Quote: (06-05-2012 12:09 PM)Tuthmosis Wrote:
Capital One "No Hassle" Card: Remember reading it was pretty good in an article or two, but don't have any concrete reasons for believing this.
One of the big scams today is that you accumulate tons of points and bonus points for everything, but when it comes to cashing those in, travel costs a lot more in points (100,000 points for a regular coach ticket, for instance, instead of the standard 25-30,000). Another consideration is that most airlines (except for Southwest and JetBlue) charge you for checking in luggage on domestic flights, which would be part of my use.
Any of guys have any familiarity this topic?
I have the Capital One No Hassle card and it's pretty good.
They have a few options, I went with the one that has a $39 annual fee, and I get 2 "points" per dollar I spend.
I think there's also another one with no annual fee, but you only get 1 point per dollar you spend.
Basically the way it works is that for every 100 points, you can write off $1 in travel expenses.
But you have to build up a certain number of points first, and use the system to your advantage so you don't get ripped off. Like, once you get 30,000 points you can write off $300 in travel expenses. But they'll try to screw you, because if you write off $250 in expenses, they'll take the entire 30,000 points. They have 2 thresholds: 30,000 points and 60,000 points.
So what I do, if I have a hotel expense over $300, is ask the hotel to charge me twice. Once for exactly $300, and then the rest on a separate charge. Make sense?
But lately I've been saving up points to write off big airfare expenses to Europe, which is a better deal. After you accumulate 60,000 points, you can write off the exact amount without waiting to hit a certain threshold of points. So a $1259 airline ticket can be written off for exactly 125,900 points. Make sense?