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La Costa Beach Club Resort Timeshare Cancellation Guide

Review La Costa Beach Club Resort cancellation options, including Florida rescission, Capital Vacations records, Broward deeds, transfers, and scams.

Use this article to answer one question clearly

This category is for fee pressure, financing, collections, and ownership economics. Use it when the numbers are what make the case urgent.

  • Separate maintenance fees, assessments, and loan exposure so the burden is visible in one place.
  • Understand which financial signals change the urgency of the file, especially if the account is slipping toward collections.
  • Use the topic to quantify the problem before you compare exit paths or service pricing.
Before You Act

Do not treat a loan balance and annual fee pressure as the same problem.

Keep statements, invoices, and any collections communication in one folder before you decide on a response.

If the payment burden is the trigger, calculate the real annual and long-term cost before you assume any service quote makes sense.

Charles HowardCharles HowardPublished December 13, 2021Updated June 1, 2026Costs & Fees

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Get the free exit guide and an initial case review so you can see what to do before you pay anyone.

Start with the La Costa Beach Club owner file

La Costa Beach Club Resort cancellation should start with the Pompano Beach ownership file, not with a generic beach-resort letter or a broad Club La Costa search result. The current La Costa Beach Club Resort site identifies the resort at 1504 North Ocean Boulevard, Pompano Beach, FL 33062, describes studios, one-bedroom suites, townhomes, and two-bedroom condos, and lists practical amenities such as full kitchens, private beach access, free Wi-Fi, a fitness center, pools, and hot tubs. The site footer says the resort is proudly managed by Capital Vacations Resort Management.

The resort's Owners' Corner is more important for an exit review than the vacation photos. It directs owners to Capital Vacations Owner Connect to view contracts and pay maintenance fees. Florida Division of Corporations records identify La Costa Beach Club Resort Condominium Association, Inc. as an active Florida not-for-profit corporation filed in 1981, with a principal address at the same 1504 N. Ocean Blvd. property. That means the useful cancellation file should identify the exact owner ID, contract, titled owner names, account balance, maintenance-fee status, deed or ownership instrument, and any Capital Vacations or association response before choosing resale, transfer, complaint, or professional review.

Check Florida rescission first

If the La Costa purchase, upgrade, conversion, or resale contract is recent, the deadline comes before every other strategy. Florida section 721.10 gives a covered timeshare purchaser the right to cancel until midnight of the 10th calendar day after the later of the contract execution date or the day the purchaser received the last required document. The statute also says the cancellation right cannot be waived.

Use the cancellation instructions in the signed packet, send written notice exactly where the packet says, include every required owner signature, and keep a complete copy with postmark, tracking, portal, fax, or email proof. Do not wait for a salesperson, owner-update representative, exchange-company answer, or resale-company callback while the Florida clock may still be open.

Build a La Costa document packet

After the rescission period, cancellation usually becomes a document, account, title, and authority problem. A strong La Costa packet should include:

  • The purchase agreement, public offering statement, rescission notice, and any addenda or upgrade documents.
  • Capital Vacations Owner Connect screenshots or statements showing the owner ID, contract, current balance, maintenance fees, special assessments, late charges, and reservation status.
  • The deed, recorded instrument, estoppel, legal description, Broward County book and page or instrument number, and any loan or lien release.
  • All letters, emails, portal messages, call notes, and certified-mail receipts involving La Costa, Capital Vacations, the association, a lender, broker, title company, resale advertiser, transfer company, or exit company.
  • Evidence that affects authority, such as death certificates, probate papers, divorce orders, trust documents, power of attorney, name-change records, or missing co-owner issues.

If financing is still open, organize the payoff and lender documents separately from the resort transfer request. A resort may be able to explain owner-record or transfer rules, but it usually cannot release a borrower from a third-party loan without lender action. See how to cancel a timeshare with a loan for the lender side of the file.

Verify the Broward County record trail

La Costa Beach Club Resort is in Broward County, so deeded or condominium-linked ownership questions should be checked against county records as well as the resort ledger. Broward County's deed-recording page says the Records, Taxes and Treasury Division records deeds into the Official Record, maintains a searchable deed database, provides certified copies, and processes deed name changes. The county's Official Records search page points to online records for documents recorded into Broward County's Official Records from January 1, 1978 to the present.

