Financial Feminist - 96. How to Use Your Credit Cards to Travel for Free
Episode Date: June 22, 2023If you’ve ever watched a TikTok video where someone showed off their lavish lay-down business class suite they got “with points” and wondered, HOW?! This episode is for you! Today, Tori breaks d...own beginner-friendly tips for how to use your credit cards to get deals on flights, hotels, and more. This episode is for anyone who wants to better understand how to choose the best credit card and utilize points, whether you’re a seasoned multi-trip traveler or a casual vacationer looking to get a better deal. Credit card recs: https://herfirst100k.com/recommended-credit-cards Read transcripts, learn more about our guests and sponsors, and get more resources at https://herfirst100k.com/start-here-financial-feminist-podcast Not sure where to start on your financial journey? Take our FREE money personality quiz! https://herfirst100k.com/quiz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello, financial feminists. Welcome back to the show. Your girl got COVID. I am recording
this with a sore throat and a stuffed up nose. I feel the same way I did last
year when I got COVID. I almost got it at the same time. It was like end of June last year,
and we're recording this in early June, and your girl got the vid. I am thankful for vaccines. Get
fucking vaccinated, and I'm going to stay in my house. And what's crazy to me is
that CDC, I googled what I'm supposed to do now because, you know, it's been a while. I wasn't
sure what the guidelines were. They told me that after day five of symptoms, I could go out into
my normal life. And I was like, that seems too soon because technically I'm on day five right
now and I feel contagious as fuck.
So I am planning on staying home for a couple more days and surviving off of canned goods and
frozen stuff from Trader Joe's. And I'm excited to see what kind of meals I end up inventing
with my limited amount of groceries. But I'm so excited to see you. Today we kind of have a sexy episode that has a sexy
title and a not-so-sexy execution, which is the fact that I am traveling to Europe this summer,
and I am flying for the first time in business class lie-down flat seats. You know that I travel a lot, but you might not know that I don't sleep
on planes. I am a terrible, terrible sleeper on planes. I can sleep in a car just fine,
but I cannot sleep on a plane unless I have not slept for a day. So when I flew to Australia with
Christine last year, I think I got on a 14-hour flight about two or maybe three hours of sleep,
and it wasn't good sleep. I also just have a body that's broken. I am in chronic pain,
so I have to get up and walk around a lot, which is not conducive to sitting
for a very long time and trying to sleep. So I am so stoked to be flying nonstop from Seattle to Paris in July, which is peak
season, business class. Here's the catch. I did not pay for business class. A just business class
seat for myself would have been $14,000. However, I am getting it for just the taxes and fees, which is about five to
seven hundred dollars a person. I am flying business class to Europe, lie down flat seats,
meals, alcohol, little eye masks that they give you entirely on credit card points. Last year, Friend Moon 2K22 with Christine, I flew to Australia, economy,
but still, Australia, which is normally Seattle, Australia is like a $2,000 flight on miles and
credit card points. Again, you can do this. You can do this listening. You can fly. You can get
free shit using your credit card points. First, a couple of common misconceptions because you just heard that and you're like, but I don't travel a lot or like, Tori, I don't go on
world speaking tours. And I'm like, I totally get it. So first, one of the myths is you have to be
a big traveler in order to take advantage of points. Not true. Not true. You can plan a big
trip for like once a year or even once every other year, whether that's international or domestic, and you can use points. And if you use a credit card strategically, you don't have
to be this like traveler that's going all of the time. You also don't have to use a fancy travel
rewards credit card to get free travel. Now that's great if you do have a travel rewards credit card. We've talked
about the benefits of these in the past. We also have the ones we recommend linked down below.
Travel rewards cards, think of the ones that are like metal, like an Amex Platinum or a Chase
Sapphire Reserve. These are travel rewards cards where they give you not just points,
right? But they're giving you like free TSA pre-check and lounge
access and maybe double or triple points on travel related expenses, travel credit.
You can redeem points for travel through just a general credit card that gives you points. It
doesn't have to be a fancy travel rewards credit card if, again, you're not somebody who travels
all the time and won't get the benefits of that. I have tried to get my parents to sign up for one of those
travel rewards cards. And they're like, but we don't travel enough. They do a lot of road trips.
That's their thing. But they don't fly a lot. And I'm like, you can still take all of the points
that you're earning from your general cash back card and redeem them for travel. And the last thing, you don't have to have a full
amount in points. That's another common thing I hear. It's like, I am booking this flight,
business class to Paris and back on points. But there are plenty of options that are like
your points plus a little bit of cash. You don't have to have the hundreds and hundreds of thousands of points if you don't have them. You can do a combo of points and cash or pooling your points. We'll talk about all of
that in this episode. One of the final myths is that a huge annual fee is not worth it.
