Chase Freedom Card $250 Bonus Offer
Though this card doesn’t offer 0% APR balance transfer, the $250 bonus is just hard to resist. In addition, the Chase Freedom card also has another benefit that’s very appealing to me: 3% cashback for purchases made at grocery stores, gas stations, and quick service restaurants. Currently, the best rewards program I have is with my Fidelity 529 Rewards card, which gives me back 2% on all purchases.
It didn’t take me too long to decide that I want this card, though I just opened a Citi PremierPass card less than two months ago. After hitting the Submit button and waiting about 10 seconds, I got instant approval (no credit limit information) and my new Chase card, my fifth Chase card and 20th overall, will be here in two weeks.
If you are also interested in this card, you can use this link to apply. However, there may be a catch of this offer as the Terms & Conditions say:
You will receive $200 in bonus rebates which can be redeemed for a $250 check. Please allow 6 to 8 weeks after your first purchase for bonus rebates to post to your account. First purchase includes purchases, balance transfers, or any checks that are used to access your account. To qualify for bonus rebates, account must be open and not in default at the time of fulfillment. The bonus offer is valid only for first-time cardmembers with new accounts. Only one bonus per account. Existing cardmembers/accounts are not eligible for the bonus offer.
The question is: Am I a first-time cardmember if I don’t have a Chase Freedom card? The language is really vague.
Update: The $250 bonus offer has expired. Check out how you can get $50 bonus from Chase Freedom card and other signup bonuses.
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Trackbacks & Pingbacks
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- Pingback by Chase Freedom Card $200 Bonus: It IS Real | The Sun’s Financial Diary | A Personal Finance Blog on Saving and Investing on June 26, 2007 @ 9:48 am
- Pingback by Chase Freedom Card $200 Bonus Promotion: It IS Real on November 13, 2008 @ 10:50 pm
6 Comments
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Sun,
the promo is a little misleading. It really isn’t a $250 promo. It is a $50 promo. You have to earn $200 worth of rebate, which can be used to get $250. Normally, you can get $50 check once you reach $50 in rebate credit. Once you reach $200 you can get a $250 check instead of the normal $200 check. I presume that instead of cashing out every time you get $50 amassed, you have to keep a running balance to $200 in order to get the bonus. at 1% that is $20k, at 3% that is $6666.67 in purchases you’d have to make before you can see the extra $50. So it may take a while to amass that $200 rebate points. Not really good once you figure that portion out.
Offer is still valid when I go to the site. Tim – I think you are mistaken, you do get $200 extra.
In 2005 we developed a budget for groceries, eating out, entertainment, bills, savings, and other miscellaneous expenses. As long as we used our credit cards, no matter how hard we tried, we always surpassed our spending limits.
We always paid off the balance each month, mind you, but we had no “automatic” way of recording exactly how much we had spent in each category, especially because purchases on a credit card are time-delayed by a few days. This made for hard work, because keeping track of the situation required
1) Saving receipts, and identifying each purchase on the receipt into its Budget category (groceries, miscellaneous, etc.). After all, you can buy just about anything at Walmart or Target, from clothing to groceries to electronics.
2) Entering these components into a spreadsheet to keep track of how the money was spent, and how much is left per category.
We never stayed under our target. Sometimes we would go over budget badly (by a factor of 2 in some categories). This can lead to a defeatist attitude!
Starting in 2007, we began using credit cards for only gasoline purchases (pay-at-the-pump), or emergencies. We withdraw cash each month, and deposit it into a “groceries” envelope, and another envelope for “eating out”, etc. This gives us much more accountability with our money, and cuts us off hard and fast when we have reached our spending limit. We have stayed under budget each month the cash-only method has been in force! It is much easier to track our past expenses, and plan our future expenses each month. Its all psychological, and what works for some may not work for others.
Now I am patiently waiting for April 1st, because we are down to around $50 spending for the month. It’s a good thing we stocked up on necessities last week!
By the way, your blog has special significance because June 9 is my birthday.
Your e-mail comments are below:
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While I agree that the easy access of credit cards makes impulse shopping a lot easier, I don’t have any comparison myself between shopping with cards and with cash since I almost charge everything with cards. It’s true that we spent money on stuff that we don’t use a lot, we try not to make our purchasing decision based on how easy we can pay the bill. I am interested in how you figured out you actually spent more when using credit cards.