I have to get a cc for work to expense stuff and to book airline flights. Which one? I want to get some bennies with it. I've seen the United Airlines and REI cards that seem cool but are there any other good ones out there?
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I have to get a cc for work to expense stuff and to book airline flights. Which one? I want to get some bennies with it. I've seen the United Airlines and REI cards that seem cool but are there any other good ones out there?
Southwest rapid rewards kicks ass if you're planning a bunch of domestic flights. I built up enough between flying and cc usage to get 4 free round trips in a year :cool:Quote:
Originally Posted by Conundrum
Alaska Air? Plus miles good on American and British I normally manage to get a flight to Jolly olde and one to South America every year.
Do you have military experience?
The one that Mrs. C. and I use is from the Navy Federal Credit Union (she was in the Navy at one time). Great frequent flier benefits, usable on any airline, redemption is based on the price of the ticket at certain point levels.
Are you going to use it to jimmy locked doors?
I have had a few with air miles, but I like Capitol One the best since I can use it on any airline any time. My Alaska Air card is nearly worthless. I have to book 300 days in advance to get any seats, it is a real PITA.
I don't know, but at this point I'll take just about any one. I didn't get a card in college when they're throwing them at you, which was in retrospect, an actualy mistake. And now, I've gotten rejected from several card companies because I have no credit. Well, of course, I'm 23.
*sigh*
What are rates like for credit cards that give you airline miles?
I currently have a Capital One credit card with no benefits, but my interest rate is fixed at 4.9%. Just curious if anyone has found a credit card with a lower rate tan 4.9%
If you're a Costco member, the Costco Amex gives you cash back instead of miles, at roughly the same rate of accumulation. I use it whenever possible, including for business travel, and my cash back last year came to more than $1000.
Discover has the same benefit, on a lower scale, but you don't have to wait to get it once a year and you can credit it directly to your balance.
I'm a big fan of AMEX Rewards Plus. Double miles on stuff like groceries and gas.
Keep in mind that the standard AMEX card needs to be paid off in full every month. For most businesses this isn't an issue. But it might be if you're going solo.
some of the best cards that give you the best miles/rewards do so because they have the highest interest rates. This doesnt effect you if you pay off the balance in full every month, so its worth it if you can afford to do it and dont make impulse buys.
I'll second AMEX. If you go w/ the charge instead of credit version it'll keep you honest- and the miles work on almost every airline (unied and soutwest excluded). But, if you do need a credit line also, you can also apply for one of their credit versions and dump any unpaid balance on that.
wow, how timely. we just looked into something similar.
we had two cards - a starwood preferred guest amex card which give some pretty lucrative hotel rewards, and a citibank cash-back card which gave us 5% cash back on groceries, drugstores, and GAS!! It's an awesome card. or at least it was..
two weekends ago, my wife and I were up in VT at sprite's place and they were telling us about how they've earned a whole load of airline miles from their credit card. we were intrigued.
well, this week, we got a letter from citibank telling us that "because of customer requests," they have lowered their cash reward from 5% to 2%. yeah right.
so, I did a little research, and I found a capital one card that gives us 2 airline miles for evert $1 spent on it. It has a $39 annual fee, but it's worth it. If you don't want to pay the fee, however, they have another card that gives 1.25 miles per $1 with no annual fee.
so yesterday we applied and were approved for the 2 miles per $1 card.
we're going to cancel the citibank card.. and use the amex only at costco (which doesn't take visa.)
35000 miles for a free RT ticket to south america..
-steve
I've found it's better to take cash than build up airline miles. Unless you're going directly through an airline, the card companies generally bill top dollar for flights, plus they add fees. It's cheaper to take the cash and buy yourself. Plus, you can put the cash into an online MM account and gain interest on it until you need it.
