redtop43
Jun 13, 12, 9:04 pm
A frequent question in this forum is "Which credit card should I get?" That is obviously an extremly broad question. However, there are three cards that get a lot of attention because they accumulate points that can be transferred to other loyalty programs. I'm going to give a comparison of these cards, the Chase Sapphire Preferred, American Express Preferred Rewards Gold, and Starwood Preferred Gold American Express. (The first two cards have closely-related cards that I will also discuss.) This information is correct as of when it is written, but always subject to change.
1. Annual fee: PRG $175, SP $95, SPG $65, all waived first year.
2. Signup bonus: PRG 25000 points with $2K spend in 3 months, SP 40000 with $3K spend in 3 month, SPG 10000 plus 15000 more with $5K spend in 6 months.
3. Threshold bonuses: PRG 15K points with $30K spend in a calendar year (do not need to keep card past annual fee date), SP 7% at end of year (must pay fee), SPG Starwood Hotels gold elite status with $30K spend.
4. Bonus Categories: PRG 3X airfare, 2x gas & groceries; SP 2x travel and restaurants, SPG 2x Starwood hotels.
5. Transfer partners: Not possible to list them all, but the main ones are: PRG Delta, Air Canada, and a number of foreign airlines; SP United, Korean Air, and Hyatt; SPG almost all airlines but poor transfer ratio for United. SPG also gives 25K miles for 20K points.
6. Other redemptions: Amex merchandise and gift cards at mediocre values (max 1 cent per point) and travel at 1 cent, Chase merchandise etc. but also cash at 1 cent per point and air tickets at 1.25 cents, SPG merchandise and 1 cent per point for Starwood hotels.
7. Business versions: Amex and Chase have business versions of their cards with better signup bonuses but larger spend requirements, and different bonus categories and rules.
8. Enhanced card: Amex has a Platinum card with a much higher annual fee ($450, not waived first year), usually better signup bonus (but not currently), no category or theshold bonuses, and a number of other benefits like airport lounge access and airline fee reimbursement. Point rules are slightly more generous, including 1.25 cents per point for travel and cash at 1 cent.
9. Foreign transaction fees: 2.7% for Amex and SPG, waived for SP
Which one is best?
That depends on your situation. One big advantage of SPG is that it is the only of the three that transfers to American Airlines. It also is the only to transfer to USAir, but the other cards have Star Alliance transfer partners (PRG has Air Canada and others, SP has United). Chase has limited transfer partners, but they do have a partner in each of the main alliances (United in Star Alliance, British Airways in OneWorld, and Korean Air in SkyTeam).
There's no one card that's clearly best. If you spend exactly $30,000 a year, that's a plus for PRG. If you must have American Airlines points, SPG is the way to go. If you spend a lot abroad, SP is the best of the three (although there are Capital One no-fee cards that have worse rewards, but no forex fee). An Amex promotion for 50K signup (or occasionally 75K for the business card) could be enough to tip the balance.
1. Annual fee: PRG $175, SP $95, SPG $65, all waived first year.
2. Signup bonus: PRG 25000 points with $2K spend in 3 months, SP 40000 with $3K spend in 3 month, SPG 10000 plus 15000 more with $5K spend in 6 months.
3. Threshold bonuses: PRG 15K points with $30K spend in a calendar year (do not need to keep card past annual fee date), SP 7% at end of year (must pay fee), SPG Starwood Hotels gold elite status with $30K spend.
4. Bonus Categories: PRG 3X airfare, 2x gas & groceries; SP 2x travel and restaurants, SPG 2x Starwood hotels.
5. Transfer partners: Not possible to list them all, but the main ones are: PRG Delta, Air Canada, and a number of foreign airlines; SP United, Korean Air, and Hyatt; SPG almost all airlines but poor transfer ratio for United. SPG also gives 25K miles for 20K points.
6. Other redemptions: Amex merchandise and gift cards at mediocre values (max 1 cent per point) and travel at 1 cent, Chase merchandise etc. but also cash at 1 cent per point and air tickets at 1.25 cents, SPG merchandise and 1 cent per point for Starwood hotels.
7. Business versions: Amex and Chase have business versions of their cards with better signup bonuses but larger spend requirements, and different bonus categories and rules.
8. Enhanced card: Amex has a Platinum card with a much higher annual fee ($450, not waived first year), usually better signup bonus (but not currently), no category or theshold bonuses, and a number of other benefits like airport lounge access and airline fee reimbursement. Point rules are slightly more generous, including 1.25 cents per point for travel and cash at 1 cent.
9. Foreign transaction fees: 2.7% for Amex and SPG, waived for SP
Which one is best?
That depends on your situation. One big advantage of SPG is that it is the only of the three that transfers to American Airlines. It also is the only to transfer to USAir, but the other cards have Star Alliance transfer partners (PRG has Air Canada and others, SP has United). Chase has limited transfer partners, but they do have a partner in each of the main alliances (United in Star Alliance, British Airways in OneWorld, and Korean Air in SkyTeam).
There's no one card that's clearly best. If you spend exactly $30,000 a year, that's a plus for PRG. If you must have American Airlines points, SPG is the way to go. If you spend a lot abroad, SP is the best of the three (although there are Capital One no-fee cards that have worse rewards, but no forex fee). An Amex promotion for 50K signup (or occasionally 75K for the business card) could be enough to tip the balance.