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Normally who need 2% cash back on anything, already have some cards for grocery, dining, gas, amazon, travel...
They just need something better than 1% or 1.5% for any purchases not on the list.
@Anonymous wrote:I also checked Fidelity Rewards card, at this page: https://www.fidelity.com/cash-management/faqs-rewards-credit-cards
"In order to redeem Points for a cash deposit into your eligible Fidelity account(s), you must have a minimum of 5,000 Points. However, rewards offers begin at 2,500 Points if you choose to redeem your Points for travel options, merchandise, gift cards, or a statement credit."
that means $50 to Fidelity account or $25 to statement credit. Still sucks
It is worse than that makes it look, as if you redeem for a statement credit, you only get half the value (otherwise why bother redeeming to Fidelity!) On the old Fidelity Amex, there was a point where it became 2% for both, a few hundred dollars. Not sure if that is still true on this card.
I replaced my Fidelity spend with Paypal. Just depends on what annoys you, as, as stated, all have some issue relative to others.
But to me, the issue with replacing with QS is a 25% reduction in rewards, which, for me, is way too much for any added convenience!
@Anonymous wrote:
My QuickSilver may only be 1.5% but cash back posts when the purchase does and has no minimum redemptions, they have an excellent app, disputes with Capital One are very easy (I have had to deal with them twice), they have transaction notifications and did I mention a great app?
They pull all 3 bureaus for a card too !
@longtimelurker
My English may not be good enough...
I think you misunderstood this expression. What it actually said is that if you want to use cashback to offset your consumption, you don't have to wait until it accumulates to $50, as long as it reaches $25.
@Kforce wrote:
@Anonymous wrote:
My QuickSilver may only be 1.5% but cash back posts when the purchase does and has no minimum redemptions, they have an excellent app, disputes with Capital One are very easy (I have had to deal with them twice), they have transaction notifications and did I mention a great app?They pull all 3 bureaus for a card too !
That doesn’t bother me. They gave me my first $10K SL in June for that pull on each bureau.
@Anonymous wrote:My English may not be good enough...
I think you misunderstood this expression. What it actually said is that if you want to use cashback to offset your consumption, you don't have to wait until it accumulates to $50, as long as it reaches $25.
If this was to me: The thresholds are actually points, 5000 (earned by spending $2,500) for movement to Fidelity, 2500 points (earned by spending $1250) for other redemptions. However, if you redeem the 5000 points to a Fidelity account, you will get $50. If you redeem 2,500 points for statement credit, you will get $12.50 (so 1% earned on the $1250 spent). So half the points give a quarter of the rewards
“If you redeem 2,500 points for statement credit, you will get $12.50”
There is no problem before this sentence, but I don't know how you got this sentence.
It seems that you redeem 2,500 points for statement credit, you should get $25.
@wasCB14 wrote:Speaking as someone who generally redeems in larger "increments" of flights and hotels...
If accumulating $20 or $25 of cash back on a card will be difficult, you might reconsider whether the card will really be worthwhile. You might instead go for something with a nice fat bonus.
This exactly. I don't love redemption thresholds anymore than anyone else, but if you are barely able to reach $25 with a card, you're probably spreading yourself too thin.