Skip to main content
Cancel Timeshare
Tips & Strategies

Eastern Slope Inn Timeshare Cancellation Guide

Review Eastern Slope Inn timeshare cancellation options, including New Hampshire rescission, owner transfers, RCI status, fees, rentals, and resale scams.

Use this article to answer one question clearly

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.

  • Turn a vague problem into a sequence of documented steps that can actually be followed.
  • Improve how you organize the file, prepare written communication, and avoid self-inflicted mistakes.
  • Use these articles when you know the general issue and need a better operating workflow.
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 May 24, 2026Tips & Strategies

Want the safest next step first?

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

Start with the Eastern Slope owner file

Eastern Slope Inn timeshare cancellation should start with the owner file, not a generic exit letter. The official Vacation Ownership page separates owner resources for resale information, owner contacts, payments, RCI points and weeks reservations, ownership calendars, and rental forms. The resort identifies Eastern Slope Inn Resort at 2760 White Mountain Highway in North Conway, New Hampshire.

The owner structure also has a dedicated trust and resort-services layer. Vacation Ownership Trusts describes a Vacation Ownership Trust office for Eastern Slope Inn and Attitash Mountain Village and says the office manages daily operations, compliance, owner interests, and owner relationships. That matters because a clean exit may require resort recognition, trust or owner-services paperwork, RCI handling, current-fee proof, lender payoff, and transfer documents, not only a letter that says "cancel my timeshare."

If the purchase was recent

New Hampshire does not make every older Eastern Slope ownership easy to cancel, but a recent covered condominium sale may have a short cancellation window. New Hampshire RSA 356-B:50 says a declarant disposing of a covered condominium interest generally must deliver a current public offering statement and make the disposition subject to purchaser cancellation within five days after the contract date or delivery of that statement, whichever is later, unless an exemption applies.

If an Eastern Slope purchase, upgrade, conversion, or resale contract may still be within a written cancellation period, use the signed packet immediately. Send notice exactly as the contract directs, keep the signed notice, preserve mailing or delivery proof, and do not wait for a salesperson, RCI answer, rental result, resale listing, or exit-company consultation while a deadline may be running. If the transaction was not a developer sale, compare the contract language and New Hampshire source materials before assuming the same statutory deadline applies.

Build an Eastern Slope packet

  • Purchase agreement, public offering statement, cancellation notice, owner certificate, interval ownership agreement, deed or title records, and closing documents.
  • Unit, week, season, first-use year, RCI Weeks or RCI Points status, home-week reservation details, exchange deposits, and future reservations.
  • Annual-fee statements, payment-plan records, special charges, loan documents, payoff quote, autopay records, and collection notices.
  • Transfer questionnaire, name-addition documents, resale listings, buyer communication, rental-program forms, and owner-services emails.
  • Written sales claims about North Conway demand, exchange value, rental income, resale value, easy transfer, fee limits, or future benefits.

This packet decides which route is realistic. A current week with no loan, no RCI reservation, and a willing buyer is different from a delinquent account, a financed account, an inherited ownership, a divorce transfer, an RCI Points conversion, a pending rental week, or a purchase that may still be inside a cancellation period.

Use the resale and transfer process carefully

Eastern Slope's official resale information page does not promise that the resort will take every ownership back. It first suggests talking with the team about using what is owned, changing the week or unit size, or joining or rejoining RCI. For owners who still want to sell, it points to resale-market resources and lower-upfront-fee listing options, and it warns owners to be careful with relief, resale, and exit companies that ask for high fees.

The same page gives the practical transfer gatekeepers. Once there is a buyer, Eastern Slope describes a resort transfer fee, possible RCI transfer-support fee, a buyer information sheet, documents to be signed by all parties, annual fees that must be current, and any mortgage that must be paid in full before title can legally be conveyed. That means a buyer email, family promise, listing agreement, or unsigned quitclaim is not the finish line.

The resort's Transfer Information Sheet and Questionnaire is even more specific. It asks the seller to identify the unit, week, first-use year, RCI Weeks or Points status, future reservations, document-signing method, and who pays the resort transfer fee. It states that annual fees must be paid in full before a transfer can begin, that any applicable loan must be paid in full, and that transfers take multiple weeks to complete.

Separate owner use, RCI, and rental issues

Eastern Slope owner problems often blend several lanes together. The Vacation Owner Contacts page separates RCI space-banking and reservations, home-week confirmation for weeks owners, RCI Points home-week timing, annual-fee payments, ownership upgrades, rental-program questions, transfer questions for family, resale, death, or divorce, and general trust-office questions. Use the contact that matches the actual problem.

