First Year of Chase Sapphire Preferred
Jun. 15th, 2022 09:35 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A little over a year ago I signed up for the Chase Sapphire Preferred credit card. As with every credit card I've opened over the past several years, I did it for the benefits. I look for credit cards to pay me to use them! Now that I'm at the 12 month anniversary on this one let's check the score.
The 80k bonus was attractive because the points the card pays, Chase Ultimate Rewards points (URs), are a solid value. At a minimum, they're worth 1% as cashback. They're worth 1.25% if spent in Chase's travel portal. And when transfeered to Hyatt— just one of many travel partners available for URs— they've been worth from 1.5% up to 2%.
Along with the big signup bonus the card pays points on purchases. It pays 3 points per dollar on dining and streaming, 2 points/dollar on travel (a broad category), and 1x on everything else. I spend a lot of money on dining and travel, so those multiplier categories work well for me.
The card charges an annual fee of $95. It was not waived the first year.
I still might keep it, though. Cards like this lock you in with their points system. If I cancel the card I lose all the points I haven't spent yet... and that's over 60,000 of them! I could downgrade to a different, no-fee Chase card. That would preserve the 1% cashback option on those points though it would lose me the valuable transfer capability that makes them worth 1.5-2x as much. Another alternative is transferring my points to my spouse and then cancelling the card. She has a premium Chase card that gives her all the same options. ...Though her card charges a way higher fee, so she might cancel hers in a few months, too. We need to figure out how to shuffle the points around to preserve their value before closing any of these cards.
Update: I closed the card— after transferring the points for a great (I hope) vacation!
80,000 Bonus Points
I signed up for the Chase Sapphire Preferred (CSP) with an offer for 80,000 bonus points after spending $4,000 in the first 3 months. In terms of the range of offers available over time, 80k points is relatively high. Right now, for example, the sign-up offer is just 60k points. I think I've seen it as high as 100k for short periods. But never mind; 80k is a more than solid offer.
Along with the big signup bonus the card pays points on purchases. It pays 3 points per dollar on dining and streaming, 2 points/dollar on travel (a broad category), and 1x on everything else. I spend a lot of money on dining and travel, so those multiplier categories work well for me.
The card charges an annual fee of $95. It was not waived the first year.
The Math
In the first 12 month of owning this card I earned 97,200 points. At the rate of 1.5 cents per point that's $1,458. 😳 As always with big scores such as this, though, that's before subtracting the costs. For this card the costs were an annual fee of $95 and an opportunity cost of $168. $168 is the amount of cash back I would have earned on a no-fee 2% cashback card. That nets out to a win of $1,195... an impressive score!To Renew, or Not to Renew?
To renew, or not to renew? Ah, that is the question! As much as this card paid me handsomely for the first year it's unlikely to earn its keep in the second year. That's because with the big signup bonus in the rearview mirror all I've got are the 2x and 3x spending categories to try to outrun the no-fee, 2% cashback cards in my wallet. And then there's the $95 annual fee. I figure this card will be roughly break-even in year 2.I still might keep it, though. Cards like this lock you in with their points system. If I cancel the card I lose all the points I haven't spent yet... and that's over 60,000 of them! I could downgrade to a different, no-fee Chase card. That would preserve the 1% cashback option on those points though it would lose me the valuable transfer capability that makes them worth 1.5-2x as much. Another alternative is transferring my points to my spouse and then cancelling the card. She has a premium Chase card that gives her all the same options. ...Though her card charges a way higher fee, so she might cancel hers in a few months, too. We need to figure out how to shuffle the points around to preserve their value before closing any of these cards.
Update: I closed the card— after transferring the points for a great (I hope) vacation!