DVC Resale: Seller Banking Requests Explained
Banking DVC points is one of the most useful tools in the Disney Vacation Club membership. But it comes with a strict deadline. If you are purchasing a DVC resale contract and the banking deadline on your contract's current points is approaching before your closing date, those points could expire unused unless the seller takes action on your behalf.
This situation is more common than many buyers realize, and it is called a seller banking request. Here is a complete explanation of what it is, when it matters, and how to handle it correctly so you do not lose vacation value before you even take ownership of your new contract.
What Banking DVC Points Means
Every DVC contract has a Use Year, which is the month when your annual point allocation begins. Points must be used within the same Use Year they were allocated, or by the end of the following Use Year if they are banked. Banking extends your deadline by moving points from the current Use Year into the next one.
The banking deadline is eight months into your Use Year. If your Use Year starts in January, your banking deadline is approximately August 31. If your Use Year starts in June, your banking deadline is approximately January 31. Points that are not used or banked before that deadline expire permanently.
Once a banking deadline passes, there is no recovery. The points are gone. This is why timing matters so much in a resale transaction when a banking deadline is looming.
Why a Buyer Would Need the Seller to Bank Points
Here is the core problem. When you purchase a DVC contract on the resale market, you do not take ownership until after closing. The closing process itself takes 60 to 90 days from accepted offer to completed deed recording. During that time, the current owner (the seller) is the only person who can take actions on the account, including banking points.
If the banking deadline falls within that 60 to 90 day window, or if it has already passed by the time you start your search, you have a choice to make. Either let those points expire, which reduces the immediate value of the contract, or ask the seller to bank the points on your behalf before the deadline.
Not every resale transaction has this timing issue. If you are purchasing a contract well before the banking deadline and expect to close before it passes, the problem does not arise. But if the timing is tight, a seller banking request is the right tool to use.
How the Seller Banking Request Process Works
Step 1: Identify the Deadline
Look at the contract's Use Year and calculate the banking deadline. If the contract has a March Use Year, the banking deadline is approximately October 31. If closing is expected after that date, you need to address it proactively.
Your agent should flag this for you during the listing review. At DVC Sales, we look at banking deadlines as part of our standard transaction assessment and bring it to the buyer's attention if timing is a concern.
Step 2: Confirm What Can Be Banked
Not all points are eligible for banking. Points that were borrowed from a future Use Year cannot be banked. Points from a previous Use Year that were already carried forward cannot be banked again. Only current-year points that are still within the banking window are eligible.
The seller needs to verify with Disney Member Services exactly how many points on the contract are eligible for banking before making the request.
Step 3: Submit the Banking Request in Writing
The banking request should be documented. Your agent should create a written record of the request and confirmation from the seller that banking has been completed. This protects both parties and creates a clear paper trail.
Most sellers are willing to accommodate banking requests from buyers, especially after the purchase agreement is signed and the deposit is received. At that point, the seller knows the transaction is moving forward and has an incentive to keep the buyer satisfied.
Step 4: Confirm Banking Completion
After the seller banks the points, they receive confirmation from Disney. Your agent should obtain a copy of that confirmation or ask the seller to log into their account and confirm the banked points status. Do not assume banking happened. Verify it.
Step 5: Account for Banking in Your Planning
Banked points carry into the next Use Year. That means they will be available to you after you take ownership, but they will be under the rules of the next Use Year, not the current one. Banked points cannot be banked again, so they have a firm expiration at the end of the Use Year they were banked into. Make sure you plan to use them.
When a Seller Banking Request Is Not Appropriate
There are situations where banking is not available or not relevant:
- The points have already passed their banking deadline.
- The points are already banked from a prior Use Year.
- The points were borrowed from a future year and used early.
- The closing is expected well before the banking deadline and you can bank the points yourself after taking ownership.
If the points cannot be banked and the banking deadline will pass before closing, this is a factor in the contract's value. A contract with a full annual allocation available is worth more than one where the current year's points will expire before transfer. Your offer should reflect that if the timing situation is unfavorable.
Tips for Buyers Navigating This Situation
Raise the banking deadline question early in the transaction, not after the offer is accepted. If you identify a contract with a tight banking timeline, ask your agent to confirm the deadline and the eligible points balance before you make an offer.
If you need the seller to bank points, document the request clearly in writing with your agent as the intermediary. Include the request in the purchase agreement itself if possible, so it is a formal obligation rather than an informal ask.
Once banking is confirmed, ask for written confirmation from the seller or direct account verification. Do not proceed through closing without confirming the banking has actually been completed.
How DVC Sales Handles This for Our Clients
Our agents review banking deadlines as part of our standard listing and transaction process. If a contract you are considering has a banking deadline issue, we will tell you upfront. We help coordinate banking requests between buyer and seller and make sure both parties understand the timeline and documentation requirements.
If you have questions about a specific contract's banking situation, or if you are not sure whether a banking request applies to a transaction you are considering, reach us through our contact page. Our agents are available seven days a week and can walk you through the specifics.
Browse our current listings to find contracts available now. Our how DVC works page covers the full banking and borrowing rules in detail if you want a deeper understanding of the points system.