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After a couple weeks of investigation, I think the Bank of America cash back stack is the best for me and my wife. I have had BofA checking and saving accounts for almost 20 years now, but without much money, and no Merrill account. But we have the funds, albeit as ETFs in Fidelity, to jump to Platinum Honors. Ultimately I'd like to have several (as many as possible) Customized Cash Rewards cards, and one of Unlimited Cash Rewards, Premium Rewards, or Premium Rewards Elite as the fallback card.
However, I'm a bit confused about the best way to go about doing it.
I think my current plan is follows:
Does that seem like a reasonable plan? Am I missing something?
Bonus question: If I want a US Bank Altitude Reserve, how to throw that into the mix?
Some time ago, I got BOA Platinum honor tier as soon as I deposited 300k to my checking acount (same day). Anyway, I had a Gold tier before depositing. You may call or ask an in-person appointment and ask your questions directly from a banker.
Putting a large amount of cash (>100k) to improve cashback or reward by a few percentage (that can be in total only ~1k/year) is NOT a solid plan. Move your large assets to BOA/ME, if it is really needed and if it is a low risk plan. Rolling over 401k from your former employer to IRA in ME can be a good plan (I did it). I found that transferring personal stock to ME is not straightforward and finally, I sold a few of my stocks at E-trade, transferred cash to ME, and purchased some stocks there.
To get approved for BOA CC, having a prior relationship to BOA (checking) and good credit profile should be sufficient. There is no need to have a tier before applying for cards. It is also not difficult to get approved for BOA cards, if you meet the requirements.
You can get 3 BoA CCR cards without relying on luck or product changes.
The BoA branded, Susan G Komen branded, and Nature Conservency branded CCR cards.
Some people have been able to PC another card into a CCR, even though they already had a CCR.
BoA shut down whatever was letting people get many CCR cards by applying for them directly, but the language in the terms and conditions is "This card may not be available to you if you currently have or have had the card in the preceding 24 month period," so maybe there is a chance you could still get a 2nd one via a normal application.🤷♂️
If you only travel once or twice a year, the Premium Rewards Elite could be an option, as 100% of the travel and lifestyle credits can be used on a single trip, and you don't have to pick any specific airlines. What is categorized as "travel" is also more broad than other bank's travel cards.







@xenon3030 wrote:
Putting a large amount of cash (>100k) to improve cashback or reward by a few percentage (that can be in total only ~1k/year) is NOT a solid plan. Move your large assets to BOA/ME, if it is really needed and if it is a low risk plan.
Moving (part of) an ETF from Fidelity to ML as OP suggests really is low risk. If these are retirement funds it's an extra place to look and needs to be done correctly to avoid extra paperwork, but not a big risk. I agree though, the corresponding gains might be pretty small!
Also, the overall plan puts a lot of eggs in the BoA basket.
@losvedir wrote:After a couple weeks of investigation, I think the Bank of America cash back stack is the best for me and my wife. I have had BofA checking and saving accounts for almost 20 years now, but without much money, and no Merrill account.
You may share which cards you have, your preference (cashback or travel rewards) and your credit profile to get recommendations.
It is a risky plan to get several cards from only one lender.
It is possible to have multiple CCR, as I have 3x now (PCing other cards).
Thanks for the replies everyone.
What's the risk that a couple of y'all mentioned with putting everything in one basket, so to speak? To my mind, that was a benefit as logistically it means just one place to worry about logging in and managing. Until now, for the past ten years, we've just put everything on our 2% cashback Fidelity Visa, and have liked having everything there in one dashboard.
@Anonymous wrote:
Also, the overall plan puts a lot of eggs in the BoA basket.
^^^^ This and my personal opinion that BofA is not a place to put a lot of eggs
@losvedir wrote:Thanks for the replies everyone.
What's the risk that a couple of y'all mentioned with putting everything in one basket, so to speak? To my mind, that was a benefit as logistically it means just one place to worry about logging in and managing. Until now, for the past ten years, we've just put everything on our 2% cashback Fidelity Visa, and have liked having everything there in one dashboard.
In case that one lender wants to shut down all your cards with them for any business reason, you would be out of any CC. You can find several examples like this here.
So, it is better to get cards from multiple lenders to minimize risks, due to AA of only one lender.
@Kforce wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
Also, the overall plan puts a lot of eggs in the BoA basket.
^^^^ This and my personal opinion that BofA is not a place to put a lot of eggs
BOA is a money hungry place and it is slow in processing requests. It charges for any external money transfer (inbound, outbound). I kept my checking account with them, only to keep my premium rewards tier (Gold). I rolled over my 401k from my former employer to IRA ME to keep sufficient asset for the premium rewards tier.
@xenon3030 wrote:
@losvedir wrote:Thanks for the replies everyone.
What's the risk that a couple of y'all mentioned with putting everything in one basket, so to speak? To my mind, that was a benefit as logistically it means just one place to worry about logging in and managing. Until now, for the past ten years, we've just put everything on our 2% cashback Fidelity Visa, and have liked having everything there in one dashboard.
In case that one lender wants to shut down all your cards with them for any business reason, you would be out of any CC. You can find several examples like this here.
And to be clear, that "any business reason" can include "a mistake", such as they looked at the wrong credit report and didn't like what they saw. But more likely, one bank can decide to be extra cautious, believing say a recession is coming, and drastically reduce CLs or close cards. Fine if you have 5 lenders, not so good if this is 90% of your cards.
And yes, diversity does cause some loss of convenience, it is super-convenient to have checking/saving/retirement/investment/credit cards all on one site. And if you can work there too, so much the better! But the convenience has too much risk for many of us.