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I used points to take my mom and grandma to Iceland newsthirst.


Daisy Hernandez has been a credit cards editor at The Points Guy since 2023, but has taken joy in gamifying credit card rewards for much longer. Like many of her colleagues, she spreads her spending across multiple cards to maximize rewards such as airline miles, hotel points and cash back.

In January 2024, she opened a Chase Sapphire Reserve card and soon earned a 60,000-point bonus for spending at least $4,000 within the first three months. As she continued to rack up points, Hernandez began chatting with her mom about recreating a previous mother-daughter trip to Iceland.

When her grandmother, then 79, got in on the conversation, Hernandez knew she wanted to put some points to use.

“She had stars in her eyes. She was like, ‘That’s amazing. It sounds incredible,'” Hernandez says. “I thought, ‘Let me see what I can do.'”

By May, she’d accumulated more than 100,000 points, which she put toward a trip for all three of them. By The Points Guy’s estimates, each Chase Ultimate Rewards point is worth roughly 2.05 cents, making her stash worth just over $2,000.

Altogether, she was able to cover accommodations, a rental car and her own airfare. With those savings, she could afford to pay out-of-pocket for the other two flights.

“For my grandma, it was a once-in-a-lifetime trip,” Hernandez says.

Here’s how she did it.

She chose a card strategically

Hernandez wanted a premium travel card and narrowed things down to two main options. To choose between them she looked at rewards points and transfer partners, among other factors.

The Chase card worked with her “favorite hotel chain,” it turned out. So she realized, “this is kind of a no-brainer.” Especially because the first card wooed consumers with airport lounge perks that wouldn’t be available to her at her local airport.

For cardholders willing to pay an annual fee, several travel cards offer excellent perks and generous introductory bonus offers. By shifting the bulk of her spending onto her new Chase card, Hernandez was able to eclipse the $4,000 three-month spending threshold to earn the card’s 60,000-point bonus.

She was wise with her rewards

She didn’t let perfect be the enemy of good

Credit card point obsessive that she is, Hernandez says she could have gotten even more bang for her buck were she more opportunistic with her points.

“If I had worked harder to maximize with transfer bonuses, if any had been available, which they weren’t at the time that I booked us, I probably could have even gotten more value from those points,” she says.

Credit cards’ partner rewards programs periodically offer incentives to transfer your points over. Had Hernandez waited for a hotel chain to offer a 50% transfer bonus, for instance, she could have converted, say, 50,000 of her credit card points into 75,000 hotel points.

But getting the maximum value out of your points requires effort and flexibility. Transfer bonuses only come up every so often. And even if you manage to find a lucrative one, there’s no telling if good deals will be available when you want to travel.

“During peak season, it’s going to be more expensive, whether it’s cash or points. So you’re at the mercy of when you decide to travel and where you’re going,” Hernandez says.

Plus, if you let your points sit while you wait to find the perfect deal, they can lose some of their value. “Devaluations happen all the time. [A hotel chain] could say, ‘Instead of our points being worth 0.8 cents per point, now it’s 0.65,'” Hernandez warns.

Which is all to say that Hernandez has no regrets about using her points when she did.

“We’re from Central America. My grandma had never been anywhere close to a Nordic country. She said, ‘Never, in my wildest dreams would I have imagined that I would have seen a place like Iceland,'” Hernandez says. “That was the cherry on top for me to be able to experience that with her and my mom.”

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