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What Documents Do You Need to Start a Timeshare Cancellation Case?

Maybe you’ve already started digging through drawers, pulling out contracts, statements, and that thick binder of paperwork from your last “vacation ownership” meeting. You’re serious this time. You’ve had enough of the high-pressure calls, the rising maintenance fees, and the broken promises. You’re ready to cancel your timeshare, whether it’s with Marriott, Wyndham, Hilton, Hyatt, or Westgate, and you want to make sure you do it right.
Timeshare contracts are written to make leaving difficult. But buried in those pages are the details that can help undo them. A good lawyer knows what to look for—misrepresentations, missing disclosures, or terms that don’t line up with what you were told in the sales room. Your documents tell that story. Here as some key documents to get:
This is the contract you signed when you bought the timeshare. It lays out the terms of ownership, financing, and use. It’s also where we often find language that conflicts with the promises made during your sales presentation.
If ownership was recorded, bring the deed or title paperwork. It shows how the transaction was handled and whether it followed proper legal procedure—especially important for cases involving out-of-state resorts.
Your ongoing fee statements reveal how costs have increased over time. These increases can support arguments that the true financial burden wasn’t fully disclosed at the time of purchase.
Keep every bit of correspondence, from friendly promotional emails to aggressive collection letters. These can help show patterns of misleading information or harassment once payments stop.
Gather receipts, loan documents, and bank statements showing payments made toward your purchase or annual fees. These prove your financial investment and may reveal inconsistent billing practices.
Those glossy brochures and slides might seem irrelevant, but they’re often key evidence. They can show what was promised versus what you actually received.
At Connor Law, PC, we’re based in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, just outside Charleston—but we work with clients across the country. Whether your are in Florida, Nevada, Tennessee, or right here along the Carolina coast, the same basic principles apply: you deserve clear answers and real solutions.
We’ve handled cases involving major resort developers like Marriott, Wyndham, Hilton, Hyatt, and Westgate. Each operates differently, but the playbook is the same—make it easy to buy, hard to get out, and hope you give up before you find someone who knows how to fight back.
If you’ve already started collecting your paperwork, you’ve done the hardest part. Now it’s time to hand it off to someone who knows what to do with it. At Connor Law, PC, we cut out the middleman. We don’t sell “exit programs,” and we don’t hand you a stack of form letters. We take your documents, review the facts, and deal directly with the timeshare company for you.
If you’re ready to move forward, reach out today. We’ll review your materials, explain your options in plain language, and help you get this chapter behind you—for good.

Here’s what you need to know about your contract, the challenges, and the options available for a clean exit.

You’re ready to cancel your timeshare, whether it’s with Marriott, Wyndham, Hilton, Hyatt, or Westgate, and you want to make sure you do it right.

Thinking about canceling your timeshare but worried it might be too late? You’re not alone. To protect your rights, it’s crucial to understand how timeshare cancellation works.