The weeks reservation page tells weeks owners to use the resort's owner reservation path for usage verification and to contact the resort's RCI coordinator for additional information. The ownership calendar page points owners to the vacation ownership calendars and the same RCI coordinator. Those are use-administration details; they can affect leverage and timing, but they do not by themselves end ownership.

The Vacation Owner Rental Form is another example. It says the rental program is not confirmed until a personalized follow-up message is received, describes how rental income is split, requires annual maintenance-fee payment by the January 1 due date for rental-income eligibility, and requires loan payments to be current. Renting a week may offset part of the cost, but it does not remove title, transfer approval, RCI status, or future fee responsibility.

Ask for current transfer requirements in writing

Past the cancellation window, ask Eastern Slope or the Vacation Ownership Trust office for current written requirements for resale, family transfer, death transfer, divorce transfer, hardship review, surrender, deed-back, or account closure. A useful request should identify the exact unit and week, every owner, current annual-fee status, loan status, RCI Weeks or Points status, future reservations, rental-program elections, and the requested outcome.

If the goal is adding or removing a family member, trust, or estate party, use the resort's written name-change process instead of guessing. The Name Addition Information Sheet says the resort needs completed information, identification, paperwork signed by current owners and the people being added, a new interval ownership agreement, a resort fee, paid annual fees, and any applicable loan paid in full before the name addition can occur. That same logic applies to broader exits: owner records need to change in a way the resort accepts.

Check Carroll County records when title is involved

North Conway is in Carroll County, so a deeded or condominium interest may require county-record work in addition to resort paperwork. NHDeeds.org points users to New Hampshire county registers of deeds, and the Carroll County Registry of Deeds page lists the Carroll registry, search options, recording information, copy information, and public-record access.

If the Eastern Slope file is deeded, verify who prepares the deed or transfer documents, whether all owners and spouses must sign, whether the mortgage has been discharged, whether transfer tax or recording fees apply, and what final proof will show both county recording and resort recognition. If the file involves an estate, trust, divorce, missing co-owner, or old mortgage release, resolve authority documents before relying on a buyer or release promise.

Use resale documents and complaints carefully

New Hampshire gives resale buyers document rights that can become seller due-diligence requests. RSA 356-B:58 says a prospective unit owner in a resale can obtain association statements before the contract date, including anticipated capital and major maintenance expenditures, reserve status, financial statements, insurance coverage, declaration, bylaws, rules, and monthly or annual fees plus recent special assessments. Serious buyers, brokers, title companies, and family transferees may ask for that material.

If the dispute involves misleading sales claims, cancellation instructions, transfer refusal, fee representations, resale conduct, or an exit company, organize a timeline before filing anything. The New Hampshire Consumer Protection and Antitrust Bureau complaint form can be part of the evidence path when facts support a complaint. A narrow submission with dates, names, contract language, emails, payments, and a requested remedy is stronger than a broad statement that the owner wants out.

Pressure-test resale and exit offers

Eastern Slope's resale page warns owners about people and entities presenting themselves as relief, resale, or exit companies and charging high fees under labels such as appraisal, analysis, marketing, advertising, or legal retainers. The FTC's timeshare and vacation-club guidance gives the same practical warning: be skeptical of guaranteed sales, big-return promises, upfront fees, and instructions to stop paying before the consequences are understood.

Before paying a reseller, transfer company, recovery service, or exit company, verify licensing, buyer identity, refund terms, escrow or closing mechanics, Eastern Slope approval, RCI handling, Carroll County recording if needed, and the exact written proof that ends future liability. A company that guarantees cancellation before reviewing the Eastern Slope agreement, RCI status, fee ledger, loan, transfer form, owner signatures, and New Hampshire records is moving too fast.

Bottom line

Eastern Slope Inn cancellation is strongest when the owner treats the file as a New Hampshire vacation-ownership, RCI-status, annual-fee, transfer-document, possible Carroll County record, and proof-of-release problem. Act quickly if a recent purchase may still be cancellable. If that window has passed, organize the documents, ask Eastern Slope or the Vacation Ownership Trust office for written requirements, verify any title work, and do not treat resale or exit-company work as complete until the resort ledger and any public record support the same result. 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.

Call Now: (843) 890-8839