- Use your new card whenever possible. The more you spend with it, the faster you reach the minimum spend mark. Simple first step that may be all you need.
- Prepay your cell phone / internet / cable / etc. bills for a month or two. AT&T et al won't mind if they get your money early. This lets you move spending forward; you aren't spending more.
- Buy gift cards to places you shop regularly to move spending forward. Grocery stores and other retailers with large gift card displays are great locations to pick up a bunch of cards in one stop. Safeway lets you buy gift cards with Safeway gift cards, so you can retain some flexibility.
- Car insurance is an opportunity. If you are up for renewal, pay the six month rate; it is usually cheaper and you bring all that spending forward.
- Buy American Express Gift Cards. Accepted everywhere Amex is taken. Some cards don't have a purchase fee. It works out as and even trade, so you are just turning part of your savings account into Amex gift cards while earning points and moving closer to the minimum spend mark.
- Do your Christmas and birthday shopping early or treat yourself to that thing you want, but are waiting for. If you were going to buy it anyway, it's not really an extra cost.
- Put dinner with friends on your card. Lots of people just toss down cash for their part of the check, you can put the bill on your card and pocket the cash. It also saves on trips to ATMs. (I also hate to see those potential points vanish)
Showing posts with label SPG American Express. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SPG American Express. Show all posts
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Tips for Reaching the Minimum Spend for a Credit Card Sign Up Bonus
The fastest way to boost your mileage balance is with credit card sign up bonuses. I get three or more every year and it helps me travel as often as I do. The problem here is that some cards have a minimum spend before the miles are awarded. Hitting $500 in three months isn't a problem, but $5,000 in three months (Chase Ink) is a serious challenge. Here are some tips to boost your credit card spending, without buying anything more than you would already purchase.
Labels:
Advice,
Chase Freedom,
credit cards,
JP Morgan Palladium card,
Palladium card,
SPG American Express,
Travel Tips
Monday, July 30, 2012
Status Qualification Strategy Time
If you haven’t thought about it already, you should start
planning out your status qualification strategy. With five months left in the year, you are
quickly running out of time if you are trending below your goals. Also, with this much of a heads up, you may
be able to grab a good deal on some flights or hotels stays to top off your
numbers (use ITA Matrix and try to force extra connections).
Hotels are not looking so good though. I have given up on Priority Club status all
together because of their recent award chart devaluation and my lack of hotel
activity (7/60th of the way to Platinum and 7/20th to
Gold both on points earned, it’s not happening). I am
safe at Hilton Silver because I have their Amex, but Gold is too far out of reach to
bother. Starwood Preferred Guest is my favorite program and I
will pull out all the stops to keep Platinum.
Right now I have 19 of my 25 needed stays booked or completed. This leaves me with 6 stays in 5 months, not
unreasonable, but it will be a stretch.
I have been bouncing hotels all year to increase my stay count without
needing more nights. I may be able to
grab another three stays from work travel, but the last three may come out of
my pocket. Not insurmountable, but the
$40 / night Four Points by me closed, so it may get expensive to make
Platinum. It’s still better than
finishing the year at a pathetic 23 nights.
United Express ERJ-145 at MLI |
I’m doing fine for United 1K status this year. Flown and booked trips total about 96,000 EQM
(elite qualifying miles), so I just need one or two work trips to close the gap
and I am set. I did my United mileage
math in June and booked two mileage run trips to SJU to make sure I get to
where work travel can close the gap.
W South Beach Miami Room Upgrade |
Labels:
Hilton,
Priority Club,
SPG,
SPG American Express,
Status,
United
Monday, June 4, 2012
What is a Point or Mile Worth?
What is a point / mile worth?
It’s a simple question with a complex answer. A mile or point in every program will have a
different value too. Also, miles might
not have any value until a certain number are collected. Ultimately the value is different for each
person, but here are my answers and how I got to them.
United – 1.75c
Jets Lined Up at FRA |
Miles and points are a currency that can be exchanged for
goods and services. These goods can also
be purchased for cash, making it a simple equation: Total Value / Total Points
= $x.xx per point. If a flight to Europe
is $1,000 or 50,000 miles, then each mile is worth 2c. The denominator will always be known, but the
numerator gets fuzzy when you are buying awards that you would never buy with
cash. A first class trip to Europe costs
$13,000 or 135,000 miles; yielding almost 10c per mile in value! But I would never pay $13,000 to fly to
Europe, so what is it really worth?
Priceless is the best answer, but it doesn’t help with the math. I just total the perceived value of the experience
and that’s the value. The means a first
class award is more like 3-6c in value; still a good deal.
Do the math for yourself and use your answers to decide if
to spend miles or cash. For example, I
would use miles to book a $450 domestic round trip, but use cash for a $300
ticket. It’s a gray area for borderline redemptions. I’ll lower my threshold if my balance still
has a large number of miles. Also, if
your credit card doesn’t earn at least 2c in value for every dollar spent, just
use the fee free Fidelity Amex. It has 2% cash back on every purchase and cash
is accepted by any airline.
Sun Rise at ORD |
SPG – 3c
Starwood Hotel (SPG) points are my favorite. With the Cash & Points redemption option,
SPG points are consistently worth about 4c each, while full points awards run
2-3c. The SPG Amex (business card has the
better sign up bonus) earns one point per dollar and two points for spending at
SPG hotels. Points can also be transferred
to about 30 airline programs with a 25% bonus for every 20,000 points transferred. This makes the SPG card better for earning
American or Delta miles than the airlines’ own credit cards. SPG is my favorite program and currency because
of its high value and flexibility.
W South Beach Miami Hotel View |
Drawbacks: There aren’t SPG hotels everywhere and the top
level hotels cost too many points to have any value. The cobranded credit card is an Amex and not
everyone takes those (like my local liquor store). Mile awards with United and Southwest are
poor value.
Minimum balance of 4,000 needed to achieve top value.
United miles are the best in the air. They are part of the Star Alliance (25
airlines and growing) and have a few other strategic alliances for miles
redemption (Aer Lingus has great availability to Europe). Their reservations people are very good and
the website can be used to find and book complicated award trips.
Minimum balance of 12,500 needed to achieve decent value.
United Airlines Jets at EWR Sunrise |
American – 1.5c
American is a oneworld partner and doesn’t charge excessive
fuel surcharges on awards. They allow
one way bookings and have a decent award chart.
American availability, coach and first, to most places not over the
Atlantic, is second to none. Good off
season discounts and a cheap oneworld partner chart (80,000 miles in first
London to Australia). oneworld coverage
is spotty and fuel surcharges pop up on European carriers.
Minimum balance of 12,500 needed to achieve decent value.
Delta – 1c
Delta has a three tier award chart and every time I want to
redeem, my flight is in the second or third tier, destroying the value of my
miles. They are a Sky Team partner and
Virgin Australia partner, so It’s best to redeem miles with Air France/KLM or
Virgin Australia. I wound up cashing in
my miles for Economist subscriptions, 3,200 for a year or 3c in value. Not bad considering my options.
Minimum balance of 25,000 needed to achieve decent value or
3,200 for a year of The Economist.
Not Every Trip Is Glamours |
Alaska Airlines – 1.6c
I credit my Delta and American flights to Alaska. Alaska isn't part of an alliance, but are
partners with most airlines you would want to fly not in the Star Alliance. The award chart is downright cheap in places
too. The flexible earning and redeeming
of miles makes Alaska a great program to have miles in. One ways are allowed and there is a cash and
points option. Partner awards have to be
a single carrier plus Alaska to get you to the gateway city. Not Star Alliance good, but close. Other than flights and credit card spend (not
a good deal), it’s hard to earn miles with them (SPG transfers mostly).
Minimum balance of 12,500 needed to achieve decent value.
US Airways – 1.7c
Star Alliance member with a reasonable award chart (more
reasonable than UA to Asia in business).
Only allow round trips. Can’t
book partner awards online, so be prepared for an hour long call with reservations. Great deals on off peak
awards. The Mileathon promotion runs
annually and is a great way to stock up on miles. US Airways also runs frequent mileage purchase promotions. I constantly fear award
chart devaluation.
Minimum balance of 25,000 needed to achieve good value.
BA is great for short one segment trips on American or LAN. BA has a distance based award chart, allows
one ways, and has partner booking online. For long flights (less generous
pricing), connections (each segment is charged, not total distance), premium
cabins (x2 for business, x3 for first), or trips in Europe (steep fuel charges)
don’t bother. Good deals are found
mostly in the America’s. The scary high fuel charges take the value out of any BA, Iberia, of Finnair award.
Minimum balance of 4,500 needed to achieve decent value.
Other Carriers – 0-10c
Southwest will sell any seat at 60 points per dollar so they
have a fixed value of 1.67c per point (not bad really). Other airline programs can be anywhere. My Frontier miles might only be good for a
magazine subscription. Foreign carriers
could have no value or tons of value, depending on if you need to use those
airlines. If you are going somewhere only Emirates flies, then those miles will be worth much more. It’s too subjective for me to
give a definitive value.
Southwest and US Airways Jets at ABQ |
Labels:
Alaska Airlines,
American,
British Airways,
Chase Freedom,
credit cards,
Delta,
dividend miles,
JP Morgan Palladium card,
Southwest,
SPG,
SPG American Express,
Travel Tips,
United,
US Airways
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Chase Sapphire Credit Card Review
I use a collection of credit cards to maximize rewards from everyday spending. I have a Citi Forward card because it earns
5% back (in gift card form) on restaurant spending. I have a gold American Express that earns 3
times points on airfare and the SPG Business Amex that gives me 2 times points
on Starwood hotels and Open Savings.
Then I need a card that rewards me for all my other spending.
My standby card is the Fidelity Amex that earns 2% on all
purchases and has no annual fee. My JPMorgan Palladium card earns 2 times points on travel spend, but that is limited
to non-SPG hotels since all my other travel spend is taken by other cards. I decided to try out the Chase Sapphire card
with a 50,000 point sign up bonus (now only 40,000). It earns 2 times points on travel spend and is
otherwise uninteresting. The card is not
made out of plastic, but it is not gold so I’m not too impressed. It’s a decent earner and with a much lower
annual fee than the Gold Amex or Palladium Visa; it might be my go to card for airfare spending when my free year
with the gold Amex is up.
Ultimate Rewards is Chase’s answer to Membership
Rewards. It has poor redemption value
merchandise and 1:1 miles transfers to Chase affiliated airlines and
hotels (United, Southwest, BA, Marriott, Priority Club, etc.). You can also cash out points at
$0.01 each. It is a decent program and occasionally puts all their merchandise on sale to give you better than $0.01 a
point in value. Point transfers or cash (if you are unimaginative or cash is king) are the best options.
The Sapphire is an ok card that, thanks to the sign up
bonus, is going to be a good earner for me this year. I’m not sure if I will keep it once the
annual fee kicks in. The Fidelity card
is almost too good a value for everyday purchases.
Labels:
British Airways,
Priority Club,
Southwest,
SPG American Express,
United
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Chase Freedom vs. Amex Open
Chase Freedom is offering 5% back this quarter on Amazon.com and gas. Sounds great, but my SPG Small Business Amex (same cost as the personal version, but more rewards) offers me 5% back on Amazon.com plus SPG points all the time. The Open Savings program gives me a 5% rebate (posts in a few days) on my spending at Office Max on purchases over $100. Office Max sells gift cards for Amazon.com, eBay, and many other retailers. I also earn SPG points like usual on my purchase. There is an Office Max a short walk from where I work, so its no trouble at all to grab some gift cards (and office supply stores are fun to wander around). Chase Freedom is not looking that great this quarter, but it picks up next quarter.
Labels:
Chase Freedom,
Open Savings,
SPG American Express
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