I recently got some stuff in the mail for a Luxury black card, not sure I've even heard of that.
Yeah, I got that too. I just tossed it in the trash.
I recently got some stuff in the mail for a Luxury black card, not sure I've even heard of that.
If you cancel your credit card, you don't lose points you already accumulated and posted to your Rapid Rewards account. I opened 2x SWA cards (each worth 60,000 points) to get the free companion pass, cancelled both cards last month and still have all of my miles.I desperately want to get rid of our Chase SouthWest airlines card as it has a $95 annual fee which I hate paying, but if I cancel the card we lose a ton of our miles.
The main ones:
- Chase Sapphire Reserve - earn 3% on dining and travel, $300 annual travel credit
- Chase Freedom Unlimited - earn 1.5% on everything else
- United Mileage+ - use for booking flights, get free checked bags
Also have had the Chase Sapphire Preferred, and have dabbled with a couple American Airlines Aadvantage cards.
You can earn a lot of points through spending, but where you really make the gains is from the sign-up bonuses. Generally anywhere from 50,000-100,000 miles. I strategically churn through cards, keeping in my effects on my credit score, and maintaining point transferability, etc.
I've been actively doing it for about 3 years. I keep a big spreadsheet to track everything. In that time, my wife and I have flown roundtrip from Cedar Rapids to Hawaii three times for free. And I have accumulated enough points at this point to do so another 4 or 5 times.
In my mind, if you don't use credit cards, you are losing money. You can gain an incredible amount of value through credit card rewards. I essentially do all my spending on CC. Of course, you need to be responsible with your spending, and pay off your CC balance every single month.
How much are you putting on your cards monthly to do that?
It fluctuates from month to month, but on average around $2000 a month. If you pay internet, TV, cell phone bills with credit card, there is a decent amount each month right there.
Like I said, the major gains are made via the sign-up bonuses, which can having spending requirements of up to $4,000 in the first 3 months. This can definitely be a challenge, but if you strategically time your sign-up, it can be done fairly easily. For instance, pay medical bills with credit card (then reimburse yourself from your HSA). Or pay your auto insurance premiums a little early to help you meet the spending requirement. Worst case, you can buy some Hy-Vee gift cards or something to help you hit your spending requirement -- money you will eventually spend anyway. What you want to avoid doing is spending money you wouldn't otherwise be spending, just for the sake up hitting your spending requirement.
I was just worried that you were spending $6-7k per month to get that. $2k is close to what we are spending. I was looking at the chase reserve. Also I’m trying to find another business CC to load up on points. I’ve just been doing 1.5% cash back but might just move to getting points for trips now that the kids are getting a bit older.
My main CC that I use for everything is a CapitalOne Venture card. No annual fees, 2% on everything, and 3% or 4% back on certain things (restaurants, gas, who knows). I think you can also switch between earning cash back or miles if you would like.
You won't lose the points when you cancel the card, I recently canceled and they are still in the account.I desperately want to get rid of our Chase SouthWest airlines card as it has a $95 annual fee which I hate paying, but if I cancel the card we lose a ton of our miles.
My main CC that I use for everything is a CapitalOne Venture card. No annual fees, 2% on everything, and 3% or 4% back on certain things (restaurants, gas, who knows). I think you can also switch between earning cash back or miles if you would like.
Never pay interest on the cards, just use them to get the freebies. Also makes budgeting easier as I can see everything from one spreadsheet.
Figured this might be the closest thread to bump as you would keep a close eye on credit scores. I recently noticed a large jump on my wife's credit score (via Credit Karma). It had been very steady for almost a year between good and excellent but then jumped 60 points for no apparent reason. Has anyone else noticed a recent jump? I am wondering how much they are really needing more people to "qualify" to take on more debt.
Figured this might be the closest thread to bump as you would keep a close eye on credit scores. I recently noticed a large jump on my wife's credit score (via Credit Karma). It had been very steady for almost a year between good and excellent but then jumped 60 points for no apparent reason. Has anyone else noticed a recent jump? I am wondering how much they are really needing more people to "qualify" to take on more debt.
She probably hit a average account age threshold
She probably turned 1860 points is utterly massive. I can't imagine what would cause a jump that big overnight.