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Tips & Strategies

Inn at SilverCreek Timeshare Cancellation Guide

Review Inn at SilverCreek cancellation options, including Colorado rescission, owner records, Grand County deeds, transfers, and scams.

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This category is for practical process guidance. Use it when the issue is less about legal doctrine and more about how to organize, document, and communicate cleanly.

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Before You Act

Create one clean version of the timeline and document set before you send more emails or letters.

Do not let convenience tips replace legal, scam, or collections research if those issues are active too.

Use the article to tighten execution, then switch back to the guide or service path that fits the bigger problem.

Christine HowardChristine HowardPublished December 13, 2021Updated July 12, 2026Tips & Strategies

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Start with the Inn at SilverCreek owner file

Inn at SilverCreek timeshare cancellation should start with the exact Granby, Colorado owner file, not a generic "get out of my timeshare" letter. The resort's official Inn at SilverCreek website lists the property at 62927 US Highway 40, Granby, CO 80446, describes Rocky Mountain lodging in Grand County, and says the resort is professionally managed by Alderwood Resort Management. The resort's timeshare page says timeshare weeks are available, with permanent ownership described as deeded property and one-year agreements described as a week-long vacation with no long-term commitment after payment of the yearly assessment.

Those public pages are useful because they show why the ownership type matters. A permanent deeded week, a one-year agreement, a rental reservation, an inherited interval, an owner-to-owner resale transfer, a lender-serviced purchase, or an exchange-company stay can require different proof. Before paying for help, identify the legal owner names, owner or contract number, unit, week, season, use year, purchase date, seller, deed or contract form, assessment balance, loan status, current reservations, exchange deposits, and every signer needed for release or transfer.

The resort's contact page lists a front desk number, Owner & Guest Services number, and reservations contact, and its owner area tells owners to use the Owners Login for ownership information and benefits. Use those contacts to route written questions, but keep the signed purchase documents as the source of the cancellation notice address, legal owner names, contract terms, and any transfer restrictions.

If the purchase was recent

Colorado has a short timeshare rescission rule. C.R.S. section 6-1-703 treats it as a deceptive trade practice to fail to allow a purchaser to rescind the sale of a time share or time share resale service within five calendar days after the sale. The same section requires conspicuous contract notice of the written rescission right and says notice can be given by electronic means, mail, or hand delivery. If notice is mailed, it is treated as given when postmarked; if sent electronically, when sent; and if hand delivered, when delivered to the seller's place of business.

If the Inn at SilverCreek purchase, upgrade, resale service, or one-year agreement was signed recently enough for that deadline to matter, act from the contract packet. Send a signed written cancellation notice to the address or delivery method listed in the documents, keep a complete copy, and preserve email, portal, certified-mail, postmark, courier, fax, hand-delivery, or other delivery proof. Do not wait for a salesperson, owner-services callback, exchange-company answer, buyer lead, or exit-company consultation while a Colorado deadline may still be running.

Separate deeded ownership, one-year use, and lodging

The Inn at SilverCreek timeshare page distinguishes permanent deeded ownership from one-year agreements. That distinction should drive the exit plan. A deeded ownership may require title review, Grand County recording proof, association or management approval, and owner-ledger confirmation. A one-year agreement may be more about the contract term, yearly assessment, renewal status, and whether any future use or fee obligation remains. An ordinary lodging reservation follows reservation terms, not timeshare ownership transfer rules.

Do not assume that a lodging cancellation, owner portal payment, reservation cancellation, exchange deposit, or rental listing ends ownership. Build one account map that shows who bills the owner, who controls reservations, who can approve a title change or release, who holds any loan, who records or recognizes a deeded transfer, and who can issue final written closure. If the file mixes a deed, one-year use agreement, exchange record, and loan, handle each lane separately.

Build an Inn at SilverCreek packet

  • Purchase agreement, rescission notice, public disclosures, closing statement, deed or one-year agreement, owner or contract number, rules, and transfer requirements.
  • Unit, week, season, use year, reservation history, exchange deposits, guest records, owner-portal screenshots, and written owner-services responses.
  • Yearly assessment records, maintenance-fee statements, special assessments, taxes, loan documents, payoff quote, autopay records, late notices, collection letters, and settlement offers.
  • Emails or letters from Inn at SilverCreek, Alderwood Resort Management, Owner Connection, the association, a lender, title company, broker, buyer, reseller, transfer company, recovery service, or exit company.
  • Written sales claims about deeded ownership, Grand County demand, rental value, exchange value, yearly assessment affordability, resale value, fee increases, or an easy future exit.

If records are missing, gather them before choosing resale, surrender, complaint, default-risk analysis, or professional review. A useful request shows what was bought, who owns it, who controls the account, what is owed, what has already been requested, and what proof would actually end future liability.

Use the owner portal without treating payment as closure

The Inn at SilverCreek Owner Connection page says timeshare ownership can be confusing and that the owner portal helps owners understand what they own, see important information, make payments, and more. It also offers one-time payment by ownership contract number. That is useful for account identification, but a payment screen is not a cancellation or transfer confirmation.

