ChooseFI
Travel Rewards

Getting Started

Your complete roadmap from zero to your first nearly free trip. No experience needed, no gimmicks — just a proven framework used by thousands in the ChooseFI community.

10 min read Beginner Friendly

The Truth About Travel Rewards

Here's what most people get wrong about travel rewards: they think it's complicated, reserved for finance nerds, or somehow too good to be true. The reality? Rewards points are incredibly valuable — but only if you know how to use them. With the right strategy, the points you earn from everyday spending can unlock thousands of dollars in travel.

The ChooseFI community has collectively saved millions on travel by following a simple framework. You don't need to be a math whiz. You don't need to spend more than you already do. You just need a plan.

$10K+
Average first-year value from strategic card usage
50+
Airline and hotel partners you can transfer points to for outsized value
2–5x
Value multiplier when transferring points to airline partners

Your 5-Step Roadmap

Follow this path and you'll be booking your first rewards trip within 90 days.

1

Check Your Credit Score

15 minutes

Before applying for any rewards card, know where you stand. Most travel rewards cards require a score of 670+, with the premium cards wanting 720+. Use a free service like Credit Karma to check your score without affecting it. If your score needs work, focus on paying down balances and making on-time payments for 3–6 months first.

Pro tip: Your credit score is a snapshot, not a life sentence. Small improvements compound quickly.

2

Pick Your First Card Strategically

30 minutes

Your first travel rewards card should have a generous sign-up bonus and rewards that match your spending. Don't chase the flashiest card — chase the easiest win. Look for a card where the minimum spending requirement matches your normal monthly budget.

Pro tip: Never spend more than you normally would just to hit a bonus. Use the card for groceries, gas, and bills you already pay.

Compare our top picks
3

Hit the Sign-Up Bonus

1–3 months

The sign-up bonus is where the magic happens — it's often worth $500–$1,000+ in travel. Shift your regular spending to the new card: groceries, streaming subscriptions, utility bills, insurance premiums. Some people time their application around a large planned purchase to hit the threshold faster.

Pro tip: Set a calendar reminder for the bonus deadline. Missing it by a day is a painful lesson to learn only once.

4

Learn the Points Ecosystem

1–2 hours

Not all point redemptions are equal. Booking travel through a card's portal gets decent value (1–1.5 cents per point), but transferring to airline and hotel partners can get you 2–5x more value. Start by learning which airlines and hotels partner with your card's reward program.

Pro tip: Think of points as a currency with variable exchange rates. Shop around before "spending" them.

Read Points & Miles 101
5

Book Your First Trip

1–2 hours

Start simple: a domestic round-trip flight or a 2-night hotel stay. Search for award availability 2–3 months out for domestic flights, 6–12 months for international. Use your card portal first to compare prices, then check partner transfer values.

Pro tip: Flexibility is the secret weapon. Being open on dates by even 1–2 days can cut point costs in half.

5 Mistakes to Avoid

These are the traps that catch most beginners. Sidestep them and you're ahead of 90% of rewards players.

Carrying a Balance

Interest charges will obliterate any rewards value. Always pay your full statement balance every month, no exceptions. If you can't pay it off, you're not ready for rewards cards yet.

Chasing the "Best" Card

The best card for a frequent flyer isn't the best card for someone who drives everywhere. Match the card to your actual spending patterns, not aspirational ones.

Redeeming for Statement Credits

Statement credits typically give you 0.5–1 cent per point. Transferring to partners can get 2–5 cents. That's the difference between a $500 trip and a $2,500 trip with the same points.

Applying for Too Many Cards at Once

Each application creates a hard inquiry. Space applications 3–6 months apart to minimize credit score impact and give yourself time to hit each bonus.

Letting Points Expire

Most points don't expire as long as you keep the account active, but some hotel and airline programs will purge your balance after 18–24 months of inactivity. Set a reminder to earn or redeem at least once per year.

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