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Reviews.

TimeshareBeGone

Type:Cancellation
Rated:
The following information is for educational purposes and is not to be considered professional or legal advice.

TimeshareBeGone may, at first glance, look like yet another timeshare exit company in a space already saturated with firms that immediately raise red flags. To be fair, however, TimeshareBeGone may simply be new to the industry, which by itself does not automatically imply bad intent.

Their website design follows the familiar template we have seen repeatedly among timeshare exit companies: references to years of experience, claims of a high success rate (in their case, a stated 99%), money‑back guarantees, and reassuring language meant to inspire confidence. None of this is unusual, and none of it is independently verifiable from the information they provide.

One element they highlight is their promise of “low, flat‑fee payment” plans. While this can sound appealing to consumers who are tired of open‑ended or escalating costs, the company does not clearly disclose what that flat fee actually is. As with many lesser‑known exit companies, the lack of concrete pricing information leaves an important gap that potential clients should be aware of.

TimeshareBeGone also presents itself as an active and established brand through additional website features, including a blog and a social media wall. Upon closer inspection, however, these elements raise more questions than reassurance. Their Instagram account appears to be entirely empty, and their Facebook presence seems to have only begun in February of 2025. This feels inconsistent with a company that appears to suggest it has been operating since at least 2023.

They do showcase reviews from Google, which read as fairly standard and uniformly positive. Additionally, they reference reviews and accreditation through the Better Business Bureau. To their credit, they do appear to be genuinely BBB‑accredited, which already places them a step above many companies that claim such credentials without any verifiable profile. The BBB reviews are positive and also appear to be the oldest and most consistent set of feedback available about them.

Still, the question remains: if they have existed for several years, why is their social media presence so sparse? Are they a company that has operated mostly offline and only recently attempted to establish a digital footprint, or is something else at play? At this time, we simply do not know.

What we do know is that TimeshareBeGone suffers from the same issue we often encounter with newer or lesser‑known timeshare exit companies: a lack of detailed, transparent information. Importantly, there is also nothing in our findings that directly suggests they are a scam. This places them squarely in a gray area — a middle ground of “trust at your own risk.”

Companies in this position are particularly difficult to rate. It would be unfair to assign a very low score without clear evidence of deceptive or harmful behavior. At the same time, overwhelmingly positive reviews alone are not always reliable, especially in an industry where reputation management is common.

For these reasons, we believe a cautious but balanced rating is appropriate. TimeshareBeGone earns a 2.8 out of 5 — close to a 3, but held back by the many unanswered questions surrounding their transparency, pricing, and overall online presence.