Make Your Next Trip Extraordinary

The Best Credit Cards for Travelers

by Gary Leff | April 22, 2022

Whether you’re actually traveling or working your way toward a trip, the right credit card can be a big help in getting you there.

There are three things that rewards credit cards can do for you, and it’s important to know why you’ve taken a particular card, and to use it accordingly.

Some are best for the initial bonus miles. They’ll give you a ton of points for taking the card, but there’s not really a reason to keep the card after you’ve earned the bonus.

Some are best for ongoing spending. They reward you with valuable points, and lots of them—bonuses for spending on travel, dining, groceries, and the like.

Some are best for the valuable perks. If you fly an airline a lot but not quite enough to earn elite status, the airline’s co-branded credit card will give you many of the same perks, such as priority boarding and free checked bags. Still others get you lounge access or special discounts on airfare. You want to carry these cards, but you don’t necessarily want to put spending on them.

The Chase Sapphire Reserve Card became the ‘it’ card on the market when it launched three years ago with a 100,000-point sign-up bonus, though that’s been dialed back to a still-generous 50,000 points. Ongoing spending is rewarded generously with triple points on travel and dining. The points can either be used to purchase airfare directly at 1.5 cents in value per point or transferred to a variety of airline and hotel frequent-flier programs. And though the annual fee was just increased to $550, the card’s perks are still generous: a $300 travel credit, credit of the application fee for Global Entry, TSA PreCheck, or NEXUS, and a Priority Pass Select card with unlimited visits and privileges for two complimentary guests each time, providing lounge access in over 30 U.S. airports and to about 1,300 airport lounges around the world. In terms of travel protections, you’ll get primary collision-damage coverage when you rent cars, along with coverage for lost bags and long flight delays (something Citibank cards lack), and there are no foreign-transaction fees. However, along with the increased fee there have been some nips and tucks to the benefits: The trip cancellation coverage no longer includes when a travel provider goes bankrupt; you’re limited to two guests in airport lounges, they no longer give points on the spending that’s rebated to you as part of the $300 travel credit, and they no longer give you the travel credit twice in your first year. On the other hand, the card now offers Lyft benefits (ten points per dollar) and a complimentary DoorDash DashPass for discounted food delivery.

Here are some of the best cards in each category:

Cards With the Best Bonuses for Signing Up

Chase Sapphire Preferred Card: You’ll earn 80,000 points after spending $4,000 on the card within three months. This isn’t the biggest number bonus you’ll ever see, but the points are among the most valuable out there, transferring to airlines including United, British Airways, Air France KLM, Emirates and Singapore, and to hotel programs including Hyatt and Marriott. The card has a $95 annual fee.

If you have a small business, then the Chase Ink Business Preferred Credit Card will be very tempting. You’ll earn 100,000 points after spending $15,000 on purchases within three months of opening your account. This card earns the same transferable points as the Chase Sapphire Preferred and Sapphire Reserve, so they transfer to various airlines and hotels.

Cards that are Best for Ongoing Spending

All of these cards earn flexible points that can be transferred to a variety of different airline or hotel programs. That way you aren’t locked into a single program—you can choose where to put your points once you know where you’d like to travel and who has the best award availability at that time. The flexibility of points alone makes them more attractive than airline-specific credit cards, and they often earn points at a faster rate, too.

Chase Sapphire Reserve: The card earns a valuable currency that transfers to several airline and hotel programs, and it also earns triple points on all travel and all dining. It’s a Visa card, so it is accepted almost everywhere, and there are no foreign-transaction fees either.

American Express Gold Card: American Express renamed the “Premier Rewards Gold” card and really improved it. It earns 4 points per dollar at U.S. restaurants and supermarkets (the latter on up to $25,000 in spend annually), and 3 points per dollar with airlines. It has a $250 annual fee, which is somewhat offset by a $120 annual dining credit with certain food delivery services and restaurants and $120 annual Uber credit.

