Travel contract review before you sign, pay, or miss a cancellation deadline
Travel club, vacation club, and timeshare contracts can be hard to read on purpose. The sales pitch is usually simple. The agreement is where the real obligations show up.
If you have a contract in front of you, or you recently signed one, I can review it in plain English and flag the parts most likely to cost you money later.
Who this is for
This review is for people dealing with travel clubs, vacation clubs, timeshares, destination clubs, discount travel memberships, and high-pressure vacation package presentations.
It may help if
- You are being asked to sign today.
- You signed recently and want to know whether you still have time to cancel.
- You are unsure what the fees, renewal terms, or refund rules actually mean.
- You want a second set of eyes before paying a large upfront fee.
- You feel rushed and want the contract slowed down into normal human language.
What I look for
Every review focuses on the terms that usually matter most after the presentation ends.
Deadlines and refunds
Cancellation windows, rescission instructions, refund language, notice requirements, and anything that looks time-sensitive.
Money obligations
Initiation fees, annual dues, maintenance fees, financing terms, service fees, payment plans, and renewal costs.
Use restrictions
Booking rules, blackout dates, inventory limits, availability promises, transfer restrictions, and resale limits.
Dispute terms
Arbitration clauses, venue rules, class action waivers, complaint paths, and terms that limit your options later.
Sales pitch gaps
Verbal promises that are not clearly backed up by the written contract. This is where the expensive little ghosts tend to live.
Questions to ask
A practical list of follow-up questions to send before signing, paying more, financing, or trying to cancel.
Review options
Start simple. Pick the level that matches the deadline and how much detail you need.
Best for people who need a fast read before signing or while still inside a short cancellation window.
- One-page plain-English summary
- Top red flags
- Cancellation deadline language
- Fee, renewal, and refund terms to watch
- Questions to ask the company
Best for people who want a more complete review of what the agreement says and where the risk sits.
- 3 to 5 page written report
- Major obligations and deadlines
- Fee and payment breakdown
- Cancellation, refund, renewal, and transfer review
- Red flag scorecard and next-step questions
Best for people facing a deadline, a same-day sales decision, or a rescission window that may be closing soon.
- Full review, prioritized
- Deadline-focused summary
- Document readability check
- Questions to send immediately
- Attorney escalation notes when appropriate
What you will receive
You will receive a written review by email. It summarizes the contract in plain English and points out the sections that deserve the most attention.
Upload the agreement
Send the main contract, fee schedule, financing documents, cancellation form, disclosures, and any sales emails or screenshots.
I review the risk points
The review focuses on deadlines, costs, cancellation terms, renewals, booking limits, and written terms that do not match the sales pitch.
You get a plain-English report
The report explains what the contract appears to require, what looks risky, what questions to ask, and when attorney help may be appropriate.
This service does not replace an attorney. I do not represent you, negotiate for you, contact the company for you, or guarantee that you can cancel, get a refund, or avoid payment.
If your situation involves a lawsuit, debt collection, foreclosure risk, credit damage, fraud allegations, or a large financial dispute, speak with a licensed attorney in your state.
Why this exists
A lot of travel membership contracts are signed after long sales presentations, limited-time offers, and verbal promises that sound better than the paperwork.
Once the contract is signed, the written terms usually matter more than what the salesperson said. That is why this review focuses on the agreement itself. Not the brochure. Not the dream vacation slideshow. The contract.
Before you upload
Please send the full agreement if you have it. Partial documents can still help, but missing pages can hide the parts that matter.
Main documents
Main contract, membership agreement, terms and conditions, addenda, disclosures, and fee schedule.
Payment documents
Financing agreement, payment plan, receipts, credit application, annual dues notice, or renewal language.
Sales materials
Emails, screenshots, brochures, promised benefits, cancellation forms, and anything the salesperson told you to rely on.
Frequently asked questions
Is this legal advice?
No. This is a plain-English contract review and risk summary. It is meant to help you understand the document and decide what questions to ask next. If you need legal advice, representation, or help with a dispute, contact a licensed attorney.
Can you tell me if I can cancel?
I can review the contract for cancellation, rescission, refund, and notice language. I can also flag deadlines that appear in the documents. I cannot guarantee that a cancellation will be accepted or tell you what a court, company, or agency will do.
Can you help if I already signed?
Yes, especially if you signed recently. Upload the contract and include the date signed, the state or country where you signed, and any cancellation deadline you were told about.
What if I am still in the sales office or being pressured to sign?
If you are unsure, the safest move is usually to avoid signing until you understand the written terms. A real offer should survive basic review.
Do you contact the company for me?
No. The review gives you a written summary and suggested questions, but you are responsible for contacting the company, attorney, regulator, or payment provider if needed.
What if my cancellation deadline is today?
Say that in the intake form. If the deadline is immediate, you may also want to contact a licensed attorney or send any cancellation notice required by the contract while you still have time. Do not wait on a review if the contract already gives you clear written cancellation instructions and the deadline is about to expire.
Request a travel contract review
Travel Contract Review is an educational contract review service. It does not provide legal advice, legal representation, or attorney-client services. Reviews are based on the documents you provide and are intended to identify contract terms, practical risks, deadlines, and questions to ask. For legal advice about your rights, obligations, dispute options, or state-specific remedies, consult a licensed attorney.
