Are credit Card Programs Still worth it?

Are you keeping your credit card or cancelling it

  • Increased Annual fees, devaluation: not worth it, im cancelling all of them, going to cash/debit

    Votes: 2 4.8%
  • No, I will keep all my existing credit cards and no change in card ownership

    Votes: 13 31.0%
  • My behavior wont change, i will continue to apply/cancel while keeping my existing ones

    Votes: 26 61.9%
  • I will change to Zero Annual fee cards with no program attached to it

    Votes: 1 2.4%

  • Total voters
    42
  • Poll closed .
My QF Small Business AMEX card is 1pt / $ (annual fee $160), so that’s still reasonable. My personal AMEX (fee free) went to 0.7 years ago and I only use it when there’s a cash back or similar.

My NAB VISA Signature is also 1pt / $ for first $5k pm then 0.5 (fee free with Private Banking).

Pretty much all my local spend goes on one of those cards. OS spend on 28° MC (fee free). I regret not getting one of the Coles MCs before retiring - at least the FBs points are better than nothing from Latitude.
Coles MCs are meant to be the most friendly for retirees. May be worth a shot?

 
Coles MCs are meant to be the most friendly for retirees. May be worth a shot?

I am currently a long way from retirement but have just taken out this card (requesting a modest $4k limit) after recent rejections from ANZ and Amex and having recently cancelled all other cards (in preparation for a home loan refinance). It has a pathetic 1 Fly Buy per [edit] $2 spent, but it is fee free for life and currently has 70000 bonus points ($350 or 35000 Virgin points), so a bit of a no brainer. I figured it was an idea to have a fee free card in preparation for retirement and a permanent card for automatic payments instead of updating every time I churn.
I will still keep churning though.
 
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Coles MCs are meant to be the most friendly for retirees. May be worth a shot?

It was on my To Do list to call them. I have a 28° MC for OS purchases but that was a PITA trying to get a credit limit increase. So considering Coles…
I am currently a long way from retirement but have just taken out this card (requesting a modest $4k limit) after recent rejections from ANZ and Amex and having recently cancelled all other cards (in preparation for a home loan refinance). It has a pathetic 1 Fly Buy per $1 spend, but it is fee free for life and currently has 70000 bonus points ($350 or 35000 Virgin points), so a bit of a no brainer. I figured it was an idea to have a fee free card in preparation for retirement and a permanent card for automatic payments instead of updating every time I churn.
I will still keep churning though.
It or 28° (and some others) are must have card to avoid 3% international transaction fees. Good idea to have at least one.
 
For someone in your situation, I really feel it is churn or bust.

The increased annual fees & reduced points earn on regular spend means that trying to acquire enough points via a single credit card is very likely to be a losing proposition.

Programs are likely to devalue quicker than you can acquire enough points to redeem.
Yeah thats my take too.
Feels like its the end of an era, and ive lost part of me

Ie ill never be able to travel in J/F again, unless i win lotto
 
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I'm a churner.

I think I've been told so, but I'm not sure if churning credit has a negative impact on my credit score, though I've been keeping a tab on that and it doesn't seem to be that way (or at least to a significant degree).

The only credit cards I have kept long term without churning are my Amex Platinum Reserve (long time, former co-brand card) and 28 Degrees Mastercard (yes, even after the data breach). The cards being churned are my mainstay Visa or Mastercard points-earning card.

I hadn't really thought of the effect of the annual fee on the churning strategy though; probably because nearly every card has an annual fee of sorts and I haven't had enough time to evaluate the effect of going with a no-rewards credit card but pocketing whatever savings there could be. Ironically, the more points that someone has at a time, the more valuable extra points adding onto that are. For example, a signup bonus of 100k points may be worth something for someone who has a balance of zero, but for someone with an existing balance of 300k points, the new 100k points is even more valuable. So once I burn down my balances to rather more meagre sums, that might change my perception to churning, or I'll just have to be patient before I can redeem Business and/or First again.
 
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signup bonus of 100k points may be worth something for someone who has a balance of zero, but for someone with an existing balance of 300k points, the new 100k points is even more valuable.
I think it resembles a bell curve. 100K on a balance of 0 doesn't get you much (unless you're happy with economy) & 100K on a balance of 10 mil doesn't get you much either as you already have enough points to meet your immediate future needs.

The sweet spot, as you said, is a balance of 300-500K. That's why you not only need to be a churner, you need to be a regular churner. Doing one card a year is not going to move the needle.

These devaluations therefore have an outsized negative effect on retirees. Even if a retiree can churn the occasional card, it's not going to be enough for a business class trip to Europe or the US. They need to be able to churn multiple cards, and that's going to be tough.
 
With the demise of the Woolworths QFF Visa card I have to look at getting another one for Qantas. I have Velocity Amex which I think costs $350 a year but you get a free return flight within Australia each year which offsets that if you are smart about it. Problem is the lack of acceptance of Amex, while not as bad as it was, is still common enough that no one could just get by with Amex. Plus vendors charge 'enhanced' fees for use much of the time, due to Amex's 'enhanced' charges.
I'll chase a new QFF card for points though and churn it regularly I think. The earn rates are poor now so it's really only the intro deals that make it worth it.
 

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