Capital One Venture X: The cards above all earn well in spending bonus categories. Consider the one that best matches your own spending patterns. But use it only for spending in those categories! You don’t want to earn just 1 point per dollar on the rest of your spend. If the opportunity cost of $1 in spending on a rewards card is $1 in spending on a 2% cash back card, then you’re effectively buying points at 2 cents apiece when using the rewards card for un-bonused spending. That’s too expensive! Earning with a card like Capital One Venture X for all of the rest of your spending makes sense, since it earns 2 points per dollar on all charges—and the points can either be redeemed directly against paid travel or transferred to airline and hotel loyalty programs. This card has a $395 annual fee, but comes with a $300 annual travel credit for bookings made at Capital One Travel (whether hotels, airline tickets, etc.) plus 10,000 bonus miles every account anniversary and comes with a Priority Pass membership for airport lounge access as well as access to Capital One’s own airport lounges. They have a partnership that provides Hertz Presidents Club status, and authorized users of the card come at no annual fee—and these cards are entitled to Priority Pass and Hertz status as well.

Cards With the Best Perks and Benefits

Generally, airline co-branded credit cards are worthwhile for the benefits if you fly one airline most of the time but don’t fly enough to earn elite status. You’ll get waived checked-baggage fees and priority boarding (so you can avoid having to gate-check your carry-on when the plane runs out of overhead-bin space). With United’s card you’ll also get two annual airline lounge passes. These cards aren’t as rewarding as the others on this list, though, for your ongoing spend. So consider getting them for the benefits, but put your spending on other cards.

American Express Platinum: This card is great for lounge access. It gets you into Delta lounges when flying Delta, as well as into American Express’s own network of Centurion lounges and it comes with a Priority Pass Select card, which provides access to lounges around the world (but not credit at Priority Pass airport restaurants). You also get National Car Rental’s Executive status (that means you can pick from better cars when you rent), Hilton’s Gold status (good for upgrades and breakfast), and Marriott’s Gold status (which enables you to avoid unfortunate rooms and get 2pm late checkout). You also get an annual credit of $200 for airline fees, an annual Uber credit of $200 and an annual credit of $100 at Saks; $240 Digital Entertainment Credit; $179 CLEAR credit; $300 Equinox credit and more. That all, to me, makes this card’s $695 annual fee worth paying.

Alaska Airlines Visa Signature: This Bank of America card comes with the unique benefit of a $99+tax companion ticket that isn’t like most companion tickets in travel—it really is good for any seat on any of their flights. If you pay for an economy ticket on Alaska, you can book a companion for only slightly more than $100. I consider the companion ticket to be worth the card’s $75 annual fee, since it’s good throughout Alaska’s route network—even for trips between the U.S. East Coast and Hawaii.

 

Be a smarter traveler: Use Wendy’s WOW List to plan your next trip. You can also follow her on Facebook and Twitter @wendyperrin, and sign up for her weekly newsletter to stay in the know.

Takeaways and Photos from our 4th WOW Travel Summit

Brook Wilkinson | December 19, 2023

Ask a Teenager: 3 Cool Things to Do on a Family Trip in Israel

Doug Baker | March 12, 2023

We’re Just Back: Carolyn’s Cruise in Antarctica

Carolyn Spencer Brown | February 17, 2023

Beat the Summer Heat in Europe with a Cool Trip Itinerary

Wendy Perrin | August 7, 2024

How to Buy Travel Insurance: What It Covers, When You Need It

Brook Wilkinson | October 8, 2024

Real Connections with Locals: WOW Trip Reviews

Wendy Perrin | November 25, 2024

Where to Go in June: The Best Places to Travel

Brook Wilkinson | November 5, 2024

15 Comments

  1. Stephen Bajan

    Does a list exist that identifies the airline partners to which each credit card allows transfer of points and at what ratio?

