Man I wish I was The Points Guy when I get emails like this, I could clean up! Heck, I could stop making up fake emails too! So the question today comes from Reader A. Here’s the message in verbatim:
Hello Matt,
Seriously in love with your network, your personal finance views, and the forum.I am gearing up for my next app-o-rama and I just think you can really provide me with some recommendations, somewhat at a lost here.Here are my current cards:<List of cards, blah.. etc>What do you think I should get next?Thank you so much,
Firstly, nice touch starting out with a compliment, there’s no better way to catch my narcissistic eye than telling me I’m awesome! So here’s my advice:
I’ve no idea.
The problem that we face when it comes to these app-o-ramas (applying for a bunch of cards at one time) is that everyone has different needs, balances and strategies. I’ll explain my own here:
I like to have all my major travel booked up 330 days in advance. Points can be devalued and space is limited so I really feel a pressure to lock in tickets. With that in mind I carry a balance of points to cover two areas:
An emergency fund
I use this for quick trips, weekend getaways, and real emergencies where I might need to get somewhere. For me I tend to use transferable points for this as it is a hoarding approach. Transferable funds are SPG, Membership Rewards, Ultimate Rewards. You could argue Thank You Points should be in there now, but I’ve never really warmed to them.
A ‘gap fund’
I use this for seats that aren’t open yet – IE something that is perhaps 12-14 months away, and will open soon but I just can’t book it today.
Everyone has a different ‘need’ here. A single person needs less miles than a head of household, and a person with family in driving distance needs less than an immigrant with a lot of close family many miles away.
So, that’s my strategy, and as such, I tend to carry a varying amount that hovers around 50-100K in SPG, MR, UR and then a similar amount in a couple of key programs like AA, US, or whatnot that come from opportunistic offers.
My plan may change soon as I am rethinking it… but the key is that it is a plan.
You need a plan
The two big issues that I see when trying to answer the App O Rama question is that I cannot see the goal of Reader A, and I cannot see progress towards that goal. The 11 cards listed could mean he has a balance of 5M points, and the strategy should be move to cash back only, or he could have 500K points around a few programs, but little in the way of Arrival dollars so a Venture card might seem attractive. In another situation he may have all the flights covered, but no hotel points.
Decide on your goal, price it out, do it.
Personally, I’m a bit ‘goalless’ myself right now, so I can understand this isn’t always easy. But you really should try to consider some bucket list places and find the best way to make it work. The best tip I can give here is that you shouldn’t overvalue your hard pulls.
Providing that you can manage credit, and that you have no big credit needs (such as a mortgage) you should be more comfortable applying for cards that otherwise might seem average. Some examples would be: Chase Hyatt, Citi Reserve. These two offer a 2night free offer(though Chase might be changing that..) for their sign up bonus. IE you trade a hard pull and some opportunity spend for 2 nights in almost any Hyatt or Hilton property. This can be worth it, though arguably isn’t worth as much as 100K AA miles.
A card that people love to hate is the CapOne Venture. It is reviled as they pull 3 times for this, but for most people that doesn’t matter. In exchange this offers 40K signup bonus and 2x everywhere, making it a slightly inferior version of the Arrival in some ways.
Once you have a goal, feel free to swing by the Forum to ask in our App o Rama thread, we will be glad to help. And if you want to apply for credit cards, remember doing so on Saverocity will mean a donation goes to charity.
In closing. I cannot recommend highly enough that anyone who is in the points and miles game gets traveling ASAFP. Forget cashback and MS and all that crap if you haven’t had a great trip at least once. Get a plan, and get out there.
italdesign says
Why must you make it more complicated than necessary? The answer is obviously The Chase Sapphire Preferred Card, The Chase Ink Plus Card, and the next 3 that earn you the biggest affiliate payout. In BOLD big font of course.
john says
Yes CSP is best to recommend. This way you every first Friday of the month you can re-post how you earn 3 points at restaurants.