Both my Amex cards allow balances and allow you to exchange points for cash whenever you want. I use them for every purchase and bills and pay them off each month. It's gotten to the point that in situations where I can't use a rewards card, I feel like I'm getting ripped off.
heh.. same here.Quote:
Originally Posted by bagtagley
my damned bank won't let me put my mortgage on the CC. (:
This is the beauty of the Navy Federal Credit Union card, if you are eligible for it: the customer selects the ticket, directs NFCU's travel agent to the source, and you get whatever ticket you want at the redemption level. Example: 30,000 miles = $750 ticket -- if you find a flight to Country X for under $750, you can get that ticket using NFCU air miles, doesn't matter what airline it is.Quote:
Originally Posted by bagtagley
Any military or ex-military or spouses of the same are eligible.
used to rock the mileage cards for years...running all my business expenses through them.
in the past year i've switched over to cards that pay out cash @ 1% (unless you're the dipshit type who takes, say, a "$100 hotel gift certificate" for 13,000 points instead of a $100 check for 10,000 points). they all seem to pay out at about the same rate, and there's no annual fee.
citibank platinum rewards was a good deal w/ the 5% bumps, but as noted above they've done away with that.
i still have lots of miles on american and other airlines from those mileage cards, but it's getting harder and harder to use those 'saver' (25K) awards... seems like i often must use the 40k award (e.g., on the flight i just booked to AK), which totally changes the economics.
i'm with bagtagley....get the $$ and make your own decisions about flight times, airline, etc.
I recently added this card as well. I've always only used USAA credit cards (legacy membership) which have been great as far as APR and EXCELLENT customer service. They offer miles/rewards cards as well (I actually get cash back for using my debit card with them), but it's not 2mi/$1 for their cards. With work paying my travel expenses I looked into getting a better rewards deal as my balance will be paid in full each month and was sold on the Capital One deal. So far, ok. The customer service is TERRIBLE compared to USAA, drastically worse and I hope I never have major issues with any charges etc. Calling them to deal with your card is a complete joke and after looking online it appears many have experinced major issues with Capital One. As long as you use it for expenses that are going to be paid for immeditely and never transfer a balance etc to it, it should be ok. I'm looking forward to a nice unrestricted ticket as well. Overall though so far it made me very thankful I do the rest of my banking, credit cards and insurance through USAA.Quote:
Originally Posted by steve
Actually, AMEX does work with Southwest.Quote:
Originally Posted by routter
They used to have an agreement with United too until United signed a huge loan agreement with Chase Manhattan to help with their bankruptcy. Needless to say, you can only get United miles through Chase now.
It doesn't work with American either. They're tied up with Citibank. Although after my recent AA experience, I don't know why you'd ever want to fly with them. Horrible airline.
The one problem with AMEX is that you're at the mercy of the Airlines frequent flyer programs which have gotten extremely strict and insanely expensive over the last two years. When I flew to SA 2 years ago on United it was pretty easy to get tickets and didn't use that many miles. Now it would cost twice as much and/or you'd have to book months in advance. The problem isn't AMEXs points exchange with the airlines. It's just that the airlines have made it much more difficult to redeem their own rewards points. Sometimes I wish Southwest flew international.
the only reason to use mileage cards is if you are going to make use of the mileage in the right way.
Spending 25,000 miles to get a $250 domestic ticket is a waste (1 cent per mile).
Spending 75,000 miles to get a $2,500 first class ticket to Maui is where it's at (3.3 cents per mile).
If you aren't using the miles for spendy travel, you are better off with 1% cash back.
For business credit cards for folks with good credit, you may wanna check out advanta mastercards.
I just signed up (have amex, but need visa since not everyone takes amex).
Advanta offers 1% and 5% cash back AND an apr of 7.99%
I signed up for the mileage option, though, since the cash back rewards are capped at $300 per year ($30,000 in purchases). I figure I could always get gift cards and shit with the rewards program if I don't use the miles.
www.mycardmyway.com
this is the only card I have found that has good benies AND low rates.
their big tagline is "recommended for small business by SmartMoney magazine"
LOL @ the title of this thread.
Shouldn't it be called "least worst credit card?" It's kinda like asking what the best root canal is. It's really a lose-lose.
At any rate, I second the REI Visa. Or anything that has a decent interest rate (besides only on balance transfers, :rolleyes2 ) gives you a rebate based on how much you spend with it, doesn't charge you a maintenance fee, and doesn't have two-cycle billing.
