Site icon Your Mileage May Vary

What Credit Card Did I Use The Most in 2020? It Wasn’t Even Close!

a wallet with credit cards inside

When it gets to the end of the year, people get reflective. I usually look at how many flights I took or how many nights I stayed in hotels and I’ll still do that year in review.

Since most of my points earning in 2020 was from spending on credit cards, I figured it would make sense to look and see which card I used the most. There were so many changes in 2020, with cards introducing limited-time bonus categories on dining, supermarkets and gas stations. Those made sense from travel cards because people weren’t traveling and if they were at home, they were getting food from Grubhub or using their quarantine time to learn how to bake homemade bread.

Like most of you, our travel and dining expenses went down to almost zero for most of 2020. However, most of our everyday expenses did not go away. The same can be said for the costs of running a website.

When I looked at which credit card I used the most in 2020, it wasn’t even close.

Our favorite credit card in 2020 is the American Express Blue Business Plus.

The Blue Business Plus card’s reward structure isn’t complicated. You earn two Membership Rewards points for every dollar spent on the card for the first $50,000 spent each year. We were also able to add an AMEX offer to the card where we earned an additional 8 Membership Rewards points per dollar on Amazon.com purchases.

While many people have switched to earning 2% cashback with a card like the Fidelity Rewards, I still think earning two Membership Rewards points per dollar is a better value. I’m not alone because ever American Express has said that people are hoarding points during the pandemic

Why do I think this is a better value than earning cashback? Because there’s so much more value to be had with Membership Rewards than with cash. Here are all the places you can transfer Membership Rewards:

Airline Programs

Hotel Programs

If you’re able to find a use in any of those programs for more than 1 cent per point, you’ll be earning more than you would with a 2% cashback card. In a fixed value program like JetBlue, any redemption is worth more than 1 cent. Even in programs like Marriott or Hilton where points are valued less than 1 cent, you can still find uses for points worth more than 1 cent each like when we stayed at a Residence Inn in Manhattan for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

So while I thought I’d shift our spending to a cashback card during the pandemic, in practice I ended up putting most of our expenses on a card that earned two Membership Rewards per dollar. I regret nothing.

Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved.

#stayhealthy #staysafe #washyourhands #wearamask

Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and get emailed notifications of when we post. Or maybe you’d like to join our Facebook group – we have 16,000+ members and we talk and ask questions about travel (including Disney parks), creative ways to earn frequent flyer miles and hotel points, how to save money on or for your trips, get access to travel articles you may not see otherwise, etc. Whether you’ve read our posts before or this is the first time you’re stopping by, we’re really glad you’re here and hope you come back to visit again!

This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates from our team.

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Exit mobile version