Hunter Liars
Hunter Liars — also known by their alternate name “Travel Time” — is a Mexican timeshare exit firm that, at least according to their YouTube activity, has been around for roughly nine years. The issue, however, starts right at the name. “Hunter Liars,” “HLMexico,” and “Travel Time” are all a bit too vague and scattered, making it surprisingly difficult to find cohesive, reliable information about them.


What we do find, more often than not, is an overly aggressive promotional push through their Facebook presence. Despite that level of self-promotion, there’s a striking absence of genuine customer reviews. For a company that claims to help people resolve something as stressful as a timeshare, we found surprisingly little commentary from users who have actually exited a contract with them under any of their names — HL, HLMexico, or Travel Time.
In fact, the only clear pieces of feedback floating around are one extremely negative review from a former employee (which, while not tied to their exit practices, is still worth noting) and a single positive review… posted by the owner themselves. Not exactly confidence-building.

There’s another inconsistency that’s hard to overlook: as “Travel Time” they sell vacation clubs, many of which include timeshare-like structures. Yet as “Hunter Liars,” they supposedly cancel timeshares. So, are they selling people the problem and then marketing themselves as the solution? That contradiction alone leaves us scratching our heads.
Their website doesn’t help their case either. It’s noticeably outdated — so outdated that it still runs on plain http rather than https, which is the bare minimum for modern websites handling sensitive information. On top of that, their site lacks a proper FAQ section and, based on what little can be gathered, they appear to be the type of cancellation service that charges upfront. Upfront payments in this industry are already a major red flag.
Taking everything into account, we feel that HLMexico simply doesn’t present itself as a trustworthy timeshare exit firm. There isn’t enough evidence to outright label them as a scam, but with more than nine years of activity and virtually no verifiable client feedback, it’s hard to recommend reaching out to them. At the very least, if someone is still considering contacting them regarding a Mexican timeshare, we strongly advise exercising caution.
