4 Ways Travel Credit Cards Can Save You Money

Using credit cards to take advantage of bonus points to travel hack your way to exciting destinations is a pretty well-known concept. Do you also know about the many ways you can save money using your travel credit card to access valuable benefits?
Besides offering points or miles, many travel credit cards help you save money other ways. Your card might offer benefits which can help cover transportation costs to the airport, checked bag fees, onboard expenses, or offer upgrades for your hotel stays. Travel credit cards can potentially save you hundreds every year.
You can find a card that is best for you from Credit Sesame′s partners by using Credit Sesame′s side-by-side credit card comparisons. Here are four ways I found that travel credit cards can save you money. Keep them in mind when comparing and deciding on a travel credit card.
1. Avoid Foreign Transaction Fees
Many credit cards impose a fee on every transaction made outside the U.S. (or transactions made in currencies other than the U.S. dollar). Foreign transactions fees are typically 2-3% of the transaction amount, so if you spend $1,000 on your card while traveling beyond our borders, you′ll be on the hook for an additional $20 to $30.
Travel with a card that offers no foreign transaction fees, on the other hand, and you could save a bundle. Many travel credit cards offer no foreign transaction fees. They want you to use your card when you travel.
2. Make the Most of Onboard Expenses
Depending on the credit card, you can earn bonus points per dollar spent or even a dollar-for-dollar statement credit toward airline fees or onboard purchases. When you use your eligible credit card to pay to check a standard bag, or buy a drink, food, internet access or a movie while in flight, depending on the card you have, you may be able to recoup those expenses for a statement credit or earn more points on those purchases than you would earn for similar purchases elsewhere.
Some of today′s top tier travel credit cards offer $100 to $300 per year in airline fee statement credits.
3. Take Advantage of Brand-Specific Perks
If you have an airline co-branded credit card, you can get specific perks when you use it to purchase travel on that airline. A common perk is a free checked bag for yourself and one or more traveling companions on the same reservation. (Note your card′s eligibility requirements, for example, that you must be one of the travelers and that the entire reservation must be purchased on the card.) Keep in mind that the free checked bag perks typically are for standard bags meaning if the bag is over the weight limit you may be charged a fee for being over the weight limit.
Most airline cards that offer financial benefits like free checked bags charge an annual fee. Low tier airline credit cards usually charge an annual fee between $85 and $100 per year. Most airlines charge $25 to $35 for the first checked bag. Depending on how often you travel and how much luggage you travel with, you might make up for the cost of your credit card with the savings gained on the first trip.
Other common perks are discounts toward onboard purchases, private lounge access (which can cost $50 or more per person) and free in-flight WiFi. The food and drink discounts are common on low-tier cards, but lounge access and free WiFi are typically associated with top-tier cards. A premium credit card with travel benefits will have a higher annual fee (generally $300 to $450).
4. Travel and Hotel Stays
Some hotel co-branded credit cards offer a free night stay each year. Like airline cards, hotel cards that offer freebies normally come with an annual fee. Many cost less than $100 per year. The free night benefit can be worth two to three times that annual fee amount, depending on the location and time of year you travel. The free night may be further complemented by higher status in the hotel′s frequent traveler program, which can include free Wi-Fi, early check-in or other perks.
To continue the savings, look for a credit card that offer bonus points or statement credits for ground transportation.
5. Bonus: Other Ways Travel Credit Cards Help You Save Moneybr/>Here are a few more ways a travel credit card can save you money:
Introductory 0% APR. While it is always a best practice to pay your credit card off in full each month, if you do get stuck in a pinch some travel credit cards offer 0% introductory APR on balance transfers to qualifying cardholders for a set period of time.
Large bonuses. Many travel rewards cards offer bonus points to eligible new cardholders. In most cases, you need to spend a certain amount on purchases on the card within a set period of time.
Typically, the larger the bonus, the more you have to spend on the card. Make sure when you evaluate cards that you can meet the minimum spending requirement to get the bonus.
Status. Many co-branded hotel credit cards offer automatic upgraded status just for being a cardholder.
Take the time to educate yourself on all the benefits a card offers. The more benefits you take advantage of, the more you will save and the easier it will be to overcome any cost associated with owning the card. Knowing what benefits you will use most can help you to determine which travel credit card you should own.

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