StopFeesNow
If a timeshare scam website could be any more obvious, this would be the one. Think of the classic pump-and-dump setup: a shiny newcomer magically ranking at the top of Google, clearly designed to catch anyone desperate for a quick timeshare exit. “StopFeesNow”—yes, that’s actually the name—is the newest suspicious timeshare exit website appearing in search results.

But how long has it been around? Are there reviews? Actual users? Anyone?
Of course not. The site is as shady as it gets in nearly every possible way. It's laughable at first glance, but also worrying—because not everyone will spot the red flags.
Fake “Live” Activity & Fake Reviews
One of the most ridiculous parts of their website is a perpetually auto-scrolling list of supposed clients “saving money in real time.” Names, timestamps, and amounts flash by: “2 minutes ago,” “8 minutes ago,” and so on.

Except… the list never changes. Ever. You could sit on the page for an hour and nothing updates. And, let’s be honest, timeshare exits don’t work like instant order tracking. There’s no such thing as “real-time exit savings.”
Then there’s the lone 5-star review plastered on their homepage from “LuAnn C.”—the only review that exists, and clearly written for the website itself. A few more “reviews” appear as you scroll, but they’re just as trustworthy as the first one (meaning: not at all).


Suspicious Claims With Zero Proof
StopFeesNow claims they’re accredited by the BBB with an A+ rating, and listed on TRUSTe, Yahoo, The Today Magazine, and TIME. Except… there’s absolutely no evidence. No links, no badges, no verifiable trace. And if you search for them on Google? Nothing.

Their Supposed Services Make No Sense
They claim to buy timeshares from users as a way to “stop fees” and then “advertise them” like a rental/resale service. Yet their site has no marketplace, no listings, and no evidence of any timeshare being resold.
Their Terms of Service—ironically the only section that almost explains anything—admit they don’t offer refunds. So if you trust them and nothing happens? Your money is gone.



They also mention a “searchable marketplace” in their ToS… but, again, there is no such feature anywhere on the site.
A Strange Domain History
The domain stopfeesnow.com has a bizarre long-term history that has nothing to do with the current site.
- Originally used in 2003 as a UK student blog (“nusonline.co.uk/subsites/stopfeesnow/”) according to the Wayback Machine. (Don’t visit it now—it redirects to something malicious.)
- Abandoned around 2007–2008.
- Briefly tested by a timeshare exit group in 2011.
- Reappeared in 2015 as a “work in progress” page linked to a company called Timeshare Closing Services (TCS).
- Wayback Machine stops tracking it around 2018.



TCS still exists today with a different website and at least some actual reputation, but the connection between TCS and StopFeesNow casts doubt rather than confidence. StopFeesNow even references TCS in its “About Us” section, though it never clarifies whether they’re the same entity.

Does TCS Make StopFeesNow Any More Trustworthy? Not really. If anything, the association lowers TCS’s credibility rather than raising StopFeesNow’s.
Final Verdict
“StopFeesNow” does not inspire confidence. Its services are vague, its claims unsupported, its features nonexistent, and its terms are written against the user. A “resale service” with no marketplace, no reviews, and no transparency should not be handling your timeshare.
If you find “StopFeesNow” while searching for timeshare exit options, we absolutely do not recommend engaging with them. And remember: giving your timeshare to a reseller does not guarantee that you’ll be freed from your maintenance fees—no matter what their website tries to imply.
