WonkoTheSane said:
dculberson said:
In reply to WonkoTheSane :
Wow you just described $60k/yr in credit card charges. That’s on another level and it’s great you get over $2k in rewards but DANG.
Yeppo! It helps when you travel a lot for work and you pay for everything up front (then get reimbursed). And, we go through a lot of food around here :). Although I have been travelling less lately so I guess my haul probably won't average out that good this year.
The biggest thing is that we put EVERYTHING on the cards. I would guess that we use less than 2k in cash per year, because we can get something back by using the cards. Every bill is on auto pay on the cards, charitable donations go on it, etc. All household expenses. Buying new windows? On the card.
We treat it like cash as far as never spending what we don't have today, but why turn down free money, right?
Since this bubbled up to the surface, I thought it would be fun to check how my rewards are this year, since there was no work travel and significantly less gas usage across the board. But also due to the pandemic and the twins getting old enough to transition to beds, I ended up redoing two bedrooms for the kids, so I built three beds, got some desks, redid flooring, etc., finished up the house windows from two years ago, so it was a bit heavy on the improvement expenses over the normal yearly budget.
Total spent on the Citi: $47,402.63, cash back: $919.64 or 1.95%
Amex: $12,561.84, cash back $550.10 ($470 after yearly fee) or 3.75% (after fee).
Another hit to the Amex is that we started shopping at CostCo, which doesn't allow you to use anything other than Visa, so that comes directly out of the bank (debit card used as credit), so no points are awarded. So between lack of gas and reduction of local grocery store purchases, we're down over 50% return on that.
May be time to break down & grab a CostCo card.
Interest paid: $0.00