How to Respond to Offers on DVC Sales?
Posted On December 18, 2025

When you receive offers on your DVC resale listing, responding appropriately keeps transactions moving forward and demonstrates professionalism to potential buyers. Whether you accept, counter, or decline, how you respond affects buyer perception and ultimately your success in selling your Disney Vacation Club membership.
Understanding Your Response Options
As a seller, you have three primary response options when receiving an offer: accept, counter, or decline. Each response serves different purposes and leads to different outcomes. Understanding when to use each option helps you navigate negotiations effectively.
Accepting an offer means you agree to the proposed terms and want to proceed with the sale. Countering invites continued negotiation by proposing modified terms. Declining ends the current negotiation but keeps your listing active for other buyers. Choose your response based on the offer quality and your selling priorities.
When to Accept an Offer
Accept offers that meet or closely approach your expectations and are reasonable given current market conditions. If the offered price aligns with recent comparable sales and your timeline needs, acceptance moves you toward closing without extended negotiation.
Consider the complete offer package, not just the price. Favorable closing timeline, clean terms without unusual conditions, and a qualified buyer may make a slightly lower offer more attractive than a higher but complicated one. Acceptance creates commitment and momentum toward completing your sale.
When and How to Counter
Counter when an offer shows genuine interest but falls short of your expectations. Counteroffers signal willingness to negotiate while establishing new terms for buyer consideration. Most DVC transactions involve some back-and-forth before reaching agreement.
When countering, consider what adjustments would make the deal acceptable. Price is the most common counter point, but you might also adjust closing timeline, point allocation specifics, or other terms. Make counteroffers reasonable enough that the buyer remains engaged rather than walking away.
Include a response deadline in your counteroffer. Open-ended negotiations can drag on indefinitely. A deadline of 24 to 48 hours creates appropriate urgency while giving the buyer time to consider your terms.
Additional Considerations for Counteroffers
- Research recent sales data to support your counteroffer.
- Communicate clearly and professionally to maintain buyer interest.
- Be prepared for further negotiations and remain flexible within your limits.
When to Decline an Offer
Decline offers that fall far below market value or include unacceptable terms you cannot negotiate around. Extremely low offers may not be worth the effort of countering if the gap between offer and expectation is too large to bridge through reasonable negotiation.
Be cautious about declining too quickly. Sometimes buyers start low expecting negotiation and will improve their offers significantly. A counteroffer may produce better results than immediate rejection. Consider whether any response might lead to an acceptable deal before declining outright.
Strategic Declining
- Politely explain your reasons for declining to keep communication open.
- Suggest areas where the offer could be improved for reconsideration.
- Maintain a positive tone to encourage future offers from the same buyer.
Responding Through DVC Sales
All offer responses should be submitted through the DVC Sales platform for proper documentation and communication. Log into your seller account to view pending offers and submit your response. The system records all communications and ensures both parties receive appropriate notifications.
Your response is communicated to the buyer through our platform. For acceptances, we begin preparing purchase agreement documentation. For counters, the buyer receives your new terms and can accept, counter back, or decline. For declines, the buyer is notified and your listing remains active.
Response Time Best Practices
Respond to offers promptly, ideally within 24 to 48 hours. Quick responses demonstrate serious intent and keep buyers engaged. Extended delays may cause buyers to lose interest or pursue other listings while waiting for your response.
If you need time to consider an offer, let DVC Sales know so we can communicate with the buyer. A brief message acknowledging receipt and indicating you are reviewing the offer prevents buyers from assuming they have been ignored.
Handling Multiple Offers
If you receive multiple offers simultaneously, evaluate them carefully before responding. You are not obligated to respond in the order offers were received. Compare all offers and respond to the one you find most attractive, whether by acceptance or counter.
Be aware that responding to one offer while others are pending creates situations where you may need to decline other buyers if your first choice accepts. DVC Sales can advise on handling multiple offer scenarios.
Evaluating Multiple Offers
- Consider the financial aspects and terms of each offer.
- Assess the reliability and seriousness of each buyer.
- Consult with DVC Sales for advice on prioritizing offers.
Questions About Responding
Contact DVC Sales with questions about how to respond to specific offers or handle negotiation situations. Our team provides guidance based on current market conditions and negotiation best practices. We help you achieve successful sales through effective offer management.