Marriott Vacation Club in 2026

Marriott Vacation Club now sits inside The Marriott Vacation Clubs family alongside Sheraton Vacation Club and Westin Vacation Club, so the Florida appeal is broader than the old single-brand timeshare pitch. For buyers focused on Florida, the big draw is still the concentration of villa resorts in Orlando and on the coast, plus the flexibility to use Club Points more widely through Abound by Marriott Vacations.
The official Marriott Vacation Clubs package site says owners and exchange users can access 90+ premium villa resorts and city properties and travel across 55+ global destinations. That does not mean every owner gets every option in the same way, but it does confirm that Marriott now sells the club as a points-led network rather than a simple fixed-week Orlando product.
Florida resorts and where Marriott is strongest
Florida remains one of Marriott Vacation Club’s strongest regions. The most useful names for UK and Orlando-focused buyers are still the familiar Central Florida resorts, especially Marriott’s Grande Vista and Marriott’s Cypress Harbour, with coastal options such as Marriott’s Ocean Pointe in Palm Beach Shores also appearing in current Marriott package offers.
- Orlando area: Marriott’s Grande Vista, Marriott’s Cypress Harbour and nearby Sheraton Vistana Villages all feature in current promotional stays
- Palm Beach area: Marriott’s Ocean Pointe is still being actively sold in current Florida package promotions
- Broader network value: Marriott positions Florida as one part of a much larger Abound exchange network rather than a stand-alone state-only club
Current price examples and what they really tell you
Marriott’s most visible public pricing in 2026 is on its discounted preview-stay pages rather than on a simple “buy now” ownership price table, so the clearest live numbers are examples rather than full purchase costs.
- Sheraton Vistana Villages, Orlando: from $369 for 5 days / 4 nights, with a $199 deposit and a required 90-minute sales presentation
- Marriott’s Grande Vista, Orlando: from $399 for 5 days / 4 nights, guestroom sleeping up to 4
- Marriott’s Cypress Harbour, Orlando: from $399 for 4 days / 3 nights in a 2-bedroom villa sleeping up to 8
- Marriott’s Ocean Pointe, Palm Beach: from $399 for 5 days / 4 nights
Those are trial stay prices, not ownership purchase prices, but they are still useful because they show where Marriott is actively pushing Florida inventory and the sort of villa value it wants prospective buyers to compare against paying cash for repeat holidays.
How Marriott ownership works now
Marriott’s marketing now revolves around Club Points, annual replenishment and exchange flexibility rather than the older-style “buy one fixed week and mostly stay there” message. Marriott’s package terms note that Club Points for Marriott Vacation Club Destinations owners replenish each year on the owner’s anniversary date, and enrolled owners in Abound by Marriott Vacations elect to receive Club Points annually.
In practical terms, that makes Marriott easier to compare with newer flexible clubs like Hyatt Vacation Club, Hilton Grand Vacations Club and Disney Vacation Club. The trade-off is that the system is more complicated than the old deeded-week model, so buyers need to understand annual dues, exchange rules and the difference between home-resort priority and network access.
Who Marriott Vacation Club suits best
Marriott makes the most sense for buyers who expect to take villa-style family holidays regularly and want a Florida-heavy base with wider exchange potential. It is usually less compelling if you mainly chase the cheapest possible short breaks each year, because annual dues and the upfront purchase cost only start to make sense when you actually use the membership consistently.
If you are still comparing the big Florida ownership brands, start with our broader guides to Florida vacation clubs and the main vacation ownership pros and cons before sitting through a sales presentation.






