Anonymous wrote:I've been using united mileage plus for years and have earned & burned quite some miles over the years.
Recently heard about Chase sapphire which a lot of people say is one of the best card for travel. I am not a credit card enthusiast and I just did a brief comparison, it looks like that sapphire offers more flexibility, versus confined to United with the mileage plus card. I currently have about ~70k miles on my mileage plus but I think it can be transferred to sapphire, if I open one.
If you have used both or the sapphire card, what do you think?
You can't transfer United miles to Chase Ultimate Rewards points. It's the other way around- Chase UR transfers to a number of partners, including United. But it's a one way only transfer, and irreversible. That's why having a nice stash of those flexible points is nice- it gives you options for a trip depending on which partner has the best award options. But that of course involves more work/learning about how to maximize points values, search available flight awards, etc. It's a good amount of work and learning.
But yes in general cards like the Sapphire Preferred/Reserve are a better value from a points EARNING perspective because they have bigger bonus categories, and since you can transfer them 1:1 to United and others, that's better. You can also pair with a Freedom Unlimited card, which earns 1.5x on everything, and those points can be pooled into your Sapphire pot, so in that case you can really start to maximize for each purchase by using the Freedom Unlimited for most purchases, and the Sapphire for the things like travel/dining which get bonuses (2x on Preferred, 3x on Reserve).
If you don't check bags much, you probably aren't getting a ton of value out of the annual fee on your United card- you can always downgrade it to the no annual fee version and hold on to it. But if you check bags on United more than 3 times a year, you should hold onto the current Explorer card as that perk will be worth the $95 annual fee.