Money Matters
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
Credit Card Recomendations
Hi All,
Does anyone have a miles card (Like Discover It Miles, Capital One Venture card, etc)? Do you think they're better or worse than just a regular rewards card that you can use to redeem points for other things as well as travel?
Currently we use our debit card for almost everything but I'm hoping to start putting most of our purchases (groceries, gas, etc) on whatever card we get so we can get points/miles, and then I can just turn around and pay off the card each month.
I'm just now starting to research some of the cards out there, but would appreciate any tips to look out for, or if there are any cards that you might recommend (or ones to stay away from!)
Thanks!
Re: Credit Card Recomendations
@hoffse, so true! Just the time is a huge factor for me also. I get a decent amount of vacation time at work and it doesn't affect that income to take it...but it's still only so much time. And then I have a part-time job that I have to pay someone else to do when I am out of town so, for a week, that is $350 I am not earning on top of paying for a vacation.
My mom is friends with a married couple...both retired...who play the "airline" game. They will book flights to places they want to go on but, as long as the costs are similar, will purposely choose flights or days/times that tend to oversell. Then they are the first to raise their hands when the airline offers free tickets/airline dollars to anyone willing to give up their seats. They're almost always able to get on another flight later that day or the next day and are given at least a couple hundred airline dollars each on top of that. They have gotten a lot of free airfare this way, though they complain the airlines used to be a lot more generous with the offers, lol.
I would think about how you spend money, in addition to what you want to buy with points. Chase doesn't have many perks for money spent on gas, but that's fine with us as we only have one car and don't put a lot of miles on it. We try to be reasonable about eating out, but that is where 90% of our fun money goes, so we wanted a card that rewarded that. Also they counted our caterer as a restaurant, and the caterer didn't charge us a credit card fee, so that was almost a flight right there. It was awesome.
Do you know any management consultants? They are basically professional points/miles gatherers. If you do, I'd ask for some advice, but be prepared for a long lecture involving binders and charts.
ETF: typo
I use a Chase United for work and personal spending. It has an annual fee, but comes with two business class lounge passes a year and free checked bags. We usually take one big international vacation a year and fly a United partner so this makes it worth it.
We also maintain a fee free Capital One for longevity, which has a decent earn rate for a fee free card. We put all our wedding expenses here and ended up making well over $1,000 before we even got into the strategy of points and miles.
We have no family or friends nearby so it would be nice to earn some points and not have to pay quite as much when we fly out to Colorado or California to visit DH's family and our friends, or on trips to visit my family in Brazil. Ideally we like to visit each of our families at least once a year, but those trips add up (especially to Brazil--those plane tickets get more expensive each year!) and make it harder for us to go on trips to other places that we want to see.