    1. Billie Cohen

      Hi Stephen, I spoke to Gary and he says each program keeps their own such list, eg Amex’s is here. He also keeps a list on his View From the Wing site, which you can find here. Hope that helps!

  2. Rich Walker

    For me, this article omits the most important feature of a credit card to be used internationally – whether or not they charge an exchange fee for each transaction. I have stopped using my banks’ credit card outside the U.S. because of its per-transaction foreign-currency exchange rate. Instead, I rely on my HSBC card.

    For future articles about credit cards, please include whether or not they add on fees for foreign-currency transactions.

    1. Gary Leff

      Hi Rich,

      Increasingly premium cards and especially travel rewards cards do not apply foreign transaction fees. Something that Chase was at the forefront of but other issuers have come to learn is that when a customer travels abroad they put away cards that impose these fees and they tend not to move the cards back top of wallet when they return to the states.

      So card issuers learned that it’s in their own interests, they make more money, by not taxing their customers who tend to travel abroad.

      As a result every card on this list except one waives these fees. The Chase Sapphire Preferred and Reserve as well as Ink Business Preferred, the Amex Platinum, and the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature all have no foreign transaction fees.

      The only one of these cards that has foreign transaction fees is the Amex Everyday Preferred and that’s because of a quirk in who it’s marketed toward. The Everyday cards aren’t meant to be travel rewards cards, they’re targeted at ‘multitasking moms’ … they even got rid of the Centurion soldier off the card (too masculine). However in designing the product they happened onto what’s one of the most rewarding cards for spending in the travel space too.

      In fact the card is rewarding enough that the points you’ll get [provided you use the card 30 times a month or more] are worth as much as the foreign transaction fees charged. Still, I’d use any of the other cards here internationally instead.

      Good question!
      Gary

  3. Lindsey Wallace

    Great information! Thank you! In addition to your best perks and benefits, I also like the Citi Prestige card which gives the 4th night free at hotels which can be a valuable benefit.

  4. LorraineMoss

    For a travel writer, you left out the most important item……..In Europe (and probably most other international destinations), your card has to have a chip in it, otherwise they won’t even take it.

  5. Jane W Ellis

    Chase Sapphire requires you to transfer your miles to one of their airline programs to get decent mileage tickets, BUT (a big but for me),, once transferred, the miles cannot be returned. They recommend checking for available mileage seats first, but say the transfer can take a couple of days or longer. That seems a huge risk to me on two scores: First, what if the seats are gone by the time of the transfer? and second, what if the airline mileage plan miles expire within one or two years? Unfortunately, I didn’t realize these risks were involved when I got the card and not until I’d accummulated 200,000 miles which might have been better on a less risky card. Has anyone had experience with this?

    1. Wendy Perrin

      I’ve transferred Chase Sapphire points to United Airlines, and the transfer occurred immediately. With some credit cards, the transfer of points to an airline’s mileage program can take much longer than a couple of days. Transferring Starwood AmEx points to an airline, for example, can take two to four weeks. (That’s one reason I don’t redeem my Starwood AmEx points for airline tickets; I redeem them for stays at Starwood hotels.)

    2. Gary Leff

      Transfers to nearly all partners are instantaneous.. Transfers to Singapore Airlines take 24-48 hours.

  6. Rosemary Chiaverini

    I obtained this card based on Wendy’s recommendation. Loved the no transaction fees. It worked for the Paris Metro when I bought a carnet through a machine. It did NOT work, however, at self-serve gas stations or on the self-serve toll booths on the Peage.

  7. Marcy Schackne

    Would have enjoyed reading about the best cards without foreign transaction fees. Chase Sapphire was the only one noted, and I travel with my Delta Amex, too, for that reason (even though AmEx is less widely accepted, hotels and major restaurants do accept the card).
    Safe Travels,
    Marcy

  8. Sue joyce

    With the chase card, way better to transfer miles and book through airlines rather than their absolute rewards. Saved 140,000 miles booking for two.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published.

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

Our Latest Newsletters