Uploading Your Disney DVC Point Balance When Selling
When you list your DVC contract for sale on DVC Sales, one of the most important things you'll do is upload screenshots of your current point balance from your Disney Vacation Club member account. This isn't a formality. It's a foundational part of the listing, and accuracy here matters a great deal for both you and the purchaser you'll eventually be negotiating with.
Why Point Balance Documentation Matters
When a purchaser makes an offer on your listing, they're basing that offer on the number of available points they expect to receive. Those points have real dollar value. Annual dues are paid on every point in the contract regardless of whether they're used, so a purchaser who expects 200 available points and receives 150 has paid more than they should have for what they got.
Your purchase agreement at DVC Sales includes a representation that your available points match what's shown on your listing. If there's a discrepancy between your stated balance and Disney's records at closing, the purchaser has grounds to cancel the transaction or request compensation. The title company is required to reconcile this before the deed transfers. A mismatch discovered at closing is one of the more stressful things that can happen in a resale transaction, and it's entirely preventable with accurate documentation upfront.
So uploading accurate point screenshots isn't just good practice. It's contractually significant.
Where to Get Your Point Balance Screenshots
Log in to your Disney Vacation Club member account at the official DVC website. After logging in, navigate to the points management section. Disney typically labels this as "Manage Vacation Points" or something similar under the "My DVC" section.
From there, you'll see a dashboard showing your point activity for the current use year. Take a clear, readable screenshot that captures the full point display, including available points, any points that have been banked into the next year, any points borrowed from the next year, and points already used. The goal is a complete picture, not just the total number.
Repeat this for each relevant use year. If you have points available in the prior year (in rare cases where banking was involved), the current year, and the upcoming year, you need screenshots for each. Don't skip a year just because the numbers aren't favorable. A complete and honest disclosure is what protects you legally and builds trust with potential purchasers.
How to Upload the Screenshots to DVC Sales
Log in to your DVC Sales dashboard and navigate to your listing. Inside the listing, you'll find a required documentation section. Upload each screenshot there. The platform will show you a thumbnail preview after each upload so you can confirm it was received correctly.
The images need to be legible. If a screenshot is too small, blurry, or cut off such that the numbers can't be read clearly, upload a better one. Purchasers and our team will be reviewing these, and a blurry screenshot raises more questions than it answers.
If you're having trouble uploading through the dashboard for any reason, you can email your screenshots to the DVC Sales team directly. We'll attach them to your listing manually and confirm when it's done.
Keeping Your Documentation Current
Here's something sellers often overlook: your point balance changes over time. If you bank points, borrow points, make a reservation, or cancel a reservation after uploading your screenshots, your documentation is now out of date. You need to update your uploads to reflect the current state of your account.
This is especially important if any of those changes happen after you're under contract. Your purchase agreement references the point balance you disclosed. If you bank or borrow points without telling the purchaser after the agreement is signed, you're in violation of the terms you agreed to. Any changes to your point balance after going under contract need to be communicated to DVC Sales immediately so we can update the agreement accordingly.
What Purchasers Look At
When a purchaser reviews your listing, your point screenshots are one of the first things they look at carefully. They want to see exactly what they're getting before they make an offer. A listing with clear, complete point documentation inspires confidence. A listing with missing or unclear documentation raises doubts.
Purchasers are especially interested in points available in the current use year and whether any points have been banked. A contract with a full allocation of banked points available immediately is more attractive than one where points are all tied up in reservations or have been borrowed. If your points situation is favorable, clear documentation helps your listing stand out.
The Verification Step
The DVC Sales team reviews each point documentation submission for completeness and clarity before your listing goes fully live. This isn't an adversarial review. We're looking for the same things a purchaser would look for, and we'll let you know if something needs to be corrected or supplemented. The verification step protects both you and potential purchasers by catching issues before they become transaction problems.
Once your documentation passes review, your listing shows an accurate picture of your available points and you're in a strong position to attract serious offers. Browse other active DVC resale listings to see how other sellers present their point balances, and visit our how DVC works page to understand how point availability affects the full transaction including the schedule of fees at closing.
If you have questions about what to upload, how to read your Disney dashboard, or what any of the point figures mean, contact our team at our contact page. We've helped hundreds of sellers navigate this step and can walk you through it in plain language.