And I want to debunk that hard. My Amex Platinum card has a nearly $700 annual fee. And you're like, oh my god,
I just vomited into my mouth a little bit. My other big travel rewards card, which is my Chase
Sapphire Reserve, has almost a $500 annual fee. Why do I sign up for these cards in the first
place? Because they pay for themselves almost immediately. Let's break down that like $700 Amex Platinum fee.
For me, it makes sense because I get TSA PreCheck, a $75 value, and Clear, a $125 value completely
for free.
Cool.
We've just like almost cut it in half immediately, right?
That's not half.
Math is hard.
But we also get a $250 travel credit immediately. That travel credit
can be used on a hotel. It can be used on a flight. I get, I think, a $200 airline credit.
I get lounge access. And for the amount of times that I fly, that is saving me the cost of a $25
salad and an $8 water bottle, right? Anytime. I've also been able to shower at these
airport lounges or take a nap. And truly, that is priceless when you've been traveling all day.
There are so many benefits with the card that it basically pays for itself. So don't get turned
off by an annual fee that's super high if it will make sense for you. Now, that's the asterisk,
right? If you're signing up for a card
with a huge annual fee and you're not going to use all of the benefits or you're not going to
have it pay for itself, it might not be worth it for you, right? But there's a reason why I have
chosen to invest in those cards and it's because I basically earn that back immediately upon using
the card. And of course, I remember another myth after I
said the last one was the last one. The other myth, I think, is that people believe that this
whole thing is super complicated and that you need a portfolio of credit cards. And some people
take this that seriously. Ultimately, if you would like to become obsessed with this, you can.
I know people who have redeemed millions of dollars of flights
using credit card points and done it responsibly. I know those kind of people. I am like a
knows more than the average person, but is like, I got other shit to do. My friend Janelle,
Janelle on a jet, we'll drop her info below. She was the one actually who helped me book this
flight to Europe.
I probably could not have done this by myself.
But she is very good at this.
She knows a lot about this.
So as you're going through this episode and you're like, I don't know that and I would like to learn more, Google will be your friend.
People like Janelle will be your friends.
There is so much that you can learn if you want.
But also you can be super
casual about this, right? You can just say like, I want to redeem my points in a way that feels the
most useful for me. That's great. That's cool. That is travel hacking. You can like travel hack
like a fucking pro, or you can just be like the casual travel hacker and both things are going to
be fine, right? It's just like, how much time do you want to spend doing this thing? You don't need
to be the most pro travel hacker in the world to take advantage of these benefits.
Okay. First, we need to understand credit card travel rewards programs.
We need to understand how these work. It's going to be different depending on your card,
right? We're talking about like travel rewards credit cards specifically versus just your general
general credit card that offers rewards. But credit card travel rewards programs can go from
anything to like airline specific cards. Like I have an Alaska Airlines card. That was one of like my first more fancy
cards that I got. It gives me obviously points and miles specifically for Alaska Airlines.
You can get a Southwest card, right? You can get a Marriott card. You also can get cards that are
just these general redeemable points for hotels, flights, car rentals, even just like cashback
or gift cards, right? I'm thinking of like a Capital One Quicksilver card. Again, all of these
are linked down below in the show notes. But Capital One Quicksilver card just gives you one
and a half percent cashback on every purchase you make, right? So that cash back can be redeemed as just like a statement credit or also for things like travel, flights, rental cars, hotels, etc. It's really important when you
choose a credit card. It sounds so obvious, but choose a credit card that makes sense for you.
I don't fly United. Sorry, United. I will never ever fly you again after the New Orleans incident of 2018.
I will never fly you again. So it does not make sense to get a United Airlines credit card,
right? Even if it has like the best sexiest offer in the world, because I'm not going to use it,
right? On the flip side, just like I was talking about with my parents, for them,
they don't feel like it makes sense to get a card that offers them TSA pre-check and all of that stuff if they're not flying that often. So really find a credit card
that makes sense for you, not just the one that feels like the most sexy offer ever. Let's talk
about how we can earn credit card points. I've mentioned this before. I do not have a debit card.
I do not own a debit card. I do have one technically. It's in a drawer,
but I don't use it. I do not use the debit card. I never have. So when we think about putting all of our purchases, right? I put all of my purchases on a credit card. That means that I
get points for every single thing. I put my electric bill on my credit card. I put meals. I put any purchases for HFK, the business. They all
go on a credit card. I've said this once. I'll say it again. Please make sure with all of these
strategies that you can use your credit card responsibly, meaning that you're paying your
bills on time and in full. This strategy doesn't work if you are in credit card debt or you are
likely to go into credit card debt, right?
I'm only putting things on a credit card that I can actually afford. But I am putting everything
on a credit card. I'm putting everything on a credit card. So I am earning points and miles
on things that I already spent money on, right? They're just making me more money, which is great.
