How Quickly Do Sellers Respond to Offers on DVC Listings?
One of the most common questions from purchasers who've submitted an offer is: how long should I expect to wait for a response? The honest answer is that it varies, but there are typical timeframes, clear reasons why responses can be delayed, and steps you can take if you're waiting longer than expected.
Typical Seller Response Times
Most sellers on DVC Sales respond to offers within 24 to 48 hours. Many respond faster than that, especially sellers who are actively monitoring their listings and motivated to close. The offer notification goes directly to the seller's email and updates their dashboard immediately, so there's no technical reason for a delay.
That said, sellers are people with jobs, travel schedules, and lives that don't revolve around their DVC listing. Some check their email every hour. Others check it once a day. The platform is designed to prompt a quick response, but it can't force one.
Why Responses Sometimes Take Longer
There are a few common reasons a seller might take more than 48 hours to respond. The notification email may have landed in their spam folder. They may be traveling with limited connectivity. They may be discussing the offer with a spouse or partner before deciding. Or they may be waiting to see if additional offers come in before responding to any of them.
None of these situations are unusual, and none of them necessarily mean the seller isn't interested in your offer. A seller who received your offer on a Friday afternoon and is on a road trip with their family may not respond until Monday morning. That's a two-day delay with a completely mundane explanation.
Each Offer Has an Expiration Window
Offers submitted through DVC Sales include a built-in expiration. The seller sees clearly how much time they have to respond before the offer automatically expires. This prevents offers from sitting in limbo indefinitely and keeps negotiations moving.
If your offer expires without a response, you'll be notified. You can choose to resubmit at the same price, submit at a different price, or move on to other listings. The expiration of an offer doesn't prevent you from making a new one on the same listing if it's still active.
What DVC Sales Does to Keep Things Moving
At DVC Sales, our team actively monitors offer activity across all listings. If a seller hasn't responded within a reasonable time, we follow up with them. This isn't passive monitoring. We reach out proactively to make sure sellers understand an offer is waiting and encourage a timely response.
This matters because a listing with a pending offer that goes unanswered can create frustration for both sides. Purchasers wonder what's happening. Sellers miss the chance to negotiate while the purchaser is still engaged. Our team bridges that gap.
Tips for Purchasers While You Wait
While waiting for a seller's response, keep a few things in mind. Continue looking at other listings. There's no obligation on your side until an agreement is signed, so staying active in your search is smart. The right contract might be one offer away on a different listing even while you're waiting on this one.
Also, be ready to respond quickly if the seller counters. Counter negotiations can move fast. A seller who sends a counteroffer may be fielding offers from other purchasers, and a prompt response to their counter signals that you're serious and engaged.
And if you've been waiting more than 48 hours without any response and the offer is close to expiring, contact DVC Sales. We can check whether the seller has seen the offer, follow up with them, and keep you informed about what's happening.
How Counteroffers Work
If a seller doesn't accept your offer outright but wants to negotiate, they'll send a counteroffer through the platform. You'll receive a notification by email and in your dashboard showing their proposed price and any changed terms. You then have the option to accept the counter, decline it, or counter back with a different number.
There's no formal limit on how many rounds of countering can happen. In practice, most negotiations involve one or two rounds before both sides land on a number. If you and the seller can't find a price that works for both of you, the negotiation ends and neither party owes the other anything.
After an Offer Is Accepted
When a seller accepts your offer, the purchase agreement goes out to both parties immediately. From there, you sign, submit your deposit, go through Disney's Right of First Refusal review, and proceed to closing. The full timeline from accepted offer to completed transfer is generally 60 to 90 days.
Purchasers pay Disney's $500 Administration Fee and the title company's closing costs at closing. Sellers pay DVC Sales' 6.9% commission and Disney's $150 Estoppel Fee. Our how DVC works page walks through every step and every cost in detail.
If you haven't found the right listing yet, browse current DVC resale listings filtered by resort, use year, and price. And if you're new to DVC and want to understand the home resort booking advantage and which resort might be the best fit, our DVC resorts page breaks it all down.