There will also be a new cap of 500,000
points rebated per year.
Not exact matches
PURCHASE WITH CONFIDENCE: 112 -
Point Inspection and Reconditioning, 2 years / 24, 000 miles bumper - to - bumper limited warranty, 24 - Hour Roadside Assistance, $ 50 deductible
per dealer visit, Trip - Interruption Services, Trip - Planning Services, Vehicle History Report, SiriusXM Satellite Radio 3 - month trial * Discounted prices on new vehicles include all applicable
rebates & incentives to dealer.
Great Gas Mileage: 37 MPG Hwy.SHOP WITH CONFIDENCE: 112 -
Point Inspection and Reconditioning, 2 years / 24, 000 miles bumper - to - bumper limited warranty, 24 - Hour Roadside Assistance, $ 50 deductible
per dealer visit, Trip - Interruption Services, Trip - Planning Services, Vehicle History Report, SiriusXM Satellite Radio 3 - month trial * Discounted prices on new vehicles include all applicable
rebates & incentives to dealer.
This card also gives you a 5 %
rebate for all redeemed
points, making the value of the rewards rate equal out to 2.1
points per dollar.
This means that assuming each Thank You
Point = $ 0.01, your maximum rebate is 2 % (ie, if your ordinary purchase point is 20,000 per year, no matter how many miles you fly, only 20,000 flight points can be converted into redeemable Thank you points, you can only turn 20,000 purchase points + 20,000 flight points = 40,000 Thank you points eligible for redempt
Point = $ 0.01, your maximum
rebate is 2 % (ie, if your ordinary purchase
point is 20,000 per year, no matter how many miles you fly, only 20,000 flight points can be converted into redeemable Thank you points, you can only turn 20,000 purchase points + 20,000 flight points = 40,000 Thank you points eligible for redempt
point is 20,000
per year, no matter how many miles you fly, only 20,000 flight
points can be converted into redeemable Thank you
points, you can only turn 20,000 purchase
points + 20,000 flight
points = 40,000 Thank you
points eligible for redemption).
With the
rebate, your average
per point value comes out to $ 0.028.
If you have an Amex Membership Rewards card, you can choose between earning 2X bonus
points per dollar spent or a 5 %
rebate in the form of a statement credit.
So folks with the card will effectively pay 4,500 IHG
points per night for a PointBreaks hotel (5,000 IHG
points — 500
point rebate).
If you have the Chase IHG card, you'll get a 10 %
rebate on redeemed
points, up to a maximum
rebate of 100,000 IHG
points per year.
On June 1, the 50 % bonus will be reduced to earning a 35 %
points rebate, and it will have a cap of 500,000
points back
per calendar year.
I paid for these with American Express Membership Rewards with 2 cent
per point uplift thanks to a 50 %
rebate for premium cabin flights when paying with Membership Rewards for Business Platinum cardholders.
The IHG Rewards Club card also comes with Platinum status, 10 %
rebate on all reward redemptions, no foreign transaction fees, and you earn 2x
points per $ 1 on gas, groceries, and restaurants.
And under the new Southwest Rapid Rewards program, UR
points transferred to Southwest could be worth as little as 1.25 cents per point, which would make the Amex Pay With Points rebate actually b
points transferred to Southwest could be worth as little as 1.25 cents
per point, which would make the Amex Pay With
Points rebate actually b
Points rebate actually better.
With this
rebate you'd get roughly 1.43 cents
per point for your Membership Rewards
points (the 30 %
rebate means you're spending 70 MR
points per dollar, so $ 1 divided by 70
points equals 1.428 cents
per point).
Points redemptions come with a 10 % rebate, and all purchases earn 2 points per $ 1, so this card can easily cover two roundtrip flights at present
Points redemptions come with a 10 %
rebate, and all purchases earn 2
points per $ 1, so this card can easily cover two roundtrip flights at present
points per $ 1, so this card can easily cover two roundtrip flights at present rates.
Ultimate Rewards
points are worth 1.2 cents
per point, ThankYou
points are worth 1.33 cents
per point, and Membership Rewards
points are worth 1 cent
per point (if you have Business Platinum Card from American Express, then you get a 20 %
rebate, for a value of 1.25 cents
per point).
A similar combination with American Express would be the Everyday Preferred card (1 MR
per point on everyday spending, plus 2x at gas stations, plus 3x at grocery stores up to a $ 6,000 yearly limit, with a 50 % bonus for 30 purchases in one month) and the Business Platinum Card with the now 35 %
rebate.
For the Amex cards, the 2 cents
per point valuation comes in the form of a 50 %
rebate, so you'll need double the number of required
points in your account in order to make redemptions with half the
points returned afterwards.
You have to choose one specific airline
per year for that particular
rebate, but when booking that way, you're getting over 1.4 cents
per point in value.
The card offers a 10 percent
rebate for Priceline redemptions and has the highest earning rate of five
points per dollar spent on Priceline.com.
When you use Pay with
Points for booking your designated airline, you will receive a 50 percent
rebate for a value of 1.5 cents
per point.
It's essentially like getting a 1,000
point rebate on your award stays and if you value Hyatt
points at 1.8 cents
per point, that's about $ 18 back
per night (which is excellent).
Now the 50 %
rebate will be reduced to 35 % as of June 1, 2017, dropping the value of the redemptions to 1.54 cents
per point.
The Arrival card even gives us 10 % of our
points back as a
rebate, so the redemption valuation becomes 2.2 cents
per dollar on that $ 73 fare.
Some programs like Barclaycard and Capitol One offer you one cent
per point for all miles booked on travel and this never changes (with the exception of factoring in
rebates).
The Enhanced Business Platinum ® Card from American Express OPEN offered a lot of value for many people with its Pay With
Points benefit allowing members to redeem Membership Rewards for certain airlines at 2 cents
per point by utilizing a 50 % automatic
rebate.
2,000
points per stay isn't exactly generous — I value Hilton Honors
points at around 0.4 cents each so this promotion is effectively offering a
rebate of $ 8
per stay.
On top of that, for a limited time, you will earn over $ 500 in travel, 2x
points per $ 1 spent, and a 5 %
rebate on all
point redemptions.
First and business - class tickets on all airlines get the
rebate, but you'll only get 2 cents
per point for economy tickets on your selected airline.
If you have an American Express Business Platinum card, you can use Amex Pay With
Points on your selected airline in economy for 1 cent
per point and receive a 50 %
rebate (making it a «2 cents — but not really 2 cents —
per point» value).
As promotions go this one isn't exactly lucrative but, valuing Marriott Rewards
points at 0.7 cents each as I do, you'll be getting an effective
rebate of either $ 14 or $ 28
per stay (starting with your second stay)... which is better than nothing.
Combined with the 5 %
rebate earned when you redeem those
points, you essentially earn 2.1 x
per dollar.
This card also gives you a 5 %
rebate for all redeemed
points, making the value of the rewards rate equal out to 2.1
points per dollar.
Still, if the standard redemption rate is 2.5
points per Euro that's essentially a
rebate of $ 0.05 / Euro or 5 %....
1 OpenTable
point = 1.0 cents and you'll usually earn at least 100
points per booking... so that's a $ 1
rebate per reservation.
On the spending side, you get 2
points per dollar on every charge, and with the 10 %
rebate,
points are worth about 2.2 cents each, making it better than a 2 % cash back card, the usual benchmark.
2 cents
per point from the 50 %
rebate can't really compare to 14 cents
per point!
This is a great fixed based earning card that earns 2
point per dollar everywhere, but with the 10 %
rebate, this card truly becomes a 2.2
point per dollar card, further making this card even more valuable!
Imho, you would have to generate significant amount of reward eligible purchases with that additonal 50 cent
points per $ 100 SPENDING to make it appear worthwhile the hassle of remembering (usually right) before December EACH YEAR to ask Rogers / Fido (other than towards Rogers / Fido store / stuff) for your hUge cash payout as next January statement credit ONLY; thus finally getting back ~ all Fido / Rogers» 2.5 % FX fees you loaned / paid them except FX fees Fido / Rogers bank keeps from any purchase returns / cancels / reversals, atm cash / cash advance needs and any cash - like transactions (e.g., pre-paid load, «lottery tickets, casino gaming chips») in «foreign currency» where you get zero / no rewards
rebating them.
but unlike ThankYou
points, which must be redeemed for mortgage checks, student loan
rebate checks, or travel through the ThankYou booking tool in order to get a full 1 cent
per point in value, Blue Cash «reward dollars» can be redeemed directly for cash;
My Business Centurion gets me a 50 %
rebate, so 2 cents
per point in value.
For the record, a 35 %
rebate works out to just over 1.5 cents
per point value.
On the other hand, Amex makes it difficult to get better than 1 cent
per point value when using
points to pay for travel: only Business Platinum cardholders get a 35 %
rebate when using
points to pay for flights with their preferred airline, or business / first class flights with any airline.