Is it a keeper? My take on BOA’s new Premium Rewards Card

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Bank of America’s new card was originally expected to be an ultra-premium card.  Rumors were that it would compete in the $450 / $550 space with the Chase Sapphire Reserve, Amex Platinum, Citi Prestige, US Bank Altitude Reserve, etc.  But… Either the rumors were false, or Bank of America changed course along the way.  The new and creatively named “Premium Rewards Credit Card” is just $95 per year.

a credit card and a woman standing on a dock

For full details about the Bank of America Premium Rewards card, including tips for getting approved, please see our Bank of America Premium Rewards Credit Card Complete Guide.

At $95 per year, this new card seems to take aim at the $95 per year Chase Sapphire Preferred.  Like the Sapphire Preferred, the Premium Rewards card offers 2 points per dollar for travel and dining.  And it trumps the Sapphire Preferred by offering 1.5 points per dollar everywhere else (the Sapphire Preferred earns just 1 point per dollar everywhere else).

That said, the meaning of “points” here is very different.  With Bank of America, a point is worth a penny of cash back.  Period.  Yes, you can use points to pay for travel or gift cards, but you’ll still just get 1 cent per point value.  You’re better off redeeming points for cash back and then earning more points by paying for travel and other things with your card.  With Chase, on the other hand, points are potentially worth far more than a penny each since they can be transferred 1 to 1 to airline and hotel programs (see: Chase Transfer Partners).  Or, points can be used to purchase travel through Ultimate Rewards Travel for 1.25 cents value per point.

Since BOA Premium Rewards Card points are just pennies, I think it makes more sense to compare this card to best-in-class cash back cards such as Citi Double CashUSAA Limitless Cashback Rewards, and Alliant Cashback Visa Signature Card.  And, compared to those cards, at first glance this one does not fare well:

Card Annual Fee Earning Rate
Bank of America Premium Rewards $95 2% Dining & Travel; 1.5% Everywhere Else
Citi Double Cash $0 2% Everywhere
USAA Limitless $0 2.5% Everywhere (if you have $1K of direct deposits each month)
Alliant $59 2.5% Everywhere (3% first year)

As you can see above, you can earn more cash back for a lower annual fee with a number of other cards.  That said, the Premium Rewards card also offers a few premium features:

  • $100 in airline fee incidental reimbursements each year (checked bags, for example)
  • Global Entry or TSA PreCheck reimbursement every 4 years
  • Travel Insurance protections.  Surprisingly, coverage includes emergency evacuation and transportation.  This is a feature usually reserved only for ultra-premium cards.

If you make full use of the card’s $100 in airline fee reimbursements each year, you can argue that this card is effectively a no annual fee card (you pay $95, but get $100 in credits).  Still, unless it earns a higher cash back rate than other no-annual fee cards, it isn’t worth bothering with this card (after securing the 50,000 point signup bonus of course!).

Fortunately, for those fortunate enough to have $100K in savings, this card is quite special once you throw in Bank of America’s Preferred Rewards…

Preferred Rewards

a screenshot of a credit cardPreferred Rewards is Bank of America’s own customer elite program.  Benefits vary depending upon the total amount of money you have on deposit and/or invested with Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, or Merrill Edge .  Customers must maintain a 3-month average combined balance at the following amounts for each elite level:

  • Gold: $20K
  • Platinum:  $50K
  • Platinum Honors: $100K

These translate into the following earning rates with the Premium Rewards card:

  • Gold ($20K on deposit): 25% bonus = 2.5X travel & dining; 1.875X everywhere else
  • Platinum ($50K on deposit): 50% bonus = 3X travel & dining; 2.25X everywhere else
  • Platinum Honors ($100K on deposit): 75% bonus = 3.5X travel & dining; 2.625X everywhere else

While other cards offer better returns for travel & dining, 2.625% cash back everywhere is a remarkably high rate of return on spend.

More about Bank of America Preferred Rewards can be found here.

Who has $100K sitting around?

I expect that a number of readers may have $100K sitting around… in the form of retirement accounts.  If you have an IRA, or something similar, you may be able to simply transfer management of the funds over to Merrill Edge.  Here’s a Merrill Edge page that describes how.  My understanding is that this transfer won’t change the value of your investments in any way.  And a nice bonus: Merrill will kick in $250 if you transfer $100K or $600 if you transfer $200K.

a screenshot of a white and black chart

But.. you might want to wait!  Late last year (2016), Merrill offered an even bigger bonus: $500 for $100K and $1000 for $200K.  If we hear of a new bonus like this, of course we’ll publish the details.

a close-up of a white background
Merrill Edge offered this enhanced bonus in late 2016. Will a deal like this return this year?

What about the no fee Travel Rewards card?

Bank of America also offers a no fee Travel Rewards Card (details here) which earns 1.5 points per dollar everywhere.  With Preferred Rewards Platinum Honors status, this card also offers 2.625 points per dollar on all spend. The main difference is that this card does not earn extra points for travel and dining, and Travel Rewards points must be used to offset travel, otherwise they’re worth less than a penny each.

So, while the Travel Rewards card has the upper hand by having no annual fee, the Premium Rewards card offers points that are easier to cash out.

My Take

The new Premium Rewards card offers a nice easy $500 signup bonus.  That alone makes the card worth getting the first year.  And, if you’re not interested in keeping it past year one, you can rack up $100 in airline fee reimbursements twice: once this calendar year, and once next calendar year before cancelling.

For me, this card may be a keeper. Last year, I took advantage of the opportunity to earn a cash bonus by funding a Merrill Edge account (see above: “Who has $100K sitting around?”) and I now have Preferred Rewards Platinum Honors status with Bank of America.  That means that I would earn 3.5% cash back on travel & dining and 2.625% cash back everywhere else with the Premium Rewards card.

I’ll continue to use my Sapphire Reserve card to earn 3X Ultimate Rewards points for travel & dining, so if I keep this new card it will really just become my “everywhere else” card.  This would be the card I’d whip out when I can’t earn 3X with some other card.  I used to use the 1.5X everywhere Freedom Unlimited card as my everywhere else card (see: FU Sapphire Reserve), then I moved to the 2X everywhere Amex Blue Business Plus (see: The new king of everyday spend: Amex Blue Business Plus).  Both cards are great for this purpose, but both charge foreign transaction fees so I have to be careful not to use them when traveling abroad.  I like that the Bank of America Premium Rewards card has no foreign transaction fees and is therefore good to use at home and away.

One thing I don’t like is the $95 annual fee.  Yes, I should be able to recover $100 per year by strategically using the card for reimbursable spend, but I don’t like the added pressure of yet another card like that.  I already have to make sure to use up the airline fee reimbursements each year for my and my wife’s Amex Platinum cards, our CNB Crystal Visa Infinite cards, and my Citi Prestige card.  As a result, I’m still on the fence as to whether or not I’ll keep the BOA card long term.  It may be possible to downgrade it to the no-fee Travel Rewards card instead.  Then, when I want to cash out the points, I could probably temporarily upgrade back to the Premium Rewards card.

The monkey wrench: Last night, Nick published a crazy idea that just might work to get 4.59% back on everyday spend with a combination of Bank of America cards (see: Can you earn 4.59% back on everyday spend with the new BOA Premium Rewards card?).  To be clear, it is extremely unlikely that this will work, but if it does work then of course I’ll keep the Premium Rewards card and pickup a Cash Rewards card too.  I’d probably even use the Premium Rewards Card for travel and dining at 6.1% cash back.  But that’s a pipe dream of course.  There’s just no way it will work.  Never mind that one of Richard Kerr’s friends succeeded in a very similar trick.

For more details about the Bank of America Premium Rewards card, including tips for getting approved, please see our Bank of America Premium Rewards Credit Card Complete Guide.

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