Timeshare Tracy
When we look into timeshare exit companies, we try to give every business a fair shot. But sometimes a company’s digital footprints tell a story far more tangled than the polished website sitting in front of us. Timeshare Tracy is one of those cases.
They’ve been around since at least 2019, yet the moment we started digging, we found ourselves wading through a trail of deleted pages, disappearing policies, suspicious affiliations, and an entire history quietly scrubbed off the internet.
So let’s go in order—past, “middle,” and present—because context matters.
1. Timeshare Tracy’s Early Days (2019–2020): Very Little Transparency and a Whole Lot of Oddities
Despite existing since at least 2019, Timeshare Tracy’s online presence was almost… ghostly. Most legitimate companies accrue something—a BBB listing, Google reviews, Yelp ratings, Trustpilot feedback, something. But for Timeshare Tracy? Nothing.


Literally nothing but two Facebook reviews, both negative. One complained of long periods of zero communication, and another alleged that clients’ timeshares were “exited” by transferring them into dummy LLCs, leaving owners still legally stuck with their obligations.

Meanwhile, their website showed the classic pattern we see in lots of questionable timeshare exit outfits: three “reviews” conveniently written directly on their own site with no external source to be found.


And then there was the imagery. We noticed a few pictures that looked strikingly familiar—because the exact same photos were used by Timeshare Compliance and Resolution Timeshare Cancellation. We’re not accusing them of being the same company, but it is… interesting when multiple “totally separate” timeshare exit firms all pull their visuals from the same AI-generated stock well.


But the biggest eyebrow-raiser from this era came from some of their old blog posts—glowing write-ups exclusively praising Timeshare Compliance and Timeshare Contract Resolution. For a supposedly independent firm, that’s an oddly biased take.
Those particular blogs post have since vanished, of course.
2. The Middle Era (2021–2025): Deleted Policies, Missing Blog Posts, and an Increasingly Suspicious Cleanup Job
Up until 2025, Timeshare Tracy still displayed a handful of features that have now been completely erased:
Terms of Service & Privacy Policy
These used to mention things like customers being entered into sweepstakes or receiving “special offers” from their third-party partners. That language has since been scrubbed away.


Actor-Read Testimonial Videos
They once admitted that some of their video reviews were read by paid actors, allegedly based on real reviews sourced from partner Trustpilot pages. Today? Gone.

A Free Ebook
They promoted it through Facebook, and it existed on Scribd—but it is no longer linked anywhere on their current website.


Affiliations With Other Exit Companies
As recently as September 2025, Timeshare Tracy openly linked back to one of their “affiliates,” Timeshare Contract Resolution (TCR). By October 2025, those connections quietly disappeared.


Even their entire blog section underwent cycles of additions and deletions. At one point, the blog suggested they had older posts from around 2020; another version only displayed a single 2025 article. Eventually, by late 2025, everything was cleared out and replaced with generic “timeshare education” pieces, written in a voice that didn’t match their earlier content at all.

The last archived glimpse of the “old” Timeshare Tracy—with its original logos, blogs, and disclaimers—was captured on February 13th, 2026. Shortly afterward, the entire site transformed.
3. The 2026 Reboot: A New Face, a New Company Name, and a Very Conveniently Clean Slate
The Timeshare Tracy we see today is almost unrecognizable compared to its earlier versions. For the first time ever, the site displays the copyright of:

SAVI Collaborative LLC
A name that was never present before. No explanation. No transition notice. No acknowledgment of ownership change. Just a fresh coat of paint on a company that quietly erased nearly all its prior history.
Their old disclaimers—gone. Their old admission that they “do not administer timeshare exit services”, gone. Their old partner testimonials, gone.
In their place, we now see:
- Claims of completing a very large number of timeshare resolutions (numbers that feel, frankly, inflated).
- AI-generated blog posts and service descriptions.
- A newly written About page saying “We do not sell timeshare exit services or represent developers,” which feels more like legal positioning than actual clarity.
- Vague mentions of “Developer-Assisted Exit Programs,” “Attorney-Assisted Timeshare Exit,” and “Timeshare Exit Companies,” none of which include names, partners, attorneys, or any verifiable details.



The majority of the new website reads like it was crafted by an AI set to “generic marketing mode,” and almost nothing ties back to their older claims or structure. It’s as if Timeshare Tracy is trying very hard to pretend their first seven years never happened.
4. So What Does All This Mean? (Our Perspective)
When a company wipes its past so thoroughly that even basic policy pages vanish, it raises a real question: What exactly are they trying to hide?
We found:
- A long, inconsistent, and often contradictory history
- Disappearing blog posts and evidence of former partnerships
- Actors reading “client reviews”
- A complete rebranding under a new LLC with no transparency
- AI-generated content replacing human-written material
- No traceable service providers or verified attorneys
- No independently verifiable success rate
- Zero meaningful customer reviews across the internet
Users over the years have claimed Timeshare Tracy functioned as a lead funnel for firms like Timeshare Compliance, Resolution Timeshare Cancellation, and Timeshare Contract Resolution. Today, even if those connections aren’t visible on the surface, the sudden vanishing act doesn’t inspire confidence.
Their history is messy, their present is vague, and everything in between has been conveniently cleaned up.

Final Rating & Recommendation
We Strongly Advise Staying Away
Timeshare Tracy may wear a polished new mask, but their past—and the way they’ve tried to erase it—tells us everything we need to know.
A trustworthy company doesn’t need to rewrite itself from scratch. A trustworthy company doesn’t need paid actors reading testimonials. A trustworthy company doesn’t need to hide its partners, owners, or actual service providers.
And a trustworthy company certainly doesn’t need to eliminate its entire documented history within months.
For us, that’s more than enough reason to steer clear.