Save owner-portal screenshots showing the ownership contract number, current owner names, balance, payment history, annual assessment status, reservations, and any transfer or account notes. Then pair those records with written answers from the party that can approve release, resale, title change, or account closure. If owner services gives transfer instructions by phone, request the same requirements by email or letter before signing documents or paying a third party.

Check Grand County records when title may matter

If the Inn at SilverCreek interest is deeded, Grand County land records may matter in addition to the resort ledger. The Grand County Recording Office says its public record search can be used to locate recorded information and that recording personnel cannot perform searches for users on those sites. The county's Grand County Official Records Search supports party-name searches for grantor and grantee records.

For a deeded transfer or title cleanup, verify the exact owner names, legal description, unit or interval identifiers, reception number or recording reference, mortgage or lien status, death, divorce, trust, estate, or power-of-attorney authority, and whether every required signer is available. A buyer email, signed quitclaim draft, listing agreement, resale invoice, or transfer-company receipt is not enough if Grand County records or the owner ledger still show the old owner.

Inn at SilverCreek transfer proof checklist

An Inn at SilverCreek owner should not treat a resale listing, buyer email, family-transfer promise, signed deed draft, owner-portal payment, annual assessment receipt, or transfer-company invoice as the finish line. The file should end with written proof that the transfer or release was documented correctly, delivered to the responsible resort, association, management, lender, title, escrow, closing, county-record, or owner-ledger contact, accepted in the owner records, and matched to the correct future fee responsibility.

  • Confirm the exact owner names, ownership contract number, account number, unit, week, season, use year, deeded or one-year status, reservation status, exchange status, and loan status before requesting transfer instructions.
  • Ask whether every titled owner, contract holder, spouse, trustee, estate representative, or power-of-attorney signer must approve release, resale, title change, or transfer documents.
  • Verify whether unpaid assessments, taxes, special assessments, late charges, exchange fees, reservation charges, closing costs, transfer fees, or loan balances must be resolved before review.
  • Pair any Grand County public-record result with written Inn at SilverCreek, Alderwood, association, owner-services, lender, title, escrow, closing-agent, or managing-entity confirmation.

Colorado resale and transfer-service rules

Colorado resale and transfer-service rules matter when a company promises to sell, advertise, transfer, invalidate, or take over an Inn at SilverCreek interest. C.R.S. section 6-1-703 prohibits false or misleading statements about offers, resale value, rental value, transfer timing, ownership costs, fees, the source of owner contact information, and the terms of a resale service. C.R.S. section 6-1-703.5 requires timeshare resale transfer agreements to describe the interest, the method or documentation for completing the transfer, fees and costs, expected timing, use rights during the agreement, who receives rents or value, and written notice to the association or exchange company when transfer is complete.

That same Colorado transfer-agreement section ties compensation to proof. It requires language stating that the resale entity and its affiliates or agents will not collect fees or other consideration from the owner until the owner receives recordable deed or equivalent written evidence showing the resale time share has transferred and the other statutory requirements have been satisfied. The Colorado Division of Real Estate's timeshare scam guidance gives the same practical warning: resellers must provide disclosures, must not falsely advertise, and must not collect fees or costs from the seller until the timeshare has been transferred.

Pressure-test exit-company and recovery offers

Grand County location and deeded ownership can make an Inn at SilverCreek week sound marketable, but resale only helps if a qualified buyer closes, any loan and assessment issues are resolved, any required Grand County recording is completed, and the resort or association recognizes the new owner. A listing, buyer lead, estimated value, resale invoice, or "guaranteed exit" promise is not liability-ending proof.

The Colorado Division of Real Estate tells consumers contacted by a resale company to verify the company's authenticity, business license and address, and any claimed real estate broker license. The FTC's timeshare guidance also warns against guaranteed sales, big-return promises, upfront fees, and resale or recovery pitches that do not prove a real transfer. Before hiring a reseller, transfer company, recovery service, or exit company, verify licensing, buyer identity, refund terms, escrow or closing mechanics, written authority from the party that controls the owner account, county recording if needed, and the exact documents that end future fees.

Bottom line

Inn at SilverCreek timeshare cancellation is strongest when the owner treats the file as a Colorado timeshare, ownership-contract, deeded-title or one-year-use, assessment-status, loan-status, Grand County record, transfer-proof, and scam-screening problem. Act quickly if Colorado's five-calendar-day rescission window may still be open. If that deadline has passed, organize the owner packet, ask the correct resort, management, or association contact for written transfer or surrender requirements, verify any county-record step, and do not treat resale or exit-company work as complete until the account and any public record both show liability-ending proof. For help reviewing the documents and next step, start with Get Started.

Use This Topic In Context

Practical tips matter because most bad outcomes come from process slippage: scattered records, unclear chronology, and reactive communication. This category should make the file easier to manage, not just more informed.

Use the linked next steps as soon as the process becomes clear so the owner does not get stuck optimizing workflow while the underlying problem keeps getting worse.

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