Kerb Hohl wrote:MartyConlonOnTheRun wrote:humanrefutation wrote:
Excellent suggestions. I've got the CSR and a big chunk of my trip is being paid through points. But I'm definitely taking advantage of the lounge access, especially in Singapore. I just used the meal credit to pay for dinner at an airport in Denver during a layover a couple weeks ago.
Just third-ing this comment. Even if you don't travel much, getting one of these cards gives you 3-10x return on the first annual fee (you can always cancel when the second annual fee hits).
It amazes me how many people are risk averse to CCs when they are financially literate with no debt (I'm talking CPAs, engineers, etc). 5 minutes to add a new chase or amex card every 6 months to your account and would cover lodging or flights for a weekend. The same people who say "I don't travel much" then complain a month later because the highway side Hampton inn was $200 when visiting family, wedding, funeral, etc.
I used to kind of credit card cycle more. I use the hell out of CC points but haven't opened new ones much lately. I have a Citi Premeir card and currently just use it for absolutely everything possible and probably get like $700 in rewards every year and just use it as cash back since that gives the greatest bang for buck. I also have Costco, Target, Amazon, etc. cards specific to those for the 5% or whatever it may be discount.
Do you just cycle a new rewards card every 6 months or so? I probably should start doing it again. It affects your credit score but not that much?
I have $1.5k of daycare spend every month and going up with the second kid. I basically get a new card every month. I'm like at 780 from a high of 810. Only dropped 2x:
-1st time when I refinanced and paid off the student loans wiping off my longest debt history and screwing up percentage of loans paid
-2nd time was when I refinanced a second time to get the better rate on the house and took out all equity for windows.
Opening cards had very little impact and may drop it a few points for a month but creeps back up. And if you are in a position where you don't need a car or house loan any time soon, who cares what your credit score is.

















