Points Check May 2024

May was a pretty big month for us as far as points are concerned. We booked our return trip home from Rome and had a huge bonus hit from American Express. I’m thinking the flights back from Rome might be the last big redemption we have for the rest of the year, so I’m curious to see how our overall points totals increase as the year goes on.

Getting What We Wanted

We have been unbelievably indecisive about coming home from Rome. We will be meeting our friends and Jenn’s parents at Leonardo di Vinci airport in Rome in November and while it was very important that we all arrive at nearly the same time, leaving at the same time was not as important. We kept changing our minds about when we would fly out, and even if we would take a short trip to a different city and then fly home from there.

We finally decided that we were going to fly out of Rome on Sunday, which meant that we are both going to have to work the next day, jetlagged. We didn’t want to complicate things too much by having layovers, so we found a direct flight from United for 37,100 points and $60 a piece. We were able to use United’s new point pooling feature to combine 51,000 of Jenn’s Ultimate Reward points (transferred 1:1 to United) and 23,200 of my United Miles to book the flight.

Keep in mind, there was a Flying Blue award flight available from Rome to Chicago for 22,000 points and about $160 a piece. That’s a lot less points but that flight had a layover and with us having to work the next day, it really seemed worth it to get the non-stop United flight. This is a change for us, because in the past we would take the inconvenience to save points, but as we become more comfortable with our ability to replace those points, it becomes easier to part with them, especially if it will make our trip better.

Big Amex Bonuses Hit

Jenn signed up for the American Express Business Gold card when the sign up bonus was 130,000 points for spending $10,000 in 3 months, which is a hefty spend for us, but it was tax time, and generally we have to send Uncle Sam about $4,000 when we settle up so that made it a little easier. Tax time has a little less sting to it now that we’ve decided to use it as an opportunity to land a big signup bonus. Last year, we signed up for the Capital One Venture card and with one charge to the IRS landed over 83,000 points (75,000 points for the signup and 8,000 for the charge).

Jenn also used her Amex Business Gold card to refer me to the American Express Blue Business Plus which landed her a 20,000 point referral bonus and an additional 10x for dining for 3 months. The additional 10x shows up on the Amex website as a bonus and that was an additional 9,500 points for the month. So for the month, Jenn earned a whopping 159,500 Membership Rewards points from bonuses.

Amex Blue Business Plus

I knew at some point I was going to want the American Express Blue Business plus card. It doesn’t come with a big sexy bonus, in my case it’s 15,000 Membership Rewards points when you spend $3,000 over 3 months. However it’s a no annual fee card that earns 2x on everything, which gives me a way to at least get 2x on purchases in categories that are not in bonus categories.

By timing this with a referral offer from Amex that gave Jenn 20,000 points and an additional 10x on dining, she’s managed to already earn 29,500 membership rewards on this offer, with a couple more months of 10x dining left.

Having a no annual fee American Express card is nice to have since it’s a good way to stash these huge bonuses they offer for cards with large sign up bonuses. I’ll probably talk myself into applying for a Platinum card someday when they offer some ridiculously high sign up bonus but with a $695 annual fee, it’s hard to imagine I’ll keep the card too long. Knowing I can keep the points and drop the card is a pretty nice luxury.

On to the Points Check!

Card UsedSpendPoints EarnedPoint ValuePoints Per $Return on Spend
Wyndham Business Earner$7273,856$42.425.35.8%
Ink Cash$6833,395$69.605.010.2%
Venture$5201,040$19.242.03.7%
Total$1,9308,291$131.254.36.8%
This month’s spending not devoted to earning a signup bonus

Almost all of our spending not devoted to earning a signup bonus has been reduced to just 3 cards now. Wyndham Business Earner is just for utilities and gas because it’s 5x on utilities and 8x at gas stations. Ink Cash is 5x on streaming services, phone bills (don’t get me started on our phone bill), and internet. We use the Venture card for trips to Costco (they don’t like American Express) and for our insane auto insurance bill. Getting an average return on those purchases of almost 7%? I’ll take it.

