Marionnette
Children see magic because they look for it
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2009
- Messages
- 19,509
No. You can do "balance transfers" from one credit card to another but they normally have fees tied to the cost of doing the transfer. Just pay with your bank account and you will be fine.It's a visa debit card and works exactly like VISA. Do most cc's not allow you to pay with another cc?
I'm not in love with airline branded credit cards because I don't care for most airline FF programs. The seats are often limited in number and take too make FF miles to book. Southwest is one of the few that does not limit the number of award seats available on each flight. I don't fly JetBlue, so I have no opinion on their FF program.I already pay all my bills with my Visa -- except my mortgage darnit.
I don't want an annual fee. Do you have a suggestion for a good non-annual fee card? I suppose if i were to work at it I could try the Chase Sapphire for a year and if it didn't work out, I could close it before they started charging me an annual fee. Do the points work on SWA or Jetblue? Those are the two I fly most. We took Aer Lingus this last summer to Ireland. We are in the daydreaming stages of either France or England so being able to get airfare on an airline that flew overseas would be great, too.![]()
The Chase Sapphire allows you to transfer your points to select airline programs (SWA, United, BA, Singapore Air, Virgin) or to some hotel programs and Amtrak. You can also use them for a statement credit (20K pts = $20) or for cash back. Points can also be redeemed for various retail GCs or for Amazon shopping.
The nice thing about the statement credit is that its value is the same as any other redemption they offer. So 20K in points is worth a $20 statement credit, a $20 GC, $20 cash back or approx. $20 worth of airline miles.
It also means that you can shop for the best price for airfare and then pay with your CC. When the bill comes, you use your points to pay for the airline tickets and you don't have to worry about whether they are a participating airline or if there are any award seats available on the days you chose to fly.
It means that you charge those fees to your CC and then when the statement arrives, you call cardmember services and ask them to apply your points toward those charges.sorry for all the posts, I'm excited
Does anyone know what this means:
You can redeem your miles as a statement credit against any travel expense gas, airfare, baggage fees, hotel stays, you name it
I don't understand "as a statement credit", or how that works.
I use my Chase Sapphire to reload my EZPass for tolls and recently used it to pay for parking when my husband was in the hospital. Each of those charges earned 2X "travel" rewards.I want airline miles!! LOL. I'm such a travel bug.
I notice the Chase Sapphire says 2x on travel or restaurants. And travel listed things like parking.
I use a toll road daily on my commute and it's about $60/month. I pay my toll charges with VISA. I wonder if those would count as Travel. Anyone with experience here?
And restaurants: does fast food count?
THANKS!!
"Fast food" locations are still restaurants, regardless of the way that they serve their food (or what they serve!). As long as Chase has them coded as a restaurant in their system, it will credit as 2X points.