Business-Cards

How to Choose the Right Capital One Card for Miles

How to Choose the Right Capital One Card for Miles

Capital One’s miles lineup runs from no-fee simplicity (VentureOne) to premium travel perks (Venture X), plus business versions, all built around transferable points and flexible redemptions. Transferable points are rewards you can move to multiple airline and hotel partners, letting you pick the best redemption later; this flexibility often beats fixed portal pricing or simple statement credits. Capital One supports 15+ transfer partners, with many at a 1:1 ratio, which can significantly boost value when award space is available, per TPG’s Capital One overview. Points and Perks Guide compares these trade-offs so you can match a card to real travel patterns.

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Business vs Personal: Which Chase Accounts Count Toward 5/24

Business vs Personal: Which Chase Accounts Count Toward 5/24

Understanding which accounts raise your 5/24 count is the difference between instant approval and an auto-denial. In short: all new personal credit cards that show up on your consumer credit report count, regardless of issuer. Chase consumer cards always count. Most business cards—including Chase Ink—do not add to your count once approved because they don’t report as new consumer accounts, but you typically must be under 5/24 to get them. Authorized user cards generally count, though you can ask reconsideration to ignore them. The sections below turn these rules into a fast, five-minute decision flow. Points and Perks Guide uses this framework to help you sequence applications without guesswork.

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Best Chase Credit Cards for Rewards: Our Expert Picks for 2026

Best Chase Credit Cards for Rewards: Our Expert Picks for 2026

Choosing the best Chase credit card for rewards in 2026 comes down to three questions: Do you want travel points, simple cash back, or a business solution? How often will you travel? And are you willing to pay an annual fee for perks? In this five‑minute guide, we at Points and Perks Guide apply a rules‑based approach to help you pick quickly, focusing on Chase Ultimate Rewards, welcome offers, and practical stacking strategies that reflect 2026 trends. We cite current market analyses and card‑issuer data where useful, and call out when an elevated welcome offer may tilt the decision. Let’s get you to the right card—without the hype.

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Chase 5/24 Rule Explained: Which Cards Count and Why

Chase 5/24 Rule Explained: Which Cards Count and Why

Chase’s 5/24 rule shapes whether you’ll be approved for many of its most valuable credit cards. In short: if five or more personal credit cards have been opened on your credit report in the last 24 months, Chase will typically deny new applications for most of its cards. Personal cards that show up on your credit report usually count; most business cards do not. Authorized user lines often count if they appear on your report; loans and denied applications do not. While the policy is unofficial, it’s widely observed across the points community and financial media, and mastering it helps you prioritize high‑value Chase approvals early in your card strategy (see Business Insider’s overview of the 5/24 rule and consistent enforcement, and The Points Guy’s 5/24 guide for scope and timing). At Points and Perks Guide, we recommend mapping your last 24 months of new accounts before you apply so you can prioritize Chase approvals up front.

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