June 1, 2020
Due to travel restrictions, plans are only available with travel dates on or after
Due to travel restrictions, plans are only available with effective start dates on or after
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Ukraine; Belarus; Moldova; North Korea; Russia; Israel
Jamaica
Jamaica;
“Save, don’t spend.” It’s classic, common-sense financial advice — but it doesn’t apply to your credit card travel points.
Travel experts say you should spend or redeem your points soon after you earn them, because they lose value over time.1 If you hang onto your points for years, chasing the idea of a totally free dream vacation, you’re cheating yourself (and it’s possible to lose your rewards altogether.)
But wait… What about that great feeling you get when you’ve saved enough points or miles to pay for your airfare to Europe or your week in the Caribbean? That’s a thrill you just don’t feel when you redeem your points for a statement credit on a $75 train ticket.
We’ll examine when it makes sense to spend your travel points and when you’re better off saving them. Remember, the best way to protect your vacation — and your precious points! — is to purchase a reliable travel insurance plan. Every year, more than 55 million American travelers trust Allianz Global Assistance to safeguard their trips. Find your plan.
The art of travel hacking — leveraging credit card points and airline miles to score free or extremely cheap trips — is complicated. Plus, airlines, hotel chains and credit cards are constantly changing their rules. If you want to dive deep into travel-hacking strategy, we recommend The Points Guy, Johnny Jet or similar resources.
> Read more: A Beginner’s Guide to Scoring Travel Rewards Points
The short version is that you can sign up for travel rewards credit cards, airline credit cards or hotel loyalty cards to earn miles or points for spending money. Then, you can redeem those points or miles for travel in three ways:
How much is a single mile or point worth? “On average, one credit card mile is worth approximately one cent,” says Money Under 30. Yep: one penny. So 10,000 points only equates to $100 in travel savings. That may sound pretty paltry, but it’s a really useful thing to know! That’s because if you see an opportunity to redeem points for a better ratio, such as 1.25 cents or 1.5 cents per mile, you should grab it.
There’s one more important thing to know about redeeming your points: if you must cancel your trip, the airline, credit card or hotel chain likely will charge a redeposit fee. These fees vary, but $100-$150 is common.2 Luckily, travel insurance can help! A little-known benefit included in some plans is loyalty program redeposit fee coverage. If you have to redeposit points or miles into your loyalty/frequent flyer account because your trip is canceled or interrupted for a covered reason, and you have this benefit, your insurance will reimburse you for the redeposit fee.
The AllTrips Executive travel insurance plan includes this benefit.
Go ahead and hoard those points when…
You should go ahead and redeem your travel points if:
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