Why I love the Chase Sapphire Preferred Card
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Key takeaways
- The Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card offers various benefits and rewards that help make its annual fee worthwhile
- It offers a welcome bonus of 60,000 points, if you meet the required conditions, which you can use towards travel with Chase or its travel partners, or redeem in other ways
- It also offers other travel perks and an anniversary bonus of 10 percent of your previous year’s spending in points
This article was originally published in August 2023. Card details may have been changed; see Bankrate’s review for current offers.
I’m a flight hacker and frequent traveler, and I’m always on the lookout for good credit card deals. Last year, I set my sights on a round-trip flight to Istanbul, so I started looking for a card that would cover most of the cost of my trip.
It didn’t take me long to realize that the card I was looking for was the Chase Sapphire Preferred Card, especially given its impressive welcome bonus at the time.
More than a year later, not only did that welcome bonus pay for my trip, but the card’s reward rates have made it my go-to for almost all of my daily expenses. Add in its unique 10 percent anniversary bonus and an annual $50 hotel credit (through the Chase Travel℠ portal), and it’s easy to see why it quickly became one of my favorite rewards credit cards. Here are some of the reasons I love this card:
It offers a great welcome bonus
When I applied, the Chase Sapphire Preferred was offering 100,000 bonus points after spending $4,000 in the first three months from when I signed up. The offer is now 60,000 bonus points after spending $4,000 in the first three months, but that’s still a great deal.
I had considered getting the Chase Sapphire Reserve® instead, but the $550 annual fee was too high for me — plus, I got a much better welcome bonus with the Sapphire Preferred than I would have with the Sapphire Reserve. Bankrate values the current offer of 60,000 Ultimate Rewards points at $750 (when used to book travel through the Chase Travel℠ portal), and up to $1,200 if you take full advantage of Chase’s transfer partners. The current baseline offering of 60,000 bonus points, worth more than seven times the $95 annual fee if you redeem through Chase Travel℠, is also a good deal.
To get the welcome bonus, I needed to spend a minimum of $4,000 within the first three months. In my case, I usually spend around $800 on food and groceries every month, so I put all of those expenses on the card. This was a sensible choice since I earn 3X points on dining (including eligible takeout and delivery) and online grocery purchases (excluding Target, Walmart and wholesale clubs). The card also earns:
- 5X points on travel purchased through Chase Travel℠
- 3X points on select streaming services
- 2X points on other general travel purchases
- 1X points on everything else
It has perks like no foreign transaction fees
I live an international life, splitting my time between Canada, the U.S. and Istanbul. I frequently travel to Asia, too. I find myself using my credit cards abroad all the time. That’s why I always travel with a card that doesn’t charge foreign transaction fees, and the Sapphire Preferred fits the bill. The other benefits of the Sapphire Preferred — such as travel, purchase protections and partner benefits with DoorDash and Lyft — make it more useful and more fun.
I can transfer points to loyalty programs easily
One of the things I like most about the Sapphire Preferred is that it enables me to transfer my points to other loyalty programs, like Chase’s partner airlines and hotel chains, at a 1:1 rate. This allows me to get much more value out of my points.
When I redeem my points through the Chase Ultimate Rewards program with the Sapphire Preferred card, the most I can get is 1.25 cents apiece, which is pretty good (holders of the Sapphire Reserve card can get 1.5 cents per point).
However, if I transfer them to a partner airline’s loyalty program, I will often get much more. For example, I can transfer my points to United Airlines’ MileagePlus and use them to redeem award flights directly through the MileagePlus program. When I do, I generally get a value of 2 or more cents per point — in line with Bankrate estimates that Chase Ultimate Rewards points are worth around 2 cents apiece on average when used with the right transfer partner.
In my case, I booked a round trip from Houston to Istanbul in business class. The cheapest cash flight I could find cost $2,300, but I only spent 69,000 miles (converted from 69,000 Ultimate Rewards points), plus $81.65 in taxes and fees. This means my points were worth over 3 cents each, making my 100,000-point welcome bonus worth over $3,000. I live for this type of deal.
It offers an annual 10 percent bonus
With this benefit, I get 10 percent of my total spend back in points each account anniversary. If I spend $10,000 on my card throughout the year, I’ll get 1,000 bonus points. That’s an additional 10 percent bonus I wouldn’t earn with any other card — and one more perk that helps the Chase Sapphire Preferred pay for itself.
The bottom line
The welcome bonus alone makes the Sapphire Preferred well worth the annual fee. I accumulated more than 20,000 points last year from my everyday spending, plus some extra points I earned on a few large purchases.
While the Chase Sapphire Preferred doesn’t offer premium travel benefits like airport lounge access, the money I save using the card easily offsets these small costs. As I wait for my annual 10 percent points bonus and prepare to spend the rest of the points I already have, I can’t help but feel that this is one of the smartest financial moves I’ve made in some time.