Debit Cards: Less Rewarding

With interest rates near zero, banks are using debit-card rewards programs to entice new customers and retain current ones.

With interest rates near zero, banks are using debit-card rewards programs to entice new customers and retain current ones. Twelve of 14 large banks followed by Corporate Insight, a financial-services research firm, offer at least one rewards program.

But debit-card rewards are less generous than the rewards credit cards offer. For one thing, just over half of the debit cards you can select with a rewards checking account charge an annual fee, which can be as high as $65. And the Corporate Insight survey found that it's common to earn only one mile for every $2 spent with your travel rewards debit card, instead of the usual one mile per $1 spent with a credit card. With many programs, you have to spend $25,000 to earn $50. (One standout is the U.S. Bank FlexPerks Travel Rewards Check Card, which offers a $50 rebate when you spend $5,000. See www.usbank.com.)

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Associate Editor, Kiplinger's Personal Finance