I essentially get lounge access thru my combination of using the AGR card and my travel. If you use the card for everything you can get up to 4000 Tier Qualifying points for using the card. It takes 10000 TQPs to get Select Plus which includes lounge access. So you need to earn the other 6000 in travel. This means you need to spend 3000 dollars on Amtrak essentially to get full lounge access if you also use the card.I wonder if what ever issuer gets Amtrak. Metropolitan Lounge Access could be a new perk for their top of the line high annual fee Premium Card Memebers when traveling on Amtrak.
For example I'm thinking if AMEX became their card issuer AMEX Platinum Card Members whenever traveling on Amtrak even in coach would get Metropolitan Lounge Access (similar to the cards access to SkyClubs when flying Delta). I would also assume if Chase/Citi/Amex (I guess now CapitolOne is in the game) got the unique AGR Credit card portfolio their convertible points would now convert to AGR points.
If you always buy business class tickets, you can get your 6,000 points with a $2,000 spend, due to the 25% TQP bonus. If you only ride Acela First, you could do it with even less of a spend. This of course, is above and beyond the $20K spend on non-Amtrak items on the credit card.I essentially get lounge access thru my combination of using the AGR card and my travel. If you use the card for everything you can get up to 4000 Tier Qualifying points for using the card. It takes 10000 TQPs to get Select Plus which includes lounge access. So you need to earn the other 6000 in travel. This means you need to spend 3000 dollars on Amtrak essentially to get full lounge access if you also use the card.
Ditto for Texas!!!Sitting in Florida we of course say: "Business Class? What may that be?"
It's the one consolation prize we get for putting up with the cold and lack of sunshine.Sitting in Florida we of course say: "Business Class? What may that be?"
It's the one consolation prize we get for putting up with the cold and lack of sunshine.
If you always buy business class tickets, you can get your 6,000 points with a $2,000 spend, due to the 25% TQP bonus.
Wells Fargo, Noooooooo!!!No more signups for Bank of America and no new Amtrak credit card out. Will Amtrak even continue to offer a credit card? Companies that make the most sense would be Capital One or Chase if it were to migrate to another company or maybe even Wells Fargo.
Sitting in Florida we of course say: "Business Class? What may that be?"
But no AGR bonus. That is what we were talking aboutI think its called "Premium" on Brightline
In semi-related news, BoA is ending their relationship with MLB. Cardholders are getting sent letters letting them know and switching them to standard BoA cards. The article states it's their "Unlimited" cash card (1.5% back on everything) but the comments suggest that some (most/all?) are getting the "customized cash" card instead with a 3% category, a 2% category, and 1% back on everything else.
If BOA is dropping Amtrak (and not the other way around), my fear is no one will want to pick it up and we will be stuck with no AGR card.
The 3% category on the Customize Cash card is user-selectable and can be changed once per month. Some of the categories are quite broad: the Travel category includes commuter railroads & ferries, hotels & motels, and theme park passes, for example. There's also an Online Purchases category, which includes just about any physical retail goods you order from a .com. The downside is that all 2% & 3% rewards are limited to $2,500 combined spending per quarter; after that, everything is at 1%.In semi-related news, BoA is ending their relationship with MLB. Cardholders are getting sent letters letting them know and switching them to standard BoA cards. The article states it's their "Unlimited" cash card (1.5% back on everything) but the comments suggest that some (most/all?) are getting the "customized cash" card instead with a 3% category, a 2% category, and 1% back on everything else.
Some cash-back cards (but not BoA) now allow automatic credit to your account every month, no matter how small the amount. You don't have to worry about spending the rewards, they're effectively just a discount on anything you put on the card.I know it's illogical, but I prefer a card that allows me to splurge on something rather than a card that gives me cash back. I have a much easier time spending points on a $1,000 Amtrak trip than I would spending the same amount in cash that I had earned as a cash-back reward over many months.
Understood. My point was that spending points makes me more willing to splurge than spending actual dollars. Illogical, I know, since the points have a value, but it's just the way my brain is wired.Some cash-back cards (but not BoA) now allow automatic credit to your account every month, no matter how small the amount. You don't have to worry about spending the rewards, they're effectively just a discount on anything you put on the card.
In semi-related news, BoA is ending their relationship with MLB. Cardholders are getting sent letters letting them know and switching them to standard BoA cards. The article states it's their "Unlimited" cash card (1.5% back on everything) but the comments suggest that some (most/all?) are getting the "customized cash" card instead with a 3% category, a 2% category, and 1% back on everything else.
Info: Bank of America & MLB End Partnership - Doctor Of Credit
In semi-related news, BoA is ending their relationship with MLB. Cardholders are getting sent letters letting them know and switching them to standard BoA cards. The article states it's their "Unlimited" cash card (1.5% back on everything) but the comments suggest that some (most/all?) are getting the "customized cash" card instead with a 3% category, a 2% category, and 1% back on everything else.
Info: Bank of America & MLB End Partnership - Doctor Of Credit
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