In terms of the strategies of getting more points in addition to just your everyday purchases,
a lot of credit cards, especially as their introductory offers right before you sign up,
will give you $30,000, $50,000, $100,000 extra points if you spend like $2,000 or $3,000 in the
first couple months. This is not your permission slip to spend a bunch of money that you normally wouldn't spend. But it is your permission slip to maybe be strategic in when
you sign up for one of those cards. Maybe you're about to move and you know that you're going to
have a bunch of moving costs. You are paying movers. You're renting a U-Haul. Also, you have
a brand new couch you need to buy. You can be strategic and sign up
for that card right before you're going to do that. You can be strategic in signing up for a
card that's going to give you a huge bonus around times that you know you're going to be spending
extra money. Oh, I need a new laptop because mine broke. Perfect opportunity to responsibly sign up for a new credit card, put your new MacBook on the
credit card and reap those benefits, right? Earn the free points that they're going to give you.
Just make sure that you're spending thoughtfully, right? This is not your excuse to go out on a
crazy fucking spending spree that you did not plan for. Another favorite little hack that I love,
when you go out to eat with friends, say, I got the check and you can just Venmo me.
Suddenly that $400 meal that normally would have been split like seven ways,
now all goes in your credit card and you just get a Venmo. Do this with friends that you know
are going to pay you back. But perfect way of getting more points, of earning that introductory offer.
One of the biggest other hacks I can give you is open up your cards with the same bank or the
same carrier. So I have my Chase Sapphire Reserve credit card. That is my personal card. That was
my first really fancy card that I signed up for. It's metal. It's, again, lounge access. It's great. When it came time to open up
a Her First 100K credit card, right? A corporate card for business expenses,
I wasn't going to go to a completely separate bank to open that credit card. I was going to open it through Chase because your points can pool.
You can pool your points, right? So I can have 250,000 points with my personal card and maybe
500,000 points with HFK. And suddenly I have 750,000 Chase points. That gives me a lot more
flexibility and options than like splitting your points up into different banks and different places.
Same thing with like my Amex card. If I choose to open up another business card,
I'm either doing it through Chase or I'm doing it through Amex because it complements what I
already have. That way we can pool our points. If you are legally partnered with somebody,
credit cards. Don't put necessarily yourselves on the same credit card. Do that. Plus, open up a different
credit card so you can still get all of the benefits, right? You could get the like three,
let's say 30,000 extra points if you sign up for one credit card in both y'all's name.
Or you could get 60,000 points if you sign up for two credit cards in both y'all's names, right?
That's another little hacky way. If you still need to make sure
that you can put purchases on that card, put both of your names on it, right? But that way you can
take advantage like times two of the benefits that they're offering and that like introductory bonus.
Just make sure they're at the same place so you can pool your points. All right, to wrap up,
couple of the things, right? We want to find a credit card that actually makes sense for us, that actually reflects what we're trying to do with it,
right? We want to find a credit card with benefits that actually makes sense for us.
We have all of the ones we recommend linked down below or linked on our website. The travel cards,
the student cards, the business cards, the like, I am getting my first credit
card and I have no idea what to pick kind of card.
We got all of those linked for you.
Second is taking full advantage of your points, earning as many points as you possibly can
by putting your normal everyday purchases on, by optimizing when you're signing up for
new cards, by footing the bill and then asking people to Venmo you.
There's ways to earn more points
and to optimize that experience. And then finally, transferring those points. Typically, again,
with flights and hotels, it's going to make more sense to take the points out of the portal and to
actually transfer them to either the airline or the hotel brand that you're trying to use these
points for. This is just the tip of the iceberg with this.
Again, you can get as crazy as you want with travel hacking or you can be as casual as you want.
But there's something so fucking powerful about the fact that I will get to turn left on my first airplane. I will get to walk into an airplane, not turn right to go to coach, but turn left to go to business class and know
that I pay just the taxes and fees for that $14,000 trip for that $14,000 flight.
It makes the rest of my planning to Europe so much easier because I can take the money I normally
would have spent on a flight and spend it on something else, which is so nice. And as I'm planning the rest of the trip in this last couple weeks before we go,
I'm using more points to book hotels, to book rental cars. I'm using our points to basically
get us a half-off trip for three weeks in Europe. And there's no better feeling than that.
If you like this episode, feel free to leave us a
review, share it with a friend. If you are looking to either be full on travel hacker or just like I
want to dip my toe in again, we have our credit cards we love and that I use link down below.
Thank you for being here. Cheers to rich bitch flights and rich bitch experiences that you didn't pay any fucking money for.
And I will talk to you soon.
Thank you for listening to Financial Feminist, a Her First 100K podcast.
Financial Feminist is hosted by me, Tori Dunlap.
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