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BofA also has the Alaska Airlines debit card (in addition to US Airways). (all these cards are listed in the finance section of RewardsDB.com ).
One other thing to consider - many debit cards have a daily / weekly maximum limit of how much you can charge. I used to have the Citibank Premium AAdvantage Debit Card which as it turns out has a $2500 daily limit, the BofA Alaska Debit Card either has a higher limit or none at all (I can't remember). |
Chase offers a continental debit card, you can get a gold one for $65/year and get 1/1 in points. The regular one is 1/$2. They also have a United one, 1/$2 $25/year. I used to have that one, now i have leisure rewards, It gives you 4/$1 and you can redeem the points for gift certs for travel company websites.
Citibank has their thank you network, you can get points for pin based trans with no annual fee (i believe). Mitch |
Thank you all so much for your responses. :) pgary, I've been to your site many times but not recently, so I will take a look there.
Originally Posted by 777-DCA
So let me make sure I understand you correctly. You are a member of FT, miles are only "okay"? Are you the spawn of satan? You should banned from FT for making such a statement! :D ;) (Oh, and in case it is not evident, I am kidding. I do not seriously mean it.)
I stated earlier I would prefer just a cash back rebate each year, but if I had to choose, hotel points seem more valuable than miles to me these days. The main reason I would want miles is for free tickets for our family to either Europe or Hawaii in the summer (kindly contain your laughter). |
Originally Posted by SPort
Any thoughts on how I can earn a little something for all these grocery purchases? I prefer to earn $ but miles would be okay. I don't have a B of A account and don't really want to open one just for the sake of the rounding-up promotion discussed in S.P.A.M.
Second, I would never recommend a debit card to anyone. If your # is stolen the money comes directly out of your bank account and you have to wait for the bank to replace it, which can take some time depending on the investigation. If you have a credit card, you simply dispute the fraudulent charges and don't pay them. Unless you have a mediocre credit score, you are better off with a credit card. In your case I understand why you might still want a card, but be sure to factor the annual fee when considering the cost of your miles, particularly as you would only use this card in places that won't take CCs. |
Originally Posted by gailmjohnson
If you have a paypal premium account (it's still free), get the Paypal debit card and use that. Not only does it pay you back 1 percent for all signature purchases, but they post the credit amount at the same time they post the transaction amount instead of waiting and sending you a check once or twice a year.
Thank you I will use this. |
Thanks
Originally Posted by sjefenole
Hey gailmjohnson, welcome to FlyerTalk :D
Thank you I will use this. I used my Paypal debit when I went to Florida last month and got about $30 cash back with it. I paid for the hotel and car with it and got the cash back plus the hotel points so it seems worth it. Once you are verified with them I believe the daily limits are $300 for ATM withdrawals and $4000 for purchases. And it will take 3-4 days for a transfer to be complete when adding cash from your back account to Paypal account. Gail |
Originally Posted by Boraxo
First of all, I agree 100% with your sentiments. Given the continuing devaluation in all air and hotel programs, you are generally better off with real cash than funny money miles and points. And this is especially true for grocery purchases, as there are several credit cards that provide a 5% cash rebate on groceries, gas and drugstore purchases (see the other recent thread in this forum). Most people value miles at 1-2 cents each, so it is a no brainer to take 5 cents v. 1 mile.
(The best value in miles is using them for overseas flights in classes ABOVE coach, which start cost at only double what coach overseas flights cost in miles, but which are UNAFFORDABLY expensive -- WAY WAY more than double coach -- in cash $$$$ terms for most people. There it's not hard to find values well above 2 cents per mile. But yes, if all you're going to use miles for is cheap domestic coach flights, then miles may not be any better than cashback.) |
Originally Posted by sdsearch
Since there is a no-annual-fee credit card that gets you about 4.77 UA miles or 2.5 CO or BA miles per dollar spent
And, of course, you need to shop at a supermarket that takes credit cards (not debit cards), which negates the whole point of this thread. |
Originally Posted by themicah
Most supermarkets will let you get "cash back" if you use a pin-based debit card to check out (e.g., you buy $50 worth of stuff, but they run it as a $90 charge and give you $40 cash). And most places that sell money orders will let you buy it as part of the same transaction as non-money-order transactions. For example, at the post office, you could buy a money order and a book of stamps all on one pin-based transaction.
How in the world does BofA know what portion of your transaction is for cash instruments and what portion is for other stuff? |
Originally Posted by DennyO
I agree with Nako. I don't know how, but with my Keybank debit card, I only get the CO miles for a purchase not the cash back. The problem is that I get one mile for every two dollars I spend, and there is an annual fee, so at renewal time, I canceled and will use my credit card if I want the miles.
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