Outside of those charges, I spent a little less than $1,400 on my American Express Gold card and earned a little over 4,900 Membership Rewards points. Jenn spent $7,900 on her American Express Gold card and earned around 9,800 Membership Rewards points. That $7,900 sounds like a lot, but we not only ran our taxes through that card, but also our daughter’s taxes. Those tax bills were the lion’s share of that spending. They helped push her over the top on the required $10,000 in spending in 3 months necessary to earn the massive 130,000 point bonus, add to that a 20,000 point referral bonus and the 9,500 points from the 10x dining referral bonus and she hauled in a massive 169,000 membership reward points last month.

This left us with 230,300 Chase Ultimate Rewards points, 184,500 Amex Membership Rewards points, 78,600 Capital One Venture miles, 71,400 American Airlines miles, 38,900 Citi Thank You points, 34,800 Marriott Bonvoy points, 30,300 Wyndham points,10,300 Hyatt points, 5,100 Delta Skymiles, and 1,900 United miles as well as $790 in cash back. If you use the Points Guy’s valuations, the total value of all of those points and miles is almost $13,500

Manufacturing a Big Signup Bonus on the Amex Blue Business Plus

The American Express Blue Business Plus is a somewhat boring, but great all around credit card. It doesn’t come with a big, flashy signup bonus. However, every once in a while, American Express puts out referral bonuses that can make the signup bonus pretty sweet. A recent referral offer from American Express gave us the opportunity to get this must-have credit card and still get a decent bonus.

Why Choose the Amex Blue Business Plus

There main reasons for why the Blue Business Plus is a great option for a business credit card are:

  • No Annual Fee
  • 2x on all spending up to $50,000 in spending per year
  • Earns Membership Reward points that are transferable to 18 airline program and 3 hotel program partners

2x Membership Rewards points per dollar on all spending is great for a no annual fee card. If you are someone who uses multiple credit cards and take advantage of bonus categories to get 5x or 3x on your spending, you notice pretty quickly that not all spending will fall into a bonus category. Having a 2x card that acts as the lowest you earn can be very valuable, especially if you spend a lot in non-bonus categories.

Also, if you like to take advantage of big Amex signup bonus offers on their Gold and Platinum cards, but don’t want to pay the big annual fees for eternity, having the Blue Business Plus card gives you a no annual fee option that allows you to keep those points you earned on those big signup bonuses. This allows you to keep those points and cancel those credit cards. Keep in mind, cancelling an American Express card within 12 months from the date it was issued can cause them to take back the points.

Membership Rewards Transfer Partners

ProgramTypeTransfer Rate
Aer LingusAirline1 MR to 1 Avios
AeroMexicoAirline1 MR to 1.6 AeroMexico Reward Points
Air Canada AeroplanAirline1 MR to 1 Aeroplan Point
ANA Mileage ClubAirline1 MR to 1 ANA Mile
Avianca LifemilesAirline1 MR to 1 Lifemile
British AirwaysAirline1 MR to 1 Avios
Cathay PacificAirline1 MR to 1 Asia Mile
Delta SkymilesAirlines1 MR to 1 Skymile
Emirates SkywardsAirlines1 MR to 1 Skyward Mile
Etihad GuestAirlines1 MR to 1 Etihad Guest Mile
Flying Blue (Air France/KLM)Airlines1 MR to 1 Flying Blue Mile
Hawaiian MilesAirlines1 MR to 1 Hawaiian Mile
Iberia PlusAirlines1 MR to 1 Avios
JetBlue True BlueAirlines5 MR to 4 TrueBlue Points
Quantas Frequent FlyerAirlines1 MR to 1 Quantas Point
Qatar Airways Privilege ClubAirlines1 MR to 1 Avios
Singapore KrisflyerAirlines1 MR to 1 KrisFlyer Miles
Virgin Atlantic Flying ClubAirlines1 MR to 1 Virgin Point
Choice PrivilegesHotel1 MR to 1 Choice Privilege
Hilton HonorsHotels 1 MR to 2 Hilton Honors Points
Marriott Bonvoy Hotels1 MR to 1 Bonvoy Points

What makes Membership Rewards points so valuable is being able to take advantage of deals in any of these programs. For example, Flying Blue frequently offers flights from major US cities to Europe for 20,000 points (and around $150 taxes/surcharges) one-way in economy or 50,000 points (and around $250 taxes/surcharges) one-way in business class.

