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The Timeshare Presentation Scam

Free tequila or a tour in exchange for a 'quick' presentation that becomes hours of high-pressure sales. Here's how the timeshare pitch works and how to avoid it.

✓ What the scam is
✓ How to avoid it
✓ Where it happens

The timeshare presentation scam trades a few hours of your vacation for "free" gifts and a relentless sales pitch. Near cruise ports, resorts, and plazas, friendly reps offer free tequila, a tour, a meal, or cash to get you into a "quick 90-minute" presentation that becomes a multi-hour, high-pressure push to buy a timeshare or "vacation club," built on misleading claims about cost, savings, and resale. The defense is the easiest one in this whole guide: decline the free gift and keep your day for yourself.

How the Timeshare Scam Works

It begins with a generous-sounding offer from a tout at the pier or hotel lobby: attend a short presentation and you'll get free drinks, a discounted excursion, breakfast, or cash. The "90 minutes" stretches into hours, the free drinks keep coming, and the pitch escalates — friendly at first, then insistent, with "today only" pricing, claims that the timeshare will appreciate or rent out easily, and financing pushed hard. Leaving is made awkward by design, and the goal is to wear you down into signing before you've had time to think. What's sold as a savvy vacation investment is, for most buyers, an expensive commitment with high annual fees that's notoriously difficult to resell.

Where You'll Encounter It

In resort and cruise destinations built around tourism:

  • Cozumel, Cancún, and Mexico: reps work the cruise piers and plazas with "free" offers.
  • The Caribbean and resort areas worldwide: the same presentation model runs across Mexico, the Caribbean, and beyond.

The Red Flags

  • A "free" gift, tour, or cash offered in exchange for attending a presentation.
  • A "just 90 minutes" promise that has no real end time.
  • "Today only" pricing and pressure to sign on the spot.
  • Claims that the timeshare is an investment that will appreciate or resell easily.

How to Avoid It

The simplest defense is to decline the offer at the pier or lobby and walk on — the "free" gift is rarely worth hours of high-pressure sales. If you do attend, go in treating "today only" as untrue, never sign or pay a deposit on the spot, don't hand over your card, and take all paperwork home to review at your own pace. Remember that a timeshare is rarely a sound financial investment and is very hard to resell, so any pitch leaning on those promises should raise your guard. This is general information, not financial or legal advice — but "sleep on it" is almost always the right move with a contract sold under pressure on vacation.

What to Do if You Already Signed

Act fast, because many places give you a short cancellation window. In Mexico, the law provides a five-day cooling-off (rescission) period to cancel a timeshare contract — do it in writing immediately and keep proof. Contact your bank to dispute any deposit charged to your card, and report high-pressure or deceptive sales to the consumer-protection agency (Profeco in Mexico). Separately, be wary of timeshare "exit" or "resale" companies that target existing owners with upfront fees — that's a related scam of its own. Our guide on what to do after a scam covers the next steps.

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Frequently Asked Questions

The free-gift offer itself is a legitimate marketing tactic, but the presentations are known for high-pressure, time-consuming sales and misleading claims about cost, savings, and resale value. For most travelers the "free" gift isn't worth the hours and pressure, and signing on the spot is rarely a good idea.
Usually not. The "90-minute" session routinely runs much longer, the pressure is intense, and you're giving up a chunk of your trip. If your time on the island or ashore is limited, decline and keep your day for yourself.
Often yes, if you act quickly. In Mexico, the law provides a five-day cooling-off period to cancel a timeshare contract — submit your cancellation in writing right away and keep proof, dispute any card deposit with your bank, and report deceptive sales to Profeco. This is general information, not legal advice, so verify the current rules for your specific contract.
As a financial investment, generally no — timeshares carry ongoing fees, tend to lose value, and are notoriously difficult to resell. Any sales pitch that frames one as an appreciating asset or an easy rental income source should be treated with strong skepticism.