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I live near a mid-market airport that offers all airlines but most are SW and Delta. I am wanting to pick up a Delta card, and am deciding between Gold and Platinum. Those of you who chose between them what helped you make that decision?
@summerterrace wrote:I live near a mid-market airport that offers all airlines but most are SW and Delta. I am wanting to pick up a Delta card, and am deciding between Gold and Platinum. Those of you who chose between them what helped you make that decision?
I'm curious about this too. SW and Delta are the major ones here as well. How often do you fly?
I would lean toward Platinum for the companion pass, which would likely cover the annual fee.
Obviously you would weigh the perks of each card against the AF and see which one best suits you and your needs, then app for that one. Each individual's experiences are different and doesn't apply to everyone. If in doubt start big with Plat and if it doesn't work out as planned then go for the Gold later on, It's not like it's one or the other for life.
@Anonymous wrote:Obviously you would way the perks of each card against the AF and see which one best suits you and your needs, then app for that one. Each individual's experiences are different and doesn't apply to everyone. If in doubt start big with Plat and if it doesn't work out as planned then go for the Gold later on, It's not like it's one or the other for life.
Yes I was just curious to hear how others decided.
If you fly with a companion at least once a year, Platinum or Reserve are a much better option than the Gold since the AF is more than paid for that way. If you have or want elite status and can do a fairly significant amount of spending each year ($25k or $30k increments), Platinum and Reserve are generally going to be better options than the Gold. If you want upgrades, Reserve is almost a must. If you want to do Pay With Miles, you will need Platinum or Reserve.
Gold can be a good entry to see if SkyMiles cards make sense though, and as long as you and/or up to 8 companions would pay for baggage fees on at least 4 bags a year, it's not a loss. There are usually upgrade offers later on after a year if you would prefer not to have another new account (although you would miss out on higher new card Welcome Offers) and the fee is almost always waived the first year for Gold.
How often do you fly?
Do you usually fly alone or with a companion?
How much yearly spend do you expect to place on the card - corrolary is how motivated are you to accumulate Delta miles from normal spend?
Do you have another card that will cover the cost of a TSA Pre/Global Entry application?
How much of a stretch would it be to spend $3K on the card in 3 months vs $2K on the card in 3 months?
Answering these questions to yourself should help guide you as to which card would be the better fit.
One question, tangentially related but possibly helpful in deciding whether the platinum is the better option. I think I know the answer to this (thinking it's a No), but I've never come across it being explicitly answered. With the annual companion passes: when one receives it on the anniversary, if it isn't used in the next year, is it kept and another granted on the next anniversary? Or is it forfeit and "replaced" by a new certificate? I've wondered this in the past and never got around to asking. It'd be great if they weren't expiring, and a cardmember could save a few of them over the course of a few years to use together, but I'm assuming that's not how it works.
@summerterrace wrote:I live near a mid-market airport that offers all airlines but most are SW and Delta. I am wanting to pick up a Delta card, and am deciding between Gold and Platinum. Those of you who chose between them what helped you make that decision?
I'm a temporary Delta Gold through status match (figured I'd take a free sample in 2021 and see how I liked it, since due to pandemic circumstances I can requalify as an elite on Alaska for 2022 with very little effort). My home airport is SEA, and domestic airline usage for me on paid, non-award fares generally goes:
1. Alaska
2. T-Delta and Southwest
4. American
5. United or Spirit maybe once every other year on a VERY good fare
Delta usually throws a few thousand miles at me every year for living in Seattle, enough for a cheap one way somewhere every so often, and their planes and relibaility are pretty good, so I'm willing to fly them occasionally. If Alaska starts really crapping the bed with program changes I'll end up complete free agent (already I play hooky more than I used to because you can't get upgrades on the cheapest fares).
I picked up the Delta Gold Amex yesterday because I don't wanna spend ALL the monies on my Delta AMEX to get an MQD waiver (and I'd need it to requalify for Gold or even Silver), and there's an offer for $200 statement credit with Delta purchase + 70k miles on $2k spend, first year AF is waived. Basically that's a 45-50%ish rebate on spend with a pretty low bar to hit, even if you don't value Delta miles much above a penny a mile (I don't- I place no faith in programs without award charts). I think I'll likely spend those down with Pay With Miles or on awards for a while. Plan is to retention offer the card in 2022, if I don't like the offer it becomes a Blue if I still want PWM, with an outside shot of taking an upgrade offer to Platinum if it makes sense, but it probably won't though. Between my Southwest and Delta mileage balances (plus some Delta gift cards I picked up on an AMEX offer, plus the airline misc fee reimbursements on my Hilton Aspire + AMEX Gold) I'll be able to do a lot of domestic travel in 2021-2022 for essentially $0 in further spend beyond credit card renewals for a while (and I'll figure out requalifying on Alaska for 2023 as 2022 goes along).
If you think you can get outsize value from the Platinum card (MQD waiver + MQD bonuses, companion certificate at renewal) it can make more sense than a Gold, but you probably need to be an actual "I'm going for status" flier for that (or flying some hyper-expensive coach fare with a companion once a year). If you're a more casual flier who just wants a SUB and free bags the Gold is probably more your speed.
@Anonymous wrote:One question, tangentially related but possibly helpful in deciding whether the platinum is the better option. I think I know the answer to this (thinking it's a No), but I've never come across it being explicitly answered. With the annual companion passes: when one receives it on the anniversary, if it isn't used in the next year, is it kept and another granted on the next anniversary? Or is it forfeit and "replaced" by a new certificate? I've wondered this in the past and never got around to asking. It'd be great if they weren't expiring, and a cardmember could save a few of them over the course of a few years to use together, but I'm assuming that's not how it works.
The certificates typically expire one year from issue. Due to the pandemic, they keep getting extended though. I currently have six of them in my SkyMiles account from 2019 and 2020 renewals on 3 cards and they all currently expire 30 June 2022. From my understanding, any new ones issued in 2021 will be valid through 31 December 2022.
@notmyrealname23 two quick things I wanted to address.
While Delta does not have an award chart, main cabin award fares are at worst essentially tied to revenue prices and would yield a minimum value of 1.2 cents per mile. Paid upgrades to Comfort+, Premium, First, and Delta One seem to be pegged at 1.15 cents per mile. For PWM, they are 1 cent if redeemed in 5k blocks (it's 5000 per $50, so $201 would require 25k, and it's better to use 20k to cover $200 and pay the $1 out of pocket so you don't waste 5k SkyMiles on $1 in this example). PWM really only makes sense if you need MQMs, although for 2021 award fares are earning MQMs and MQDs (a first for a US carrier). But with frequent award fare sales, you can do much better than 1.2 cents.
As for hyper-expensive tickets needed for companion fares, it's actually the exact opposite. All L, U, X, T and V fares are eligible for the companion tickets - those are the discounted cheap main cabin fares. It's actually the expensive last-minute tickets (like full fare Y) that are excluded from companion fares. Similarly for the Delta Reserve pass, it includes those, the C+ W fares, and the cheaper First Class tickets (not full fare J and F fares).