In addition, Virgin Voyages often offers points redemptions on cruises. Recently, they were offering a cruise for 120,000 points per cabin (1 or 2 people) for a seven night Mediterranean cruise leaving from Barcelona with stops in places like Ibiza, Mallorca, and Marseille. Simultaneously, there was also a 30% transfer bonus to Virgin from American Express which means that cruise could have been booked for around 93,000 Membership Rewards points.

Being able to pick and choose between programs when they are running specials is what makes flexible award currencies, such as Membership Rewards so incredibly valuable.

A Place to Keep Your Membership Rewards

American Express offers some monster signup bonuses on their cards. Recently, as Travel On Points pointed out, they offered a 300,000 point signup bonus on their Business Platinum card. That’s just enormous, with that bonus being worth $6,000.

However, the Business Platinum Card has an annual fee of $695. While there are definitely great ways of getting $700 worth of value on that card by using the credits and benefits on that card, eventually you might decide you want to dump the card to avoid that annual fee. By having the Blue Business Plus, you can keep the points you earned on your Business Platinum card in your account without having to pay an annual fee.

But the Signup Bonus for the Blue Business Plus is so Tiny

I have definitely gotten spoiled with signup offers that seem to always be north of 60,000 points. However, I knew if I was going to be trying to get big offers from American Express, I would want the Blue Business Plus in order to house those points. Unfortunately, they almost always offer 15,000 Membership Rewards points on a spend of $3,000 in 3 months – that’s just not exciting.

However, earlier this year, Jenn was given a very enticing offer from American Express. She signed up for the Business Gold card on an inflated 130,000 point offer. Since she was a Business Gold card holder, they offered her a 20,000 point referral bonus as well as 3 months of an additional 10x on dining.

Normally, credit card companies only offer referral bonuses on the same card that the cardholder has, but American Express offers referral bonuses that work if the invitee is approved for other American Express cards as well. This means that Jenn could get a referral bonus on her Business Gold card even though I was getting the Blue Business Plus.

The 20,000 point referral bonus wasn’t that unusual, but the extra 10x on dining was very interesting. Her Business Gold card already earns 4x on dining, which means that for 3 months, she will be earning 14x on every dollar spent on dining.

We don’t eat out that often, maybe a couple of times a month, but we do spend a decent amount of time at breweries. I mean, enough that most of the bartenders we see know us by name. Hey, we like beer. Anyway, breweries code as dining, so those are 14x when using her Business Gold card for the next 3 months.

All in all, lets say that over the next 3 months we spend $2,000 on dining. With the extra 10x, that is 20,000 Membership Reward Points. If you add the 20,000 point referral and the 15,000 point signup, that makes the total signup bonus 55,000 Membership Reward points. That’s pretty good for a no annual fee card, especially one with 2x transferable points on all spending.

Benefits of Working with Someone Else

This is a great example of the importance of working with someone else when earning points and miles. Experienced points and miles hobbyists refer to this as “2-player mode”. Being able to consistently refer a spouse, friend or family member, means that both of you can amass a larger amount of points that you can as an individual. This also means that you shouldn’t be an authorized user on your Player 2’s accounts.

In this case, if I was signing up for this card by myself, I would have earned a 15,000 point bonus. Since we are working in 2-player mode, Jenn will earn around 40,000 points in addition to the points that I’ve earned.

The American Express Blue Business Plus is one of those no-brainer credit cards that should be in your wallet. With 2x Membership Rewards points on all spending up to $50,000 per year and no annual fee, it’s a great card to keep around even if you don’t use it often. American Express has a tendency to give great referral bonuses from time to time, so if you can take advantage of those referral bonuses to bump up that sign up bonus, you should absolutely do so. This is one of those cards that you should have, but be patient to see if you can manufacture an elevated bonus.