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Credit & Money Management

Air-Miles Cards for International Travel

Rack up points for overseas flights with these credit-card deals.

By Joan Goldwasser, Senior Reporter

From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, March 2010
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George Clooney may have earned his coveted silver card in the hit movie Up in the Air, but we mere mortals will have to wait. Still, it’s refreshing to learn that two international carriers are offering attractive deals.

Sign up for British Airways’ Visa Signature card from Chase ($75 annual fee; 13.24% interest rate) and you’ll receive 20,000 bonus miles after your first use of the card, and 10,000 additional miles after you spend $750. You’ll get a $50 discount on every BA transatlantic ticket you book online. Spend $30,000 on your card in a single year and you will receive a voucher for a companion ticket that is valid for two years. You earn 2.5 miles for every dollar spent on BA flights and vacation packages, and 1.25 miles for all other spending. Plus, you earn a free flight -- even on BA’s domestic partners, American and Alaska Airlines -- with 25,000 miles (50,000 miles to fly to Europe) with no blackout dates.

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For every dollar you spend with the Virgin Atlantic American Express Black Card from Bank of America ($90 annual fee; 12.24% interest rate), you earn three miles (1.5 miles on all other purchases). Make your first purchase and Virgin will add 20,000 miles to your account. Spend $25,000 in a year and you’ll receive 15,000 additional miles. Virgin is offering a 0% teaser rate that’s good for seven months on purchases and balance transfers. And Virgin currently gives you an incentive to cross the pond by requiring only 29,500 miles -- instead of the usual 45,000 -- for a New York-to-London ticket.


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Reader Comments (1)

Posted by: Dennis at 02/15/2010 04:22:59 PM

I'm surprised the writer made no mention of foreign transaction fees. Sure those miles can help you get a free flights, but as soon as you get overseas they will nail you with a 3% "foreign transaction fee" (FTF) for any and every purchase you make outside the US. To my knowledge only CapitalOne doesn't charge an FTF. I've used their travel rewards card for years and have saved thousands of dollars just by avoiding FTFs along with the added benefit of being able to use the rewards for almost any travel related expense such as hotels, car rentals, in addition to flights.




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