Pros and Cons: Ranking the Top Flexible Points Programs in 2018

The best flexible points programs feature an ability to easily cash out your points for solid value, moderate uplift for everyday travel and jackpot-like upside when redeeming for international premium cabin flights.

Success in this game means using the right tool for the right job.

Things change over time so I thought it would be interesting to take stock of what each of the four major flexible rewards programs are best at (Chase Ultimate Rewards, AmEx Membership Rewards, Citi ThankYou Points, and Starwood Preferred Guest) along with the pros and cons of each.

Let’s get right into it.

#1 Chase Ultimate Rewards

Pros

  • Easy to use transfer partners with good upside (United, Hyatt, Southwest and more)
  • 5x/3x earning opportunities with Ink cards, rotating 5x with Freedom, 1.5x everywhere with Freedom Unlimited makes them easy to earn
  • Friendly spousal transfer policy
  • Point transfers are generally instant
  • 1.5 cents a point towards any travel bookable through Chase (including cruises and Disney vacations) for Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders
  • 1.25 cents a point towards travel for Sapphire Preferred/Ink cardholders
  • Easy 1 cent a piece cashback
  • Refer-a-friend offers

Cons

  • Chase portal sometimes charges more for hotels than booking direct
  • Rental car reservations booked through Chase portal have worse cancellation terms than booking direct
  • 5/24 policy limits churnability (5 credit cards across all banks in the past 24 months means they’ll not approve new Ultimate Rewards cards)

What they’re best at

Chase Ultimate Rewards are the best all around flexible point currency. They’re relatively easy to earn through credit card signups and spend, they’ve got upside in redemption with easy to use travel partners (United, Hyatt), they’ve got every day value (Southwest), and they’re easy to cash out at a penny a piece.

With the addition of 1.5 cent per point redemption towards travel for Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders cheap airfare, cruises, and hotels all become solid redemptions.

The ability to book any travel Chase has in their system opens up a lot of hotels without loyalty programs for award redemption. Be Your Own Elite!

#2 American Express Membership Rewards

Pros

  • 1:1 transfer to Delta, Aeroplan, British Airways (and more) covers all three alliances
  • 35% reward rebate for Business Platinum cardholders equates to ~1.5 cent towards air travel
  • Insider Fares provide additional savings
  • Can be cashed out for 1.25 cents a point if you have the Schwab Platinum card
  • So many Membership Reward earning cards
  • AmEx Offers
  • Historically good retention offers
  • Refer-a-friend offers

Cons

  • Airline partners (other than Delta) can be difficult to navigate for domestic awards since they’re partner awards subject to saver level availability
  • Limited hotel transfer partners
  • Hotels and cruises are a bad redemption (less than 1 cent per point)
  • Can’t transfer to spouses
  • Takes work to cash them out
  • 35% air travel rebate takes a long time to process
  • One signup bonus per product per person lifetime

What they’re best at

AmEx Membership Rewards are best for air travel.

Like Buddy Ryan used to say “All Cris Carter does is catch touchdowns”: All AmEx does is provide cheap airfare. Cheap airfare is a good thing so I like them. Although their customer service seems to be slipping and they’re increasingly clamping down on shenanigans they’re still the #2 player in the game.

Bonus reading: Turns out Buddy Ryan may have said “All Cris Carter wants to do is catch touchdowns” as if to say that he’s not willing to do the hard work associated with getting into position to score a touchdown. Interesting read.

#3 Citi ThankYou Points

Pros

  • 1.25 cent per point towards travel for Citi Premier, including cruises (even Disney Cruises) and hotels
  • 4th night free with Citi Prestige
  • If you have Premier and Prestige you can stack 1.25 cents per point with 4th night free
  • 3x earning for online purchases with Citi AT&T Access More (not available for new signups, product change from AA card)

Cons

  • Flagship ThankYou Points credit cards have sporadic signup bonuses (none available at the moment)
  • Quirky Business ThankYou card gets hardly any attention from Citi
  • Spousal ThankYou Point transfers limited to 100,000 per calendar year (and are subject to expiration once transferred)
  • Confusing uplift towards travel depending on the card you have (this post helps straighten it out)
  • Obscure 1:1 travel partners (no AA? strange)

What they’re best at

Citi ThankYou Points are best used for international premium cabins through their 1:1 transfer partners.

But if you’re not in the market for international flights they’re good for 4th night free hotel stays paid with ThankYou Points if you have the Prestige card. Especially if you also have the Premier card. And they get solid 1.25 cents a piece value towards cruises.

Citi ThankYou Points are confusingly similar to Chase Ultimate Rewards. You can get into trouble assuming they’re the same. They’re not, but that doesn’t mean they should be ignored.

In some way I prefer them to AmEx Membership Rewards (due entirely to their ability to redeem towards cruises and hotels with uplift) but Citi’s lack of investment in the program makes the forward looking value worth less than the historical value.

#4 Starwood Preferred Guest

Pros

  • Unique transferability to airlines (both common and obscure) at a 20,000:25,000 ratio
  • Large footprint and strong redemption value at SPG/Marriott hotels
  • Favorable 1:3 transfer ratio to Marriott
  • 5th night free on hotel award redemptions

Cons

  • Slow transfers to airlines and family members
  • The best air travel redemptions require expertise
  • Difficult to earn (no bonus categories on credit card, limited number of credit cards, no shopping portal)
  • Prone to expiration due to expiration unless you spend on the SPG credit card
  • Can’t redeem them for cashback

What they’re best at

Starpoints are best used for international premium cabin flights, transferred to partner airlines that no/few other programs transfer into.

They also typically provide very good value towards their hotels, but do the math on paid rates to make sure you’re getting good value. Aim for 3 cents a piece or better.

It’s a bit of a stretch to compare this program with the others in this list but the SPG airline transfer feature has always effectively made it a flexible point program.

I’d really be interested in the back story of how they negotiated 20,000:25,000 with so many airlines – I don’t think we’ll ever see something like that again. We’ll see what happens as the Marriott merger proceeds through 2019.

Note: I didn’t include programs like Barclay Arrival, CapitalOne Venture, and Bank of America Travel Rewards etc because their value proposition is so straightforward.

Bottom Line

The rise of bank points has shifted the balance of power away from airlines and hotels towards flexible point programs. There is value to be had in each of the top points programs. Just make sure you’re investing your energy into programs that align with your travel goals.

Further Reading: Ranking The “Tier 2” Rewards Credit Card Banks

About the author

– Written by Robert Dwyer, contributor at Milenomics. Connect with me on Twitter @RobertDwyer

Comments

  1. Thanks for this thoughtful roundup!
    I would add to Citi Thank You Points as a big con:

    Expire after the card that earned them is closed. Complicated to track.

  2. I agree with your rankings. UR are great not only because of good partners but the instant transfers can’t be understated. Especially with flights you have to wait a few days for points to post your award may be gone. I like the Hyatt and WN transfers especially. I am enjoying your posts here on Milenomics, good to have the site active again!

  3. Please note that AmEx xfers cost money, the notorious (and BS) excise tax.
    E.g. ~100k MR pts transferred to Delta Skymiles costs about $90 out of pocket.

    No other flexible points program charges you to use/transfer points to partners.

        1. It’s a very good point, but I think it’s $0.0006/pt. $60 per 100,000, so a *somewhat* nominal fee but I totally agree it’s bad they charge this when other programs don’t.

          Thanks for the comment!

  4. Wait…so the 5/24 rule only applies to UR-earning cards, not co-branded? I had thought some co-branded were affected.

    But…this is the internet, so I’m sure I could be wrong.

    1. Hey Thom,

      The post is about flexible bank point programs. In the Ultimate Rewards section it says that 5/24 applies to all the cards that earns URs.

      But you’re right: 5/24 currently seems to apply to all UR cards and also some non-UR cards.

      Hope this helps…

  5. Citi added Avianca as a transfer partner. Not sure whether better to MS for cash back and buy Avianca points outright or MS for TYP and transfer to Avianca.

  6. It’s hard for me to understand TYP at #3 over SPG. Sure I love 4th night free with Prestige, but that benefit is fairly independent of the TYP program. Starpoints are great because 1) Has the most airline partners of any flexible currency by far at a 1:1.25 ratio, 2) Partners with Alaska, which has the best award chart (especially for flying on Cathay/JAL F), 3) Great Nights&Flights redemption options.

  7. I have never heard you can only transfer 100,000 TY points per year, do you have a link to where Citi states that in their T&C?

    1. As a follow up to that, from what I read, the 100,000 limit is to transfer TY points to another person’s Citi Thank You account, and not to transfer to the airline programs. That’s an important distinction!

      1. Thanks Derek. You’re right – I was talking about transferring ThankYou Points to a spouse rather than airline programs.
        I’ve updated the post to clarify that.

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