Use the Broward County Official Records search with the exact owner names from the deed or contract. Do not rely only on the street address, because timeshare intervals and condominium records may be indexed by party name, document type, book/page, instrument number, or another recorded identifier. For a transfer or title cleanup, verify the current owner names, recorded deed or transfer instrument, lien status, satisfaction or release records, and the resort account update before treating a private transfer as finished.

Ask for the current transfer or release path in writing

Once the open rescission period has passed, ask La Costa, Capital Vacations Resort Management, the association, or the current owner-services contact for written requirements for surrender, deed-back, hardship review, resale, family transfer, name change, title correction, or account closure. Do not assume a deed-back or release program exists unless the current managing entity confirms it in writing for this specific account.

The written answer should cover whether the account must be current, whether every titled owner and spouse must sign, whether a mortgage or lien must be resolved first, whether a transfer fee, estoppel fee, or processing fee applies, whether Broward County recording is required, who prepares or reviews the deed, who updates the resort owner ledger, and what final confirmation proves future fees no longer belong to the outgoing owner. A resale listing, buyer email, quitclaim draft, or payment to a transfer company is not enough by itself.

Do not ignore fee and lien exposure

Maintenance fees, special assessments, taxes, late charges, collection letters, and liens need their own plan. Florida section 721.15 says a timeshare purchaser is personally liable for assessments that come due while that person owns the interest, and it describes the managing entity's certificate process for current assessments, transfer fees, and other amounts owed. Florida section 721.16 allows a managing entity to claim a lien for overdue assessments and pursue foreclosure or a money judgment in the right circumstances.

That does not mean every late La Costa account follows the same path. It does mean the owner should preserve the latest ledger, demand letters, payment plans, lien notices, collection communications, and owner-services answers before changing payment behavior. If fees may go to collections, use can timeshare fees go to collections to separate account-risk decisions from transfer or release decisions.

Use complaint channels when the facts support them

A complaint can help when the file shows a specific Florida timeshare problem, but it is not a shortcut around signatures, lender payoff, deed recording, or association approval. DBPR's complaints page links timeshare owners to online complaint filing and the Florida DBPR Uniform Timeshare Complaint Form. The form asks whether the complaint involves sales misrepresentations, cancellation, a company paid to buy, sell, transfer, or rent the timeshare, the deed, assessments, management, maintenance, reservations, books, records, or points.

A useful complaint packet should show the contract, the exact promise or disclosure issue, dates, names, written notice to the company, the response received, and the remedy requested. Keep the complaint concise and fact-based. For a broader document checklist, see what documents you need to cancel a timeshare.

Screen resale and exit offers carefully

La Costa owners may receive offers because the resort name, beach location, and public records can make the account easy to target. Florida Attorney General timeshare resale guidance warns that resale scams often claim a buyer is ready if the owner first pays listing fees or taxes. The FTC's timeshare and vacation-club guidance flags guaranteed cancellation, large upfront fees, unsolicited exit offers, and instructions to stop paying fees as warning signs.

Before paying any reseller, buyer-introduction service, transfer company, recovery service, or exit company, verify the company, buyer identity, license status if brokerage work is involved, refund terms, escrow or closing mechanics, Capital Vacations or association approval, Broward recording if needed, lender payoff if applicable, and the final document that ends liability. Be especially careful with companies that confuse La Costa Beach Club Resort in Pompano Beach with Club La Costa, CLC World, Omni La Costa, or another similarly named resort.

Bottom line

La Costa Beach Club Resort cancellation is strongest when the owner treats the file as a Florida timeshare, Capital Vacations owner-record, Broward County recording, assessment-balance, transfer-proof, and scam-screening problem. Act quickly if a recent contract may still be inside Florida's 10-day cancellation window. If that window has passed, organize the owner file, ask for current written transfer or release requirements, verify any Broward record work, and do not treat resale or exit-company work as complete until the resort record and public record support the same result. For help reviewing the documents and next step, start with Get Started.

Use This Topic In Context

Financial-pressure articles are most useful when they turn vague stress into a documented burden. Once the numbers are organized, owners can stop reacting emotionally and start comparing real options.

If this topic reveals collections, loan, or affordability risk beyond a simple fee increase, move into the linked calculator and collections guidance before making a payment or communication decision.

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