Consumer Consulting Group
Timeshare Debt Cancellation and Their Web of Deception
Timeshare Debt Cancellation was once marketed as a timeshare exit firm, originally connected to the website Timeshare Exit Bureau. According to their Facebook page, they surfaced around October 2019, peaked in activity during the height of COVID in 2020, and remained active for several years—until they quietly vanished.
Today, the traces of Timeshare Debt Cancellation are practically nonexistent. Their website no longer exists, reviews are scarce and outdated (mostly from 2020), and their Facebook page has been abandoned. Even attempts to dig through archived versions of their site reveal little to no useful information.


In short: this was yet another timeshare exit outfit that appeared suddenly, collected desperate clients, and then dissolved into thin air—leaving people empty-handed and frustrated.
But the story doesn’t end there. Timeshare Debt Cancellation was not just a standalone flop. Evidence suggests they were tied to several other “timeshare exit” fronts, all of which have since gone under as well.
The Rabbit Hole of Related Firms
The first trail begins with Timeshare Debt Cancellation’s Facebook “mentions” section, where they are linked to another outfit: Timeshare Exit Programs. This company also launched around 2019. At first glance, it may look like a simple affiliation, but the similarities are far too striking to ignore.

For instance, one of Timeshare Debt Cancellation’s final posts was a generic update: “Good Afternoon! The week is almost over…”. That would be unremarkable—except the exact same post, with identical wording and imagery, appeared as Timeshare Exit Programs’ last update on October 5th, 2023. Not only the same date, but also the exact same hour.


The pattern repeats. Another September 2023 post is mirrored on both pages. Even more telling, the posts sometimes included the tag @ConsumerConsultingGroup—a name that becomes critical to the larger picture.


Adding to the suspicion, a 2021 review of Timeshare Exit Programs (later updated in 2024) exposed the operation as a scam. That reviewer explicitly mentioned “Consumer Consulting Group,” firmly linking the two.

Consumer Consulting Group Comes Into Focus
So, what’s the deal with Consumer Consulting Group (CCG)? Compared to the other shells, CCG was the more visible face. They had listings across Yelp, Trustpilot, ConsumerAffairs, and the BBB—but instead of credibility, these reviews paint a wall of complaints. Customers repeatedly accuse them of taking money without delivering results.
On social media, their pattern persisted. Identical posts shared across multiple “different” firms confirmed the umbrella connection. Unlike the smaller fronts, CCG’s Instagram account remained active until May 10th, 2024, despite their associated companies already leaving clients in the cold a year earlier.

The Bigger Picture: A Chain of Failed Exits
Whether Consumer Consulting Group was the original puppet master or just another layer of the façade remains unclear. What is clear is that CCG, Timeshare Debt Cancellation, Timeshare Exit Programs, and likely other unnamed fronts operated in concert, recycling posts, branding, and hollow promises while leaving customers stranded in their timeshare contracts.
Every available review and complaint paints them as a scam, with no surviving evidence of successful exits or satisfied clients. There is no trace of any legitimate industry recognition, partnerships, or positive impact that could redeem their reputation.
Even the Better Business Bureau flags them as “out of business.” Despite this, complaints continue to trickle in well into 2025. Notably, CCG’s last recorded response to any customer was on November 14th, 2024—after which, silence.












Conclusion: A Firm to Avoid at All Costs
When the dust settles, Consumer Consulting Group and its connected fronts embody everything that makes consumers distrust timeshare exit companies. They launched with slick marketing, multiplied through duplicate brands, and collapsed with no accountability—leaving behind nothing but angry customers and unanswered complaints.
If you come across Consumer Consulting Group or any of its associated firms under a new disguise, consider this your warning: steer clear.