About two weeks ago, several popular travel bloggers dropped hints about visiting a corporate sponsored affiliate meeting from a company named Mesa. Since then I’ve been expecting a deluge of articles about their newly launched card, but for the most part nothing has appeared. Why? I assume news is embargoed until Mesa says it’s ok to write about it, preferring to soft-launch in relative quiet with a waitlist and then go big at just the right time™. On the other hand though, you know what they say about assuming.

Anyhoodles, since I’m under no embargo and I guess I don’t care about soft versus full launch, let’s discuss the rewards system and the waitlist credit card in a no-quid-pro-quo kind of way. It’s a lot like Bilt in that there’s a way to earn points whether or not you have the card, but you can earn more with the card. It’s unlike Bilt in that its VP isn’t telling people how to game their own company, or seemingly lying about being an industry-first program to launch earning on mortgages.

Earning

Whether or not you get the card, you’ll earn a point for each dollar when you originate a new primary loan or a refinance an existing primary loan, as long as you use a “The Mesa Mortgage Marketplace Lender”, which I guess we’ll abbreviate as TMMML because reasons. You can do that up to five times per account too.

But, how good are those TMMMLs? Well, when I put in my address, I got a single option: Swift Home Loans Inc which is apparently a mortgage broker based out of Birmingham; but not that Birmingham, it’s the Michigan one. So I guess there’s exactly one TMMML (at least for my state) and they’re rated 2.8 out of 5 on Facebook. I dialed their main contact number to ask about which banks they work with and what sorts of mortgages they can handle, but it just rang for a good minute so I hung up. Looking pretty great guys!

How about the credit card? It’s a Visa issued by Celtic bank and carries no-annual fee. The earning structure:

  • 3x on HOA fees, contractors, homeowners insurance, property taxes, home decor, and other “home-related” charges
  • 2x on gas, groceries, EV charging, and utilities
  • 1x on a linked mortgage, but only on up to $100,000 in mortgage payments annually
  • 0x on other spend, as far as I can tell
  • Free Sam’s Club membership

Like with Bilt and rent, you don’t need to put your mortgage payment on a card to earn points on mortgage payments.

Burning

There are two options for redeeming Mesa points: booking travel through their portal, and gift cards. The cash value of each, based on my sampled searching:

  • Travel: 1.0 cents per point, but also a fixed 400 point extra surcharge per flight
  • Gift cards: 0.7 cents per point

Everything Else

Here’s how I’d look at this card, considering that if you’re booking travel through a portal you’re not going to use Mesa because Chase and AmEx have much better value propositions:

Gift card options include popular bulk brands like BestBuy and Apple, and assuming a resale rate of 93%, that means you can cash-out your points through gift cards at 0.65 cents per point 🤏. So:

  • You earn 0.65-0.70% back on mortgage payments just by holding the card
  • You get a 0.65-0.70% rebate on new mortgages, but those are probably baked into the fees of the one member of the TMMML
  • You’ll do better for other spend, manufactured or real, with other credit cards.

Finally, I extracted the full terms and conditions of the rewards program from the mobile app in case you’re curious, and it’s just this webpage.

tl;dr: It’s ok I guess, but you can probably skip the dozens hundreds thousands of affiliate articles when they come out in (probably) the next couple of weeks.

Happy Wednesday!

Kick-off party for current members of TMMML.

Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Chase, Citi, and plenty of your favorite credit unions offer premium (or sometimes even fee-free) cards that offer annual credits tied to the calendar year. Most issuers also let you refund an annual fee up to 30 days after it posts too. Combined, that means December is often the best time of the year to get a card because:

  1. Your first statement is usually issued 30 days after getting a card
  2. Your annual fee posts on the 12th statement around 360+30 days after opening
  3. Most issuers give you an annual fee refund if requested within 30 days of posting pushing that to 360+30+30 days
  4. 12 statements will straddle three calendar years: 2024, 2025, and 2026

Let’s take the American Express Business Platinum. Annually, you’ll earn (amongst other things, like I dunno, prolly a $1.50 monthly credit to Dollar Tree):

  • $200 airline incidental credit
  • $400 Dell credit ($200 in the first half and again in the second)
  • $199 Clear credit

So if you apply for a card in late November or December, your 12th statement won’t generate until between mid-December 2025 and mid-January 2026. Once that happens, you’ve still got another 30 days for games and an annual fee refund. You’ll get:

  • $600 in airline incidental credits (2024, 2025, and 2026)
  • $800 in Dell credits (2H2024, 1H2025, 2H2025, 1H2026)
  • $450 in Adobe credits (2024, 2025, and 2026)
  • $597 in Clear credits (2024, 2025, and 2026)
    (though you should discount those Adobe and Clear credits significantly)

There are a few gotchas to watch for: Bank of America’s annual fee refund after it posts isn’t guaranteed; Capital One’s is guaranteed, but the guarantee is that they definitely don’t offer fee refunds; or how the stupid Dell credits may be going away from the American Express Business Platinum in July, 2025.

