Recission Periods by State

Alabama – No data available
Alaska – 15 days
Arkansas – 5 days
Arizona – 7 days
California – 7 days
Colorado – 5 days
Connecticut – 3 days
Delaware – 3 days
District of Columbia – No data available
Florida – 10 days
Georgia – 7 days (business)
Hawaii – 7 days
Idaho – No data available
Illinois – 5 days
Indiana – 3 days (business)
Iowa – 5 days
Kentucky – 5 days (business)
Louisiana – 7 days
Maine – 10 days
Maryland – 10 days
Massachusetts – 3 days
Michigan – 5 days
Minnesota – 5 days
Mississippi – 7 days
Missouri – 7 days (business)
Montana – 7 days
Nevada – 5 days
New Hampshire – 5 days
New Jersey – 7 days
New Mexico – 7 days
New York – 7 days
North Carolina – 5 days
North Dakota – No data available
Ohio – 3 days
Oklahoma – No data available
Oregon – 5 days
Pennsylvania – 5 days
Rhode Island – 5 days (business)
South Carolina – 5 days
South Dakota – 7 days
Tennessee – 10 days
Texas – 5 days
Utah – 5 days
Vermont – 3 days
Virginia – 7 days
Washington – 7 days
West Virginia – 10 days
Wisconsin – 5 days (business)
Wyoming – No data available
 **  The following 30 states are home to the majority of US timeshares – AR, AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, HI, IA, IL, LA, MA, MD, ME, MO, NH, NJ, NM, NV, NY, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, WA and WI.  As such, some of the other states listed above may have very little information on time share law, or do not have any policy concerning a rescission period in their state.  I have made note of which states these are, and encourage you to contact the local state government office in those states which lack well-defined timeshare rescission laws.
***  Also worth mentioning, some states do the dates according to business days, and others do not – be on the safe side and DO NOT assume the time allotment goes by business days.