Most of those have annual fees, though—I’ve done the math, my spending isn’t high enough to justify them. My 1% card is free. Also, I have my credit card number memorized, so changing it would impose a fairly high annoyance burden on me. But it’s worth noting for those who have higher spending patterns than I do(~$1000-1500/month on credit).
For clarity, I’m in Canada. All the card offers I’ve seen up here that are meaningfully better than 1% have fees. Americans can take note of those, though.
Most of those have annual fees, though—I’ve done the math, my spending isn’t high enough to justify them. My 1% card is free. Also, I have my credit card number memorized, so changing it would impose a fairly high annoyance burden on me. But it’s worth noting for those who have higher spending patterns than I do(~$1000-1500/month on credit).
Nope.
Here is the 1.5% Capital One card.
Here is the 2% Citi card.
For clarity, I’m in Canada. All the card offers I’ve seen up here that are meaningfully better than 1% have fees. Americans can take note of those, though.
Ah. Sorry for my presumption.