Happy Tuesday!

Next time: The Halloween triple dip?

  1. Cardless’s Avianca Elite American Express card has an increased tiered sign-up bonus worth 120,000 LifeMiles in aggregate:

    – 80,000 LifeMiles after $4,500 spend in 90 days
    – 40,000 LifeMiles after $25,000 spend in 365 days

    Cardless has a one card per person lifetime limit, so consider whether cards like the Qatar Privilege Club may better fit your style. The Avianca card’s best features are that: it’s a third party American Express, and that it includes a Lifemiles+ lite membership which gives award redemption rebates and a cheap upgrade to Lifemiles+ basic membership for free award cancellations.
  2. American Express Offers has card-linked offers for either a statement credit, co-brand points, or Membership Rewards after spending $2,000-$7,000 depending on the offer. The rebates’ average values quite good at around 10% of spend. (Thanks to DoC)
  3. GiantGiant FoodsMartins, and Stop & Shop stores have 3x points on Visa gift card purchases through Thursday, limit $2,000 spend per account.
  4. Giftcards.com has a bonus $10 giftcards.com gift card with the purchase of a $100 Virtual Visa gift card through Wednesday using promo code GOBBLE, limit one per transaction. The great irony sadness is that giftcards.com gift cards can’t be used to purchase Visas or Mastercards.
  5. Do this now: Check your email inbox for a targeted $50 Marriott Bonvoy bonus gift card, but also note that it expires on December 21. A good search query is probably: “in:anywhere subject:Enjoy a gift from Marriott Bonvoy to celebrate your upcoming stay”.

Happy Monday!

Once per lifetime Cardless credit card unboxing photo, presumably.

The Stunt

Sometimes travel hackers get stuck with a ticket that’s got a cancellation fee (I’m looking at you and your stupid $75 award ticket redeposit fee FlyingBlue) or a ticket that simply isn’t cancellable for any fee even if you’re Steve Buscemi (actually, especially if you’re Steve Buscemi). You’ve got two choices if your plans change and you’re not going to take one of those flights:

  • Pay the fee to cancel if you can, or just eat the ticket cost if you can’t
  • Play the odds and hope that you don’t need to do either of the above

Playing the odds means waiting for the airline to offer free changes or refunds due to one of:

When one of those things happens you won’t be taking off for Lubbock, but instead you’re headed to refund-town (but you’ve probably got to request the refund from the airline, and in some cases before departure). The odds aren’t great though; at best the chances of this working are somewhere between 1/6 and 1/10, unless you own a pregnant turtle.

The Gotchas

There are a few ways this can malfunction:

  • You forget to cancel before the cancellation window expires after the game didn’t work, which matters especially with programs like Virgin Atlantic that require you to cancel before the check-in window opens
  • You don’t request a refund in a timely manner from the airline
  • The airline disagrees about what a significant delay is (but 2+ hours is usually sufficient)

Personally I put a reminder in my phone for an hour before the flight or cancellation window, whichever comes first, to figure out whether the stunt is going to work and to pay the cancellation fee if I can and it didn’t.

Good luck!

AA’s new Flagship First catering meal concept: “playing chicken with an airline”. They’ll end up cutting the ketchup at launch for cost savings though.

  1. Do this now: Register for 20% back in World of Hyatt points at Homes & Hideaways properties worldwide EDIT: No need to register, you’ll automatically get 20% back for award bookings through March 9, 2025.
  2. H-E-B stores have a promotion for a $20 H-E-B gift card with $100 or more in several gift card brands including bulk friendly like Airbnb, Lowes, and Home Depot through November 28. Scale with multiple H-E-B accounts. (Thanks to DoC)
  3. Kroger.com has 5% off of $100 Visa e-gift cards using promo code TURKEY2024 through Tuesday. The purchase won’t code as grocery but will earn fuel points. (Thanks to GCA)
  4. In case you needed further proof that Southwest hates cheapskates, they’ve launched a paid and award ticket sale for crappy flights:

    – Departing before 8AM
    – Departing after 7PM

    You have to book by tonight, but for travel at least 21 days out so that you’ve got plenty of time to anticipate your upcoming crappy flight, unless your airport is SNA; they continue to exclude it from sales because reasons.
  5. Alaska has a sale for flights to Sydney or Auckland that (in theory) connect in Honolulu, Hi for travel through September 30, 2025. The paid fare sale isn’t amazing, but on the award side I’m seeing:

    – Prices about 17% cheaper than the low level Alaska redemption price
    – The discount applying on non-stop, direct flights too

    There’s decent availability in down-under Summer time.

