Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also everyone knows not to use the portal; you have to transfer the points to a partner. You are doing it fully wrong.
I have Chase Sapphire Reserve and have never had the issue PP mentions. Flights in the portal are the same price as I find via google flights, and then I use my points for 1.5x value. Transferring points to a partner has always seemed like a massive hassle. I’m not saying there aren’t some additional savings to be had by transferring, but you absolutely can get savings by using points on the portal. (Same with hotels; I check prices on hotel websites, then confirm same price on the travel portal and book using points.)
Anonymous wrote:I have the AA card and am currently enjoying a free latte and hot breakfast in the Admirals Club at DCA. I got the card for lounge access and free checked baggage since my family travels frequently for long trips with multiple checked bags. Plus: priority boarding.
I can’t imagine flying without it.
Anonymous wrote:Op again-is it better for me to just have husband add me on authorized use as authorized user for his CSR? I didn’t realize he could do that. I’d be missing out on sign on points for it but could still use benefits. Then, I can get the AA card. Is it bad for credit to apply for both at one time. Like the AA card and add on authorized user?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also everyone knows not to use the portal; you have to transfer the points to a partner. You are doing it fully wrong.
I have Chase Sapphire Reserve and have never had the issue PP mentions. Flights in the portal are the same price as I find via google flights, and then I use my points for 1.5x value. Transferring points to a partner has always seemed like a massive hassle. I’m not saying there aren’t some additional savings to be had by transferring, but you absolutely can get savings by using points on the portal. (Same with hotels; I check prices on hotel websites, then confirm same price on the travel portal and book using points.)
But I’ve heard horror stories of things going bad/not having any recourse bc it’s third party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also everyone knows not to use the portal; you have to transfer the points to a partner. You are doing it fully wrong.
I have Chase Sapphire Reserve and have never had the issue PP mentions. Flights in the portal are the same price as I find via google flights, and then I use my points for 1.5x value. Transferring points to a partner has always seemed like a massive hassle. I’m not saying there aren’t some additional savings to be had by transferring, but you absolutely can get savings by using points on the portal. (Same with hotels; I check prices on hotel websites, then confirm same price on the travel portal and book using points.)
Anonymous wrote:I would never choose the AA card, because then it would impel me to fly American, which I consider to be the worst of the three legacy airlines. But you don't seem to mind this, so maybe it's fine.
Anonymous wrote:Also everyone knows not to use the portal; you have to transfer the points to a partner. You are doing it fully wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the CSR but everywhere I fly regularly is an AA hub (DFW, Miami, Chicago), so I'm considering getting the AA card as well. We accrue a LOT of points (~300k/year) on Chase, but adding the AA card would get us free baggage + access to the AA lounge when the PP lounges are inaccessible or crowded. Plus we have 4 people in the house and Global Entry has to be renewed every 3 years, so having both would mean we could stagger which card we pay with and cover all four through benefits.
How do you accrue that many points?
Still haven't pulled the trigger but I'm thinking about it.
Sorry responded in wrong place. How do you accrue that many points?
We have a Freedom Flex, CSR, and Ink for business. We run every expense we can through a credit card for points purposes. Use the Freedom Flex for most things (1.5 points/$), CSR for travel, restaurants and takeout, and occasional extras (Lyft, Peloton, etc), and combine points across cards. We also volunteer to put things that will be split on our CSR (VRBO with another family, dinner out with a bunch of friends who venmo back their share, etc), just for the points. Spend 12-15k/month on the personal cards, more variable amounts on the Ink (some months $0) and it all adds up.
Think you mean the Freedom Unlimited in the bolded, if you are getting 1.5x points on everything. The Freedom Flex gives 1x points on everything, and 3x and 5x in targeted categories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the CSR but everywhere I fly regularly is an AA hub (DFW, Miami, Chicago), so I'm considering getting the AA card as well. We accrue a LOT of points (~300k/year) on Chase, but adding the AA card would get us free baggage + access to the AA lounge when the PP lounges are inaccessible or crowded. Plus we have 4 people in the house and Global Entry has to be renewed every 3 years, so having both would mean we could stagger which card we pay with and cover all four through benefits.
How do you accrue that many points?
Still haven't pulled the trigger but I'm thinking about it.
Sorry responded in wrong place. How do you accrue that many points?
We have a Freedom Flex, CSR, and Ink for business. We run every expense we can through a credit card for points purposes. Use the Freedom Flex for most things (1.5 points/$), CSR for travel, restaurants and takeout, and occasional extras (Lyft, Peloton, etc), and combine points across cards. We also volunteer to put things that will be split on our CSR (VRBO with another family, dinner out with a bunch of friends who venmo back their share, etc), just for the points. Spend 12-15k/month on the personal cards, more variable amounts on the Ink (some months $0) and it all adds up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the CSR but everywhere I fly regularly is an AA hub (DFW, Miami, Chicago), so I'm considering getting the AA card as well. We accrue a LOT of points (~300k/year) on Chase, but adding the AA card would get us free baggage + access to the AA lounge when the PP lounges are inaccessible or crowded. Plus we have 4 people in the house and Global Entry has to be renewed every 3 years, so having both would mean we could stagger which card we pay with and cover all four through benefits.
How do you accrue that many points?
Still haven't pulled the trigger but I'm thinking about it.
Sorry responded in wrong place. How do you accrue that many points?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have the CSR but everywhere I fly regularly is an AA hub (DFW, Miami, Chicago), so I'm considering getting the AA card as well. We accrue a LOT of points (~300k/year) on Chase, but adding the AA card would get us free baggage + access to the AA lounge when the PP lounges are inaccessible or crowded. Plus we have 4 people in the house and Global Entry has to be renewed every 3 years, so having both would mean we could stagger which card we pay with and cover all four through benefits.
How do you accrue that many points?
Still haven't pulled the trigger but I'm thinking about it.
Anonymous wrote:I have the CSR but everywhere I fly regularly is an AA hub (DFW, Miami, Chicago), so I'm considering getting the AA card as well. We accrue a LOT of points (~300k/year) on Chase, but adding the AA card would get us free baggage + access to the AA lounge when the PP lounges are inaccessible or crowded. Plus we have 4 people in the house and Global Entry has to be renewed every 3 years, so having both would mean we could stagger which card we pay with and cover all four through benefits.
How do you accrue that many points?
Still haven't pulled the trigger but I'm thinking about it.