On that note; has anyone found a creditor with a % rebate CC that will still pay out the rebate if you pay your car payments and mortgages with it?
:rubs hands together: :FIREdevil
You can cash out the REI CC dividend in July I think.
no way, man..Quote:
Originally Posted by BLOOD SWEAT STEEL
I pay mine off at the end of every month and take every reward I can get. I never pay a penny of interest or other finance charges.
CC companies hate me. (:
I actually have had citibank try to get me to take a card with less rewards..
"why the hell should I do that?"
"we can offer you a lower interest rate."
"ok, given the fact that I pay off at the end of every month and therefore no interest, why the hell should I do that?"
"uhh.. well.. uhh.."
So you wait up to 18 months - great deal. Or you can spend it on REI merchandise, which is almost always more expensive than some other store, not counting Sales Tax + shipping :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally Posted by col_surfer
Airline Card? Whichever airline you fly. Consolidate your miles. They'll waive the annual fee for upper level elites. If you fly frequently for business status can be worthwhile; for redemption overseas is the means of choice - ex. Nairobi 80k miles or $2.5k cash.
If those don't work - go for cold hard cash.
My New Zealand ticket was running right at $1,625 dollars when I used my UAL card to get the same ticket for $35 and 60K miles. The United card has worked well for me since it is the only airline that offers non-stops to Denver from here, and they have numerous overseas locations to spend your miles on. Hard to find those seats though!
As of Q4 that ticket is 90k miles.Quote:
Originally Posted by uglymoney
Bastards! I got in just under their radar with enough miles left to go somewhere, at least I think...Quote:
Originally Posted by cj001f
I checked the chart though, and it looks like they raised it to 80k, not 90. Still stinks.
http://www.united.com/ual/asset/MP_a...art_060622.pdf
Updates? Looking to start putting everything on a card to earn miles. Southwest? United?
I live in California. Mostly need it to visit family in Hawaii, SLC and Boise.
Since I live in Durango, the main airline is United. So, I recently signed up for the mileage plus explorer card. Now here's a little trick I figured out. If you are not signed in to your united mileageplus account, the offer to sign up is like 40,000 bonus miles (25k to sign up, 5k after first $1000, then 10k after $20k) HOWEVER, if you log in to your united account, that same offer is 60,000 miles (50k to signup, 5k after first $1,000...) Plus, you get double mioles for each United purchase, earlier boarding, and first free checked bag.
So, my wife and I both signed up for our own cards, and with our exisiting miles we were able to book an economy flight (30k miles) to Geneva and a buisness flight (50k miles) back. FOR FREE. So basically, you can get a free economy rountrip international flight for signing up for this card.
Ok, I'm a bit slow. So I get a regular account and then sign up for the explorer card to get the extra miles?
Shit, I thought I had a good deal with the Capital One Aspire Cash (1.25% cash back) looks like they have a Cash World card... effectively 1.5% cash back on all purchases, no annual fee, min income 60k though... pretty sure they didn't check up on my income for the aspire card, anyone know what lengths they would go to to confirm the 60k income?
Check out the Chase Sapphire card. Not sure what the bonus sign up is right now, but you can transfer points one to one to United and Southwest, among other things like hotels. You also get a 7% bonus on any miles you earn throughout the year. No fee the first year, no foreign transaction fees. PM me if you're gonna go this route.
I like the swa rapid rewards card. I have no fathomable idea how many free flights I have booked with it. Every single thing we spend money on goes on that card except rent, car payment Costco and student loans. With ANY card always pay off the full amount every month. Also, even if you pay off your balance every month they still make money on the transaction fee to the tune of about 2%.
http://thepointsguy.com/top-deals/
I don't really have the time right now but a friend uses this site to get cards and miles and then he cancels before the fee at the end of the year and repeat. He has been doing this for a few years and is flying all over hell for free. Be aware that United has a 'lifetime' cap on how many miles you can earn through a card starter bonus. Good place to get the latest news on what is hot right now. Earning miles through sign up bonus is much easier than through spending. He notes that his credit score has not been adversely affected by several years of card churning.