Happy Thursday! (It’s Thursday right?)

My office calendar explains everything.

  1. American Express Offers has a card linked offer for 20,000 Membership Rewards or $200 after $1,000 spend with AirFrance or KLM through December 31.
  2. The three Chase co-branded Avios credit cards have an increased sign-up bonus of 100,000 Avios after $7,500 spend in six months, and each has a $95 annual fee.

    AerLingus Avios
    British Airways Avios
    Iberia Avios

    It is possible to hold multiple Avios cards, but unfortunately they’re still personal cards. (Thanks to makhav)
  3. VanillaGift.com has 100% off of purchase fees of orders of at least $250 with promo code VGTHANKS24 through November 28.

    These are Incomm gift cards, and they won’t earn credit card points when purchased with American Express.
  4. Rakuten has “unlimited” $40 or 4,000 Membership Rewards points referral bonuses for both the referrer and the referred, provided the referred makes $40 of purchases through the portal within 90 days.

    What could possibly go wrong with unlimited referrals?

Happy Tuesday!

Post-bot, pre-shutdown Rakuten dashboard view.

Gift card fraud has been running rampant at US grocery stores this year. Kroger, BlackHawk, and Pathward have been making changes to make fraud harder recently, and that’s especially escalated in the last several weeks. Updates for gift card buyers:

  • The newest batches of BestBuy and Apple gift cards are now geo-locked to the store they were shipped to (they won’t activate at other stores, and this locking applies to different stores in the same chain in the same city)
  • Older stock bulk gift card brands like HomeDepot, BestBuy, and Apple are slowly being removed from Kroger’s POS terminal software so they can’t be activated
  • Visa gift cards are going away at some stores, replaced by higher fee Mastercards with better tamper proofing
  • New gift card packaging now includes the phrase “This package is the property of BHN until purchased”
  • Kroger has installed new one-way gift card hangers in some stores that only allow removing cards from the hanger, but don’t allow putting them back

I think it’s safe to assume that geo-locking and better gift card inventory management will spread to other gift card brands quickly, and it’s also safe to assume that BlackHawk Network (BHN) is actively working on language and tamper measures to improve their legal position when fraud and theft take place.

Stay safe out there!

The scammers almost got me with this one!

  1. The Citi Shop Your Way Rewards Mastercard card sent new mid-month spend offers that stack with existing offers. We’ve seen:

    – $50 off of $750+ in online spend
    – $70 off of $1,000+ in online spend
    – 200,000 Shop Your Way Rewards points with $750+ in online spend
    – 250,000 Shop Your Way Rewards points with $1,000+ in online spend

    (Thanks to BrandonV, SPX, Y, and Charlie)
  2. The Cardless Qatar cards have both increased sign-up bonuses and increased on-going spend bonuses through the end of the 2024.

    Infinite: 80,000 Avios after $5,000 spend in 90 days, plus uncapped 6x at restaurants and 2x everywhere else
    Signature: 60,000 Avios after $3,000 spend in 90 days, plus uncapped 4x at restaurants and 2x everywhere else

    There’s a status play with the Infinite card that’s even better with the increased spending bonuses, and so is the Infinite’s rebate on award taxes and fees after $15,000 spend.
  3. The Wyndham Business Earner credit card gives Diamond status with Wyndham, which can be matched to Caesars Rewards Diamond status. The match for elites that earned status through the card only is going away on January 31, 2025 though, reducing the value of the card and the value of any trademarks paid for based on the process.

    You might want to care because Caesars Diamond gives an annual, free four-night stay at Atlantis provided you gamble for four hours during your stay, but there are smaller benefits like show tickets, no resort fees, and free parking at Caesars properties too.
  4. Citi added an extended warranty benefit to its no-annual fee Mastercards, doubling the warranty for up to 24 months after the factory warranty expires. The Citi warranty exclusions list is smaller than is typical too. (Thanks to Country Boy)
  5. Giftcards.com has $6 off of $100 Visa gift cards with promo code EARLYJOY through November 28. Shopping portals usually don’t combine with promotion codes at giftcards.com, but if something goes wrong, sometimes they do. There’s a Chase offer for 5% back on up to $1,000 spend too.

    These are Pathward gift cards.
  6. Office Depot / OfficeMax stores have $15 off of $300 or more in Mastercard gift cards through Saturday. Always buy in even multiples of $300 for best results.

    These are Pathward gift cards.

Watch out, filing a complaint with Caesars may not be successful, I guess?