Your Mileage May Vary

Credit Card Review: Southwest Rapid Rewards Priority

The Southwest Rapid Rewards Priority card is positioned to be the “premium” card of the three co-brand personal Rapid Rewards credit cards offered by Chase

If you decide to sign up for the Southwest Priority card or any of the Southwest credit cards, we’d appreciate it if you use our link. We receive Southwest points for each referral, which helps us keep Your Mileage May Vary HQ strong.

Let’s take a closer look at what the Southwest card has to offer to new cardholders and if it makes sense to hold onto the card for the long term.

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Annual Fee

$149 Annual Fee

Sign Up Bonus

The current sign-up bonus for the Southwest Priority card is 50,000 Southwest Rapid Rewards points if you spend $1,000 in the first three months. The signup bonus for this card varies, and at the beginning of the last two years, it has offered a limited-time Companion Pass.

Spending Categories

When spending on the card, you earn points in the Southwest Rapid Rewards program as follows:

I have to be honest, I’m a bit unclear about which purchases for hotels and rental cars will earn two points. Is it through any company that partners with Southwest, or do you have to book through Southwest? The documentation on this benefit is very vague on which expenses qualify.

It’s nice to see Southwest bump the earning for its own purchases up to 3X. For most, the card’s value doesn’t lie in earning Rapid Rewards points. You can earn 3x Ultimate Rewards points on Southwest airfare with the Sapphire Reserve and 2x points with the Sapphire Preferred. Ultimate Rewards points can transfer to Southwest at a 1:1 ratio, so there’s no benefit on spending on the card, even on Southwest. That’s unless you’re going for A-List status.

Card Benefits

Here’s where the Southwest Priority Card starts to shine

Ways to use Southwest Rapid Rewards points

The points you earn with the signup bonus and spending on the card are deposited into your Southwest Rapid Rewards account. From there, you can use the points to book flights on Southwest.

Southwest no longer sets a value for points, instead they say this about redemptions.

The number of points needed for a reward flight depends on the fare. Just like fares, reward pricing can vary based on destination, time, day of travel, demand, fare type, point redemption rate, and other factors and is subject to change at any time until the booking is confirmed

You can figure to get a value of around 1.3 cents per Southwest point. How much you’ll pay for a ticket is directly related to how much that ticket costs. The nice thing is that you’ll never have blackout dates redeeming points on Southwest. Prices might be high, but you’ll always be able to use points as long as there’s a cash ticket available.

Final Thoughts

If you think the Southwest Priority card is right for you, we’d appreciate it if you use our link.

When I signed up for this card, I was able to get a 60,000-point bonus, just a bit more than the first bonus from the current offer. For the $145 annual fee, I got $160 in Priority Boarding fees refunded for the flights when I forgot to pay for Early Bird check-in, and I’ve already been reimbursed my $75 credit for Southwest tickets I purchased with the card. That’s $235 in credits for the $145 fee. Add in the $520 in points I’ll get from the signup bonus, and I’m at $755 back for paying $145, thank you very much.

I’ve had both of the other Southwest cards before and eventually canceled them because the only thing I received each year for the annual fee was some bonus points. With the Priority card, I get a $75 flight credit and four Priority Boarding reimbursements, which means I’ll be able to skip paying for early-bird and save the $80 fees.

That’s a $155 savings, and I’m only paying $145. I’ll get better seats for both of us on two flights, and I’ll still get the 7,500 points, which are worth $100. I wish every card would pay me $100 each year so I could keep it for another year.

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