+1. Even the people who are playing the credit card game are likely spending a lot of money for the "free" travel because of the large spend requirements. For most people, saving for a big trip takes time, it's not something they can do multiple times per year simply by forgoing other luxury items. I think this board in particular is distorted. |
To the extent that they are speninding for the sake of travel points, yes. But one of the rules to the game is that you never spend differently than how you would have. Why does it matter if I use my Amex Gold card at Giant to buy 200 dollars in groceries (4x points) or pay cash? |
| I’m more curious about how much time people have vs the cost. Between parents’ work and kids’ activities and school; how is everyone traveling every freaking break? My high schoolers don’t want to jet set somewhere for a 4 day weekend, they want to catch their breath with school work. 6 weeks off in the summer and you work in the U.S? How? No, like really. Tell me your secrets. |
I'm one of the points travelers from upthread. The answer is a combination of having liberal leave policies at work, and having children who are preferably in elementary school and maybe middle. Once your kids are in high school, you are limited to winter and summer break for longer trips, and MAYBE thanksgiving for a short break. My kids are 7, 10 and 14. I've been traveling mostly with the older two for a few years, but now that the oldest entered high school, I know the config will change. He will have commitments during spring break and will want to use T'giving break to recharge. So, I won't be planning for his travel outside of winter and summer breaks. I will switch to traveling with the younger set of kids at other times. |
Yes, correct. Don't spend more than you would normally. But also, think of big ticket purchases you have coming up, and use them strategically to offset required spend. Example: there is an amex biz gold offer out there for 200K points with $15K spend over 3 months. I usually don't spend that much so was going to decline. But: in the next 3 months I will need to spend 2K for my son's crew, another 2K for his orchestra trip, and another 1.5K for my daughter's math enrichment. That's 5.5K out of 10 right there. And then add in regular monthly spend on food and whatnot, and you're pretty close. This is not a typical moment of the year, but when it comes, you can take advantage. At least get some reward for the painful expenditure!! |
Churning means you don't need to spend a lot on your CCs. I get a few CC's per year and the spend requirement for the bonus will be like $3000-6000 in 3-4 months. That's not a huge spend. Sure maybe there are people who put $300,000 on their Amex each year and get a ton of points that way, but it's very possible to spend $1000-2000 per month and racks up hundreds of thousands of points each year be churning and getting bonuses. |
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Gift Link on making money with CC.
I have personally made about 10 k in cash over the past 6 years and about 60k in travel. That's without spending a dollar more than what I would have, https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/11/business/credit-cards-churners.html?unlocked_article_code=1.tU8.VTv0.SeZmwCD6_Ppj&smid=url-share |
This is 100% correct. For me the game changer was switching my shopping to a portal that gives points instead of cash back. I wait for 15x days on Rakuten and buy what I was going to buy anyway. My next quarter payout is going to be about 50k points and that’s not from anything extra but from regular shopping. |
I saw that and I’m loving the predictable sanctimony in the comments section. Oh it’s too hard oh it’s a scam oh nice people don’t oh I’d rather pay cash. Lol. |
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I mean if you have older kids not old but just old enough, you just can't sit home all year long you know? We stick around for holidays but if we never went out of town for fun I'd go out of my mind! So would my kids.
You have to figure out a way to do some travel! |
I’m confused… you left the youngest home while traveling with the older kids? Isn’t that super unfair? And now the oldest gets left home? You do you but it sounds like you never adjusted to having kids and full-time parenting if you’re forcing your kids to adjust to your travel schedule and leaving specific kids out if it doesn’t work for you. |
That’s different than people who travel for every long weekend, etc. |
The youngest is not old enough for intense international travel so he stays home with my husband. I don't have enough points to support tickets for five people, and the youngest is not fit for that type of travel yet. We usually have car trips to the beach or shortish domestic trips for all five of us at some point during the year. I don't look at fairness as giving everyone the same thing at the same time - it wouldn't be fair to keep the older two homebound just because the youngest isn't fit for travel yet, and it is boring to make everyone function at the speed of the youngest one. The oldest will be heavily into his high school stuff in a year or two and unavailable for traveling much, and then I will begin traveling with the youngest and the middle one instead. Everyone gets their turn... I don't quite understand the point about forcing kids to adjust to my travel schedule - if anything, they are forcing me to adjust to theirs since I have to schedule travel during their school breaks. |
Same question! Someone was on here a few weeks ago saying their company gives 14 weeks of vacation. Like, where is this and what company?! I get about 6 and that feels average to generous. |
Probably the most common sense thing I have read on DCUM. Read the kids. Thank goodness there are people like you out there. |