires a qualified attorney's assessment

Risks and cautions

Understand the risks before you act:

  • Fading memories make documenting the sale harder over time
  • Without records, claims can be difficult to substantiate

Possible alternatives

If this path is not a fit, you might also explore:

  • Contacting the resort to raise the discrepancy directly
  • Consulting a licensed attorney about potential claims

Documents to locate

Gathering these in advance helps clarify your options:

  • Your contract and any sales materials or brochures
  • Notes on what was promised during the presentation
  • Names, dates, and any recordings or emails

Process and next steps

A typical path forward looks like this:

  • Write down what you were told and by whom
  • Compare those claims to your written contract
  • Gather supporting materials and correspondence
  • Decide whether to pursue a resort or legal route

Sources & citations

Exit My Share Editorial Team portrait

Written by

Exit My Share Editorial Team

Consumer Education Team

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Reviewed by

Compliance Reviewer

Consumer-Protection & Compliance Review

Published:
Updated:
Last reviewed:

Frequently asked questions

Not sure which path fits your situation?

Request a free, no-pressure review. What is realistic depends on your contract, resort, ownership type, payment status, and state law. We never guarantee cancellation.