A lot of hoopla has been made over the fate of the Fidelity Amex card, whose portfolio was bought by Elan Financial Services (a US Bank subsidiary), with the cards being reissued as Visas. In particular, many wondered and speculated that the card would earn (or be convertible to) Flexpoints, US Bank’s pseudo-fixed value rewards currency. Doctor of Credit has a great explanation of them here, butĀ I’ve included the award chart for reference:
Author: Daniel Tahara
In Defense of Delta
Before I dive into what is (intentionally) a controversial topic, I just want to take a second to welcome all our new readers who found us through Doctor of Credit. We’re super excited to have you, and hopefully you’ll find that we have an interesting thing or two to share. And of course, I’d be remiss to thank all of our existing, long-time readers (dad, I’m talking to you) for supporting us and valuing our voices. As we close in on the anniversary of our starting the blog, I couldn’t be happier with how it has turned out, and I know Esther and Michael feel the same way. We’ve managed to break some deals, share some different perspectives on hacking, tell some funny stories, and extend our hobby with our friends in family. What more could we want?
JetBlue Points Match Promotion: Is It Worth It?
NOTE: Please read comments about potential eligibility requirements that are not officially listed on the promotion site. As with everything YMMV.
For any of you who follow the major blogs, you’ve heard by now that JetBlue is running a promotion where they will ‘match’ your Virgin America points balances after you send them an email with a screenshot of your Virgin America balance and fly a single round-trip flight with them by August 31.
The Real Deal with Rental Car Insurance
Hello! Good day! I’m still alive!
For those of you who follow the blog regularly, you’ll know that I haven’t posted in a while and may be wondering where the heck I went. Well, long story short, I felt like I didn’t have anything particularly interesting to share, and since Michael and Esther were kicking ass with their recent posts, I didn’t feel any need to pipe in. This has definitely been a huge benefit to co-authoring a blog, since none of us feel pressured to write and we can still manage to keep up content with one or two of us writing at a time.
How I Hacked My Trip to Europe
It occurred to me as I was writing some blog posts that as much as I talk about various individual hacks, Iāve never actually detailed a real set of redemptions I made, how I constructed a trip, and the final costs. I think itās because they arenāt the most fun to write (because usually they’re not all that novel), but they can actually be pretty fun to read because they demonstrate whatās really possible with travel hacking.
Honesty, Revisited
A few weeks ago I wrote a post that looked at my travel spending in 2015 with the goal of ākeeping myself honest,ā and see if I could notice any patterns of spending that I could reduce or eliminate as I progress into the year.
In it, I remarked that, unlike most people, I donāt actually net out my cash back rewards (or equivalents like Capital One Venture āMilesā) against my travel expenses, because cash is fungible with all other cash and doesnāt change the fact that I spent the money in the first place.
About that 250,000 point sign-up bonus…
For those of you that have been following the blogosphere lately, you may have seen headlines like “Highest Offer I’ve Ever Seen” or “Best Amex Platinum Offer Ever.” When you click through, you are presented with the following (highly highly highly highly) targeted offer, first reported on r/churning on Reddit:
250,000 Points!!! That’s a lot of Points!!
Yes, it is. But how does it actually work? There are two parts:
AA 767-300 Business Class JFK-MXP
The second leg of my outbound to Europe was in Business class on American Airlinesās newly retrofitted 767-300s. Itās a two-class plane (i.e. no First class), with eight rows of seats in a 1-2-1, staggered configuration. Basically, this results in all the seats being forward-facing, with cut outs for your seat in the ottoman of the seat in front of you. My seat looked something like this:
Well, it looked exactly like that. I was seated in 4A, which is a window seat on the left aisle. This gave a really private feeling, as there was a table between me and the aisle which minimized disruption as the flight attendants walked up and down the aisle.
AA A321T First Class SFO-JFK
Hello from Milan!!! Iām here (well, in Europe) for a week visiting my sister, and for the first time, I booked all of my travel into premium cabins! Iām not usually one for trip reports (here was my first admittedly patheticĀ attempt at one), but I want to say thatās mostly because no one wants to hear me talk about how comfortable my economy class seat was or how the person next to me had bad body odor (hey, I call it as I smell it). Anyway, here goes:
Keeping Myself Honest
I was doing some bookkeeping on Mint tonight, and I decided it would be both fun and educational to look at my travel expenses from last year and do an accounting.
Let’s start with a graph:
$4,473. That’s a big number.
Granted, I got a ton of trips out of my $4,473 (Phoenix, India, Japan, Chicago, the U.S. Southwest, Bogota, Bali, Vegas, LA, and NY x 3), but it doesn’t change the fact that it’s still a lot of money.