Not exact matches
We
think you're all winners, so any nominees who don't take home a trophy tonight will get a
free night stay at our Lake Havasu
hotel or any Days Inn location.
I'd like to
think that mine is higher than a
free airline ticket or
night in a
hotel.
Affiliate blogging creates the opposite result: rather than laying out all the options and weighing them carefully and objectively so that readers can make the decision that works best for them, credit card affiliate links lead to motivated reasoning: since affiliate bloggers don't
think of themselves as bad people, but do write blog posts promoting the credit cards that pay them affiliate kickbacks, it's absolutely necessary for them to be emotionally invested, for example, in the absurd notion that the Hyatt credit card annual
free night certificate really is the best way to get a
hotel room in downtown Seattle.
In any case, I can't
think of another credit card that offers a straight up
free hotel night after booking just 3 other
nights, and with all elite perks still intact.
Living the dream on card rewards Those who don't know us very well may
think we are living the high life, but the truth is that our $ 250
hotel room near the line of totality during the eclipse was booked for 3,000 Starwood Preferred Guest points; our flight to Wyoming was 100 percent
free on a private plane thanks to a crazy JetSmarter promotion for those who could prove they had a million miles; our resort complete with water slides and a lazy river in San Antonio was booked using an annual credit card award
night when the room normally costs $ 300 - plus per
night; our amazing room at the Park Hyatt New York was booked using 30,000 Hyatt points per
night when the selling price was almost $ 1,000 per
night; and most of our other flights were booked via a collection of airline miles and credit card points that were primarily earned by leveraging our everyday spending for major rewards.
So, while a Category 3
hotel might never be more than 20k points for a
free night, the
hotels you
think are Category 3s could and / or have changed without notice.
This is actually pretty tempting to me as I can
think of a number of Conrad and Hilton
hotels I'm interested in using a
free night for.
Yes, the new
free night benefit is ridiculous because I literally can't
think of a single one of their
hotels I'd want to stay at in the U.S. (and I've researched all of them).
What this does hopefully indicate, however, that AMEX's super premium card will at least be better than this one — perhaps 10X points / $ for use at the
hotels, as well as an anniversary
free night certificate — at what Category level will be where the rub is, but I have got to
think that it will be above the current Category 5 with Chase.