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@takeshi74 wrote:You might want to qualify this with "in the US". The statement doesn't quite make sense without it. If a tier is the highest, it can't be comparable to another tier. We really don't have an equivalent to Infinite over here. VS is the closest that we have.
VS = (1) Visa Signature (the highest level of benefits provided on a Visa card, comparable with "Visa Infinite"); (2) Victoria's Secret (popular SCT CC choice)If you're including standard discussion abbreviations, don't forget IIRC.
According to what I've read, Signature benefits in the US are essentially the same as Infinite benefits where they're offered. But I changed the wording to make it more clear that it's highest benefits in US.
Added IIRC.
PIF?
AG?
No, not Attorney General.
LOX?
No, not the fish.
Hi, suggest if you may possibly want to add "CIT" for "change in terms"?
@Anonymous wrote:
@takeshi74 wrote:You might want to qualify this with "in the US". The statement doesn't quite make sense without it. If a tier is the highest, it can't be comparable to another tier. We really don't have an equivalent to Infinite over here. VS is the closest that we have.
VS = (1) Visa Signature (the highest level of benefits provided on a Visa card, comparable with "Visa Infinite"); (2) Victoria's Secret (popular SCT CC choice)If you're including standard discussion abbreviations, don't forget IIRC.According to what I've read, Signature benefits in the US are essentially the same as Infinite benefits where they're offered. But I changed the wording to make it more clear that it's highest benefits in US.
Added IIRC.
However, it's not the highest tier as the CSR and the Ritz are both Visa Infinite
Edit: Just realized replies are from 2016, when CSR did not exist and Ritz was still VS