Looking for advice. Thinking about replacing cards
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 32
Looking for advice. Thinking about replacing cards
I currently use the following cards:
Groceries & Gas: American Express Blue Preferred (6% and 3% respectively)
Restaurants: Citi Forward (3 points/$)
Travel: Chase Sapphire and United Mileage Plus
For everything else, I use the Fidelity Amex which is 2% cash back on all purchases. However, I have problems having it accepted at some places so I have to use another card at 1%. Now, Citi just came out with the Double Cash, which is also 2% cash on everything. Since , it is Mastercard instead of Amex, I'll have almost universal acceptance. Is it worth switching? If so, should I cancel the Amex or just shove it in a drawer? Is their another card I should consider instead? My goal is to have a minimum of 2% cash back or equivalent in points for all purchases.
Thanks!
Groceries & Gas: American Express Blue Preferred (6% and 3% respectively)
Restaurants: Citi Forward (3 points/$)
Travel: Chase Sapphire and United Mileage Plus
For everything else, I use the Fidelity Amex which is 2% cash back on all purchases. However, I have problems having it accepted at some places so I have to use another card at 1%. Now, Citi just came out with the Double Cash, which is also 2% cash on everything. Since , it is Mastercard instead of Amex, I'll have almost universal acceptance. Is it worth switching? If so, should I cancel the Amex or just shove it in a drawer? Is their another card I should consider instead? My goal is to have a minimum of 2% cash back or equivalent in points for all purchases.
Thanks!
#2
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: LAX
Programs: AA, TY, UR, UA, US, WN, MR, SPG
Posts: 1,453
I currently use the following cards:
Groceries & Gas: American Express Blue Preferred (6% and 3% respectively)
Restaurants: Citi Forward (3 points/$)
Travel: Chase Sapphire and United Mileage Plus
For everything else, I use the Fidelity Amex which is 2% cash back on all purchases. However, I have problems having it accepted at some places so I have to use another card at 1%. Now, Citi just came out with the Double Cash, which is also 2% cash on everything. Since , it is Mastercard instead of Amex, I'll have almost universal acceptance. Is it worth switching? If so, should I cancel the Amex or just shove it in a drawer? Is their another card I should consider instead? My goal is to have a minimum of 2% cash back or equivalent in points for all purchases.
Thanks!
Groceries & Gas: American Express Blue Preferred (6% and 3% respectively)
Restaurants: Citi Forward (3 points/$)
Travel: Chase Sapphire and United Mileage Plus
For everything else, I use the Fidelity Amex which is 2% cash back on all purchases. However, I have problems having it accepted at some places so I have to use another card at 1%. Now, Citi just came out with the Double Cash, which is also 2% cash on everything. Since , it is Mastercard instead of Amex, I'll have almost universal acceptance. Is it worth switching? If so, should I cancel the Amex or just shove it in a drawer? Is their another card I should consider instead? My goal is to have a minimum of 2% cash back or equivalent in points for all purchases.
Thanks!
As for the Fido Amex, I would not cancel it. It carries no minimum fee, so there is little benefit to canceling. The Citi Double Cash card is a fine replacement for the Fido Amex, because it also carries no AF and is more widely accepted than the Amex. If 2% is your goal and cashback is your reward of choice, then I'd suggest grabbing the Citi Double Cash card, stashing the Fido Amex is a drawer, and keeping the rest the same. The only other thing I might recommend is getting the Chase Freedom card to capitalize on the 5% categories (gas two quarters a year, etc).
#3
Original Poster
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 32
Citi Forward should be 5 points/$ or 2 points/$, depending on which version. AFAIK, there was no 3 points/$ version.
As for the Fido Amex, I would not cancel it. It carries no minimum fee, so there is little benefit to canceling. The Citi Double Cash card is a fine replacement for the Fido Amex, because it also carries no AF and is more widely accepted than the Amex. If 2% is your goal and cashback is your reward of choice, then I'd suggest grabbing the Citi Double Cash card, stashing the Fido Amex is a drawer, and keeping the rest the same. The only other thing I might recommend is getting the Chase Freedom card to capitalize on the 5% categories (gas two quarters a year, etc).
As for the Fido Amex, I would not cancel it. It carries no minimum fee, so there is little benefit to canceling. The Citi Double Cash card is a fine replacement for the Fido Amex, because it also carries no AF and is more widely accepted than the Amex. If 2% is your goal and cashback is your reward of choice, then I'd suggest grabbing the Citi Double Cash card, stashing the Fido Amex is a drawer, and keeping the rest the same. The only other thing I might recommend is getting the Chase Freedom card to capitalize on the 5% categories (gas two quarters a year, etc).
There's a bit of confusion with the Citi Forward. I was looking through my rewards details and I could have sworn it said 3 points/$. I double checked my statements and a customer service rep and it is indeed 5 points.
In any case, I made a couple of moves. I have a Chase Sapphire that was recently downgraded from the Sapphire Plus (which we got for the bonus) Since the rewards are redundant, I called Chase and had them switch to the Freedom.
I just was approved for the Citi Double Cash and I'm considering applying for the US Bank Cash+ card. The 5% cash back on restaurants is better than the 5 points on the Forward (which probably comes out closer to 3 or 4%.)
At that point I'll have more cards than I really want with several sitting unused in a drawer. I'm trying to decide if that would be a problem or not.
#4
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 189
Roki,
There's a bit of confusion with the Citi Forward. I was looking through my rewards details and I could have sworn it said 3 points/$. I double checked my statements and a customer service rep and it is indeed 5 points.
In any case, I made a couple of moves. I have a Chase Sapphire that was recently downgraded from the Sapphire Plus (which we got for the bonus) Since the rewards are redundant, I called Chase and had them switch to the Freedom.
I just was approved for the Citi Double Cash and I'm considering applying for the US Bank Cash+ card. The 5% cash back on restaurants is better than the 5 points on the Forward (which probably comes out closer to 3 or 4%.)
At that point I'll have more cards than I really want with several sitting unused in a drawer. I'm trying to decide if that would be a problem or not.
There's a bit of confusion with the Citi Forward. I was looking through my rewards details and I could have sworn it said 3 points/$. I double checked my statements and a customer service rep and it is indeed 5 points.
In any case, I made a couple of moves. I have a Chase Sapphire that was recently downgraded from the Sapphire Plus (which we got for the bonus) Since the rewards are redundant, I called Chase and had them switch to the Freedom.
I just was approved for the Citi Double Cash and I'm considering applying for the US Bank Cash+ card. The 5% cash back on restaurants is better than the 5 points on the Forward (which probably comes out closer to 3 or 4%.)
At that point I'll have more cards than I really want with several sitting unused in a drawer. I'm trying to decide if that would be a problem or not.
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
#5
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: LAX
Programs: AA, TY, UR, UA, US, WN, MR, SPG
Posts: 1,453
I don't get how this is the case, unless you truly are strictly a CASH rewards person. You can redeem TY points 1:1 on Travel, Gift Cards, Student Loan Payments, and Mortgage Payments. Pair in a Premier or Prestige and you can get a 25%-60% bump if you redeem for travel.
#6


Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 601
I would keep the Fidelity AMEX if it's an old account, since there is no annual fee. I would also recommend the Sallie Mae MC from Barclays because you get a full 5% cashback on gas and groceries (up to $250 spending in each category per month) with no annual fee. It also gives a full 5% cashback on spending at bookstores (up to $750 monthly spending), which includes most amazon purchases. It may be a good replacement for the Blue Cash Preferred, which carries an annual fee.
Last edited by steve4; Oct 23, 2014 at 4:37 am Reason: Typo
#7
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 70
5% on restaurants on US Bank Cash + is going away. It's becoming a 2% category.
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
#8
Original Poster
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 32
5% on restaurants on US Bank Cash + is going away. It's becoming a 2% category.
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
#10
In memoriam
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 4,020
Dear OP,
IMHO, you should be looking at a very different question. Namely: why aren't I collecting the big money bonuses that are available such as the Chase INK 70K Ultimate Rewards points or the many others to be found on FT.
The bonuses are where the value is for most of us. Unless your spend is truly gigantic.
One RT in F to Europe or Asia is worth whole lot more to me than a few hundred bucks in cash back.
IMHO, you should be looking at a very different question. Namely: why aren't I collecting the big money bonuses that are available such as the Chase INK 70K Ultimate Rewards points or the many others to be found on FT.
The bonuses are where the value is for most of us. Unless your spend is truly gigantic.
One RT in F to Europe or Asia is worth whole lot more to me than a few hundred bucks in cash back.
#11
Original Poster
Join Date: Sep 2012
Posts: 32
Dear OP,
IMHO, you should be looking at a very different question. Namely: why aren't I collecting the big money bonuses that are available such as the Chase INK 70K Ultimate Rewards points or the many others to be found on FT.
The bonuses are where the value is for most of us. Unless your spend is truly gigantic.
One RT in F to Europe or Asia is worth whole lot more to me than a few hundred bucks in cash back.
IMHO, you should be looking at a very different question. Namely: why aren't I collecting the big money bonuses that are available such as the Chase INK 70K Ultimate Rewards points or the many others to be found on FT.
The bonuses are where the value is for most of us. Unless your spend is truly gigantic.
One RT in F to Europe or Asia is worth whole lot more to me than a few hundred bucks in cash back.
110,000 miles combined I think.
#12
FlyerTalk Evangelist

Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Freeload Univ. Where are you sitting?
Posts: 14,818

I have a box full of cards that I've had and later canceled, as well as a half-dozen in play at any given time. Depends on the promos.
Having said that - opening and closing accounts can look a little dicey to lenders. However, having a card you don't use but has no annual fee is much better used by sitting in a drawer rather than cancelling, because it adds to the "ageing" of your credit score.
#13


Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: NYC
Programs: BA
Posts: 962
5% on restaurants on US Bank Cash + is going away. It's becoming a 2% category.
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
From my October statement:
Effective January 1, 2015, a new 5% Cash+ Category will be available: Select Clothing Stores featuring
merchants such as Gap and Talbots. Also effective January 1, 2015, Drugstores will be replaced by
Restaurants as a 2% everyday Cash+ Category
R.I.P. Airfaire, Hotels, Billpay, and now Restaurants.
And I thought that them adding a $2,000 quarterly cap on 5% categories would keep them from doing this crap...

