6 travel rewards cards that make it easy to turn points into flights and hotel stays

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6 travel rewards cards that make it easy to turn points into flights and hotel stays
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Crystal Cox/Business Insider

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Capital One's Venture card and the Gold Card from American Express make it easy to redeem points for travel.

  • Credit card companies hope you never redeem your points, so they make it a complicated process on purpose.
  • Cards from Capital One, Chase, and American Express all feature travel portals where you can book travel for most airlines, hotels, rental cars, and cruises.
  • While you can sometimes get more value per point with travel partners, it's a lot easier to use points for purchases on the credit card's website.
  • See Business Insider's picks for the best rewards credit cards »

When sitting down with my wife's uncle recently, he complained that his travel rewards points from two of the biggest credit card companies were too hard to use. He could never decide between booking through the travel portals, transferring to partners, and the seeming myriad of additional redemption options.

He's far from alone in complaining about how complicated credit card rewards points can be to use. If you log into the redemption sections at some credit card websites, it's easy to see why.

Credit card companies secretly hope you never use those points, so making it confusing and offering a plethora of low-value redemptions isn't a big surprise. But if you have the right card, or know how to quickly navigate the websites, you should have a much easier time turning your points into flights, hotel stays, and other travel rewards.

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6 of the best cards for easy redemptions

Capital One® Venture® Rewards Credit Card

The Capital One Venture card is the best credit card for people who want an easy time redeeming rewards. After building up a balance with a flat rate 2x Miles per dollar on every purchase, you can use the Purchase Eraser to wipe recent travel purchases from your statement. Each mile is worth one cent.

Venture Miles can also be transferred to travel partners, which might give you more value. But if you want the easiest redemption around, you can use your card for any regular travel purchase and redeem points to erase the cost from your balance.

Learn more about the Capital One Venture »

The Chase Sapphire Preferred Card and the Chase Sapphire Reserve

The Chase Sapphire Preferred and Chase Sapphire Reserve cards give you bonuses for travel and dining purchases and 1x point per dollar everywhere else. The best value for these points usually comes from transferring them to travel partners at a 1:1 ratio. But if you find that intimidating, you can always take the easy route of redeeming for travel in the Chase Ultimate Rewards portal.

If you find booking travel on Expedia easy, you should find using your Chase points easy, too. Just log in to your Chase account, click on Ultimate Rewards, and choose on the option to redeem points for travel.

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With the Chase Sapphire Preferred card, your points are worth 1.25 cents each toward travel in the Chase portal. With the Sapphire Reserve, points are worth 1.5 cents each. That is usually a decent deal for using your points.

Learn more about the Chase Sapphire Preferred »

Learn more about the Chase Sapphire Reserve »

The American Express® Green Card, American Express® Gold Card, and Platinum Card® from American Express

American Express offers multiple cards that give you Membership Rewards points with each purchase. I use the American Express Gold card myself for restaurant and grocery purchases. The recently updated American Express Green card and premium American Express Platinum card give you the same points and redemption options.

Like Chase, you can log in and use points for many types of travel. American Express has its own travel agency to use your points. Points are worth one cent each for flights and 0.7 cents for most other travel.

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This isn't an amazing value. I recently got more than 6 cents per point transferring points to Avianca LifeMiles and using them to book United Airlines flights. But that was pretty complicated. If you're OK with one cent per point, you can go the easy route and book flights on Amex Travel.

Learn more about the Amex Green »

Learn more about the Amex Gold »

Learn more about the Amex Platinum »

Don't let your travel rewards points get stale

Points tend to