Archive for November, 2009
Chase Sapphire Card, Travel Rewards Card with $100 Sign On Bonus
Chase Sapphire Card is a point rewards credit card best used for airfare purchases with no
annual fee. The reason that you can’t see Visa or MasterCard icon in the card image is because it’s available in either Visa or MasterCard versions. Unlike other Chase credit cards, this card doesn’t have credit limit.
You can get reward points in three ways:
- Sign on bonus: $100 value. after your first purchase, you get 10,000 points which can be easily redeemed to $100 cash
- Regular purchase: 1% cash back value. for your regular purchase, Chase Sapphire Card rewards you 1 point for every $1
- Airfare purchase: additional 2% cash back value. on top of 1 point for $1 rewards, you get double point rewards (2 points for $1) for airfares you spent if you book flights through their Ultimate Rewards Website.
Rewards points can be redeemed into cash (100 points for $1) or used to purchase merchandise through Chase’s Ultimate Rewards program. As soon as you earn $25 worth of rewards, you are allowed to redeem, make Chase Sapphire Card’s rewards easier to be redeemed than Chase Freedom Credit Card.
Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.
Credit Card Comparison: Complete List of Secured Credit Cards
There are many ways to classify credit cards. From the perspective of when you pay off bill, credit cards can be classified into charge cards and non-charge cards. This post focus on another way of credit card classification, from the perspective of whether you put down a collateral to get credit card debt, credit cards can be classified into:
- secured credit cards: the credit card debt you get is dependent on a collateral you put down with credit card company, it’s usually an amount of cash, and usually the amount of collateral you put down is the amount of credit limit you get.
- unsecured credit cards: the credit card debt you get does not require you put down a certain amount of collateral. This type of credit cards is the general type of credit cards we commonly use.
This post shows major secured credit cards for you to choose
Important Disclaimer: the credit cards information in this post were accurate as of the date of publishing, some or all of the card programs may be discontinued, their terms may be changed after wards.




