I am using a Savor One as my daily driver. It’s an excellent card and the 3% in groceries and dining covers two of my largest spend categories so it’s a great fit.

However, I still feel as though I’m leaving a lot on the table for everything else that only gets 1%. I am currently using a secondary Venmo Visa – mainly because I needed VISA exposure for costco. It’s an aesthetically pretty card but the lack of authorized users and only being able to manage the account inside the app are pretty big hindrances for me. I don’t think I’m going to stick with it.

Any recommendations for a complementary daily driver? I know I should just consider the WF Autograph but I REALLY hesitate to work with them just on principle.

  • ZehTy
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    51 year ago

    Everyone would say that the Venture X would compliment the Savor One quite nicely. The annual fee of $395 is the only deterrent and the ecosystem for the points are best utilized for travel at that point.

    The annual fee is negated by the $300 travel credit when booking on the portal and the 10k annual points given on your anniversary date.

  • @[email protected]
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    51 year ago

    I would recommend a catch-all card that earns 2% cash back on everything like the Wells Fargo Active Cash or FNBO Evergreen. They are both Visa cards as well.

  • @Sleuth
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    41 year ago

    I’m going to max the 5% Gas Stations and Digital Wallets quarter with my discover it in the next few weeks. Then probably go back to the amex bcp. I’ve been abusing the 0% intro and it’s gorgeous.

  • @SUPERcrazy3530
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    31 year ago

    I’ve held my nose and have an Autograph/Active Cash set up. They’ve been fine to deal with. I know Fidelity has a 2% cash back Visa but I don’t personally have any experience with it.

  • @cjcs
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    21 year ago

    Venture X is my catch-all - nets me 2% back on uncategorized / general spend, and I generally don’t have an issue using the travel credit to counter the annual fee. Priority pass for my fiancee and I is a plus, and the sign-up bonus when I signed up ($1,000) was leagues ahead of what other catch-all cards offered.

  • Bone
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been working on unlocking the 60k bonus travel points (80k when I signed up) on the Chase Sapphire Preferred card. It’s my first time getting a card specifically for the rewards and so far it’s going well. Depending on how I use the points, they should be valued at at least $800, which easily offsets the $95 annual fee.

    ETA: As for being my daily driver, its 3x points on dining and groceries is nice, along with 5x on travel. The points are stacking up noticeably faster than my Discover cards did.

    • @rz2000
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      21 year ago

      One way to think about the sign up bonus is 20% cash back, if it is $800 after spending $4000, as well as the points you earn for that spending.

      There are cards where you can earn 40%, ie $200 back after spending $500, but you can only apply for so many cards per year, so it would be difficult to maximize your total cash back with these smaller cards.

  • @CupDock
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    1 year ago

    Alliant Credit Union has a flat 2.5% visa. To qualify you have to keep a monthly average of $1k in an ACU checking account, have at least 1 transfer on that account per month, and use e statements. Makes for a good daily driver.

    • @danhasnolifeOP
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      21 year ago

      That sounds almost too good to be true. Does the CU have restrictive sign up criteria? All you have to do is park a small amount in the account, make one deposit a month (does it need to be direct deposit) and you get 2.5% everywhere???

      • @cjcs
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        41 year ago

        It’s good, but after crunching some numbers I find it to be less of the unicorn some folks make it out to be.

        The Alliant checking account earns 0.25% interest, and right now SPAXX is paying out 4.75%, so there’s a delta of 4.5%.

        So now there’s $45 in interest a year you give up, closer to $32 after taxes.

        $32/0.005 = $6,400 <- This is the breakeven point versus a 2% card with no deposit requirement (WF ActiveCash, Fidelity Visa, Citi DC, PayPal MC, etc.).

        That amount might be chump change to you if you have a lot of uncategorized spend, but it’s worth taking into account when choosing the best card. This was kind of my wake-up call where I realized that churning will do much more for you than optimizing spend every will. Even if you spend the $6,400 to break even, and then spend another $20,000/year, you’re netting an extra $100/year. It’d take you seven years to catch up to the sign up bonus for the Chase Sapphire Preferred.

        • @CupDock
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          21 year ago

          Yes but Chase Sapphire Preferred has a $95 annual fee, so after 7 years you’ve spent $665 on the fee which pretty much negates the $750 bonus (if redeemed on travel).

      • @CupDock
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        21 year ago

        Pretty much that easy. No restrictive signup criteria, though I think you need a good credit score. I have automatic ACH set up to transfer $1 out then back in to my account to ensure I meet the transfer criteria, though that’s unnecessary.

        Worst part imo is the card doesn’t have tap to pay. Not that big if a deal though, can still tap to pay with a phone.

  • @thrawn
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    21 year ago

    Ritz-Carlton card, which nets at least 6% on everything (factoring in devalues, it’s more if you go now) if you only redeem points for Maldives or Bora Bora, which I already did. This is not effective if you’re redeeming Marriott points on everyday places though.

    • @Cstrrider
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      01 year ago

      I have and like the Ritz card but that is a had sell on the use case lol

      • @thrawn
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        11 year ago

        It’s a use case that works if you were already going to those specific places, and provides unparalleled return, but if you’re not it’s totally worthless. Marriott points generally suck. But I was already doing that, and others are too; for that, it’s basically the best daily use card by a long shot.

        Also I didn’t downvote you.

        • @Cstrrider
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          1 year ago

          Hotel points are worth what they are worth and you have to just factor that in when you get them. The earnings rate for Marriott Hyatt and Hilton are basically the same for the $95 cards once you factor in the point value, and they will be a bit more for hotel spending than a card like the CSR. I will definitely have to look into the Maldives trip at some point though.

          Also who care about down votes there’s no karma here ;)

          • @thrawn
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            11 year ago

            For Marriotts it’s a huge difference actually: per Cardpointers, my Marriott card gets effective 18% back, versus just 6.3% from my CSR. And that’s factoring in more devalues on Marriott points— last I used it, I was getting well above 3cpp. My next redemption is looking to be decently above 3cpp as well.

            And yeah you’re right, no karma. Crazy, already better than Reddit was!

            • @Cstrrider
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              11 year ago

              To clarify that’s only for the Maldives reservation that you do. Generally, you are going to get 6x Bonvoy points per dollar spent and the value is 0.7-0.9 vs 3x at 1.5-2.0.

              • @thrawn
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                11 year ago

                Yeah exactly, hence why I think it’s a pretty garbage card if you’re getting normal value for the typically kind of sucky Marriott point. Cardpointers had it at 0.7cpp which feels about right

                • @Cstrrider
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                  11 year ago

                  For me the card pays for itself between the free night and the $300 incidental credit, plus some of the other benefits. I also have the Amex trifecta, which is not great for hotel stays besides the Fine Hotels and Resorts program so it meshes well with that.

  • @Cstrrider
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    11 year ago

    I really dual daily the Amex Gold and BBP. Most of my monthly spending falls into the Dinning/grocery spending for 4 MR, then everything else gets 2 MR.