a

Credit Card Rewards: Are they worth it?

Reward credit cards are essentially well-enhanced loyalty programs. You” earn the most rewards if you use your rewards card as your everyday credit card for as many transactions as possible.

Reward credit cards are packaged in several types, each one offering rewards programs calibrated to suit particular spending patterns. While they vary they all use the basic appoach of the more you spend on your card the greater the rewards.

Understanding the different reward card varieties

Frequent flyer credit card. Points earned from a frequent flyer credit card normally go to the frequent flyer program of the airline you prefer. The points you earn is largely determined by the monthly spend made using the card. Frequent flyer cards and points not only offer flights but can be used with travel partners such as major hotel chains, car rental and more.

Credit Cards with General / Catalogue Rewards. The credit card usually has partners in the program who provide the products offered for redemption under the rewards program. The items on offer could be anything although may include small applicances luggae, movie tickets, gift vouchers and more.

Credit cards with Cash-back
. These cards offer a very simple program: your account is credited for a certain percentage of the amount spent on particular items. As an example the card may offer a rebate from participating gas stations.

Instant reward credit cards. These programs are more straight forward. You don’t need to way to clock up points, you simply get access to special rates or discounts from partner retailers and merchants. The offer could be a discount, rebate or a bonus with items such as mobile phones.

Getting the most from a rewards credit card

Your credit card should fit your spending behaviour. If you use charge often and prefer not to carry any balances, reward credit cards that allow you to accumulate points should work best for you.

If you don’t pay your cad bills in full each month then it’s more than likely you won’t be suited to a points based rewards credit card. Reward credit cards usually have higher interest rates; the card companies recover the cost of running the rewards program partly from higher interest charges. Unpaid balances carried into the next payment period will attract the high interest rate. The cost of the high interest charges is likely to far exceed the value of any rewards earnt.

Often rewards cards have an annual fee. To know if a rewards program is write for you you need to do a rough calculation on whether the benefits will outweigh any costs such as annual fees and interest.

One quick way to measure that is to estimate how much you have to spend to get $1 of reward. Not all cards award equally, some might earn you one point per dollar spent while another could offer 1.5 points per $1. To get a reward item worth 6,000 points you thus need to spend $6,000 on the first card and only $4,000 on the other.

A further method is the point currency concept developed by Cannex. Point currency gives you the spending value of your rewards points. You simply divide the required number of points to redeem a reward item by its suggested retail price. The lower points needed the higher its value because you consume fewer points to get the reward.

For example, one program may require 10,000 points to win an item worth $75 in retail, but another program may need 12,000 points. The point currency in the first program is 10,000 divided by $75 or 133.3 points per $1 for the first, and 12,000 points divided by $75 or 160 points per $1 for the other.

As far as the rewards item is concerned, the first program gives you better point currency. Note though that if you incorporate the first method and the example described above, you may need to spend $10,000 to accumulate the required points in one program (at 1 point earned per $1 spent) but only $8,000 in the other (at 1.5 points earned per $1 spent).

The point should be clear: you need to regularly evaluate your reward credit cards for the worth of their benefits to you.

This article written by R.Greenwood from credit card comparison website click4credit.com.au.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace

No Comments

Leave a reply

Security Code: