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@longtimelurker wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:To summarize, Capital One's rewards cards are garbage.
A 1.5% cash back card is outdated when 2% should be the minimum value.
They don't have any transfer partners (and no points cards).
The Venture One earns 1.25% back
The Venture has a $95 annual fee for limited 2% back.
Their best card is probably the Savor, which isn't saying much.
More or less agree, although I would give QS some credit for 1.5% on transactions avoiding a FTF. But there are other cards that do that and better now.
I only give Capital One credit for having a rewards program that posts the rewards as soon as the transaction posts.
That's the thing that makes all this so frustrating. They really do have the best rewards management program on the market. Rewards post as soon as purchases and can be redeemed anytime in any amount. I wish everyone did that.
@MrDisco99 wrote:That's the thing that makes all this so frustrating. They really do have the best rewards management program on the market. Rewards post as soon as purchases and can be redeemed anytime in any amount. I wish everyone did that.
+1 so much
@MrDisco99 wrote:That's the thing that makes all this so frustrating. They really do have the best rewards management program on the market. Rewards post as soon as purchases and can be redeemed anytime in any amount. I wish everyone did that.
I wouldn't go as far as saying the best, but their management is very good.
USAA, NavyFed, and my local credit union also post rewards as soon as the transactions posts... But Capital One is the most accessible to join of the four for the general public. On the other hand, each transaction posts such little rewards (usually less than $5, at least for me anyways) that waiting a month and watching them to build up isn't a big deal.
I'm happy to wait to redeem my rewards, if I'm getting a good effective interest rate (in the form of more cash back from a slower-to-redeem cash back card, or a great travel redemption).
If it takes ages to reach $25 on a card (and someone has the card for rewards, and not some other reason) is it really worth it? If someone is unhappy about having to wait 30 days to redeem, how much is he or she really likely to earn/save with the cash over that period?
@wasCB14 wrote:I'm happy to wait to redeem my rewards, if I'm getting a good effective interest rate (in the form of more cash back from a slower-to-redeem cash back card, or a great travel redemption).
If it takes ages to reach $25 on a card (and someone has the card for rewards, and not some other reason) is it really worth it? If someone is unhappy about having to wait 30 days to redeem, how much is he or she really likely to earn/save with the cash over that period?
If someone is worried about the fractional interest rate on $25 of rewards, they'd be better off just cutting out a single Starbucks purchase in a year.
I'm pretty much flipping a coin trying to decide what I'll do with my Venture card. That and one of my Quicksilver cards are almost two years old. The APR for both of them is 13.99%. My other QS is 6 years old. That's a 20.99% card. Credit lines for the cards are -
Venture - $15K
QS (13.99%) - $23K
QS (20.99%) - $12K
My first thought is to move the Venture's CL into the 13.99% QS. That will give me $38K. But... some people here have experienced CLDs on their high limit cards. I believe those are more likely for CLs over $25K. I generally don't carry balances but there are times when I take advantage of one of Cap 1's 0% BT offers for 12 or 18 months. I found that I'm more likely to see those on the 13.99% cards over the 20.99% QS. I don't use the Venture enough and don't think the rewards are good enough to pay $95 per year. I was approved for the card at the end of January so I should decide soon or I'll end up paying that fee for another year.
"The $95 year Everyday Preferred gives you 4.5x on groceries (up to $6,000 per year, then 1.5x), 3x on gas, and 1.5x on everything else. If you're redeeming a Delta ticket for 1.5 cents each, you're beating the Venture.
In this case you're getting the equivlent of 6.75%, 4.5%, and 2.25%, which all beat the Venture. Although I will add that there are times when Delta points are only worth 1 cent per point."
So are these % only if you redeem your points through a Delta Ticket?
On Amex's site it's showing 3x, 2x, 1x points..
I'm prequallified, and i'm trying to understand this better.
@Anonymous wrote:
So are these % only if you redeem your points through a Delta Ticket?
On Amex's site it's showing 3x, 2x, 1x points..
I'm prequallified, and i'm trying to understand this better.
They're points if you reach the 30 uses a month. All of those point values are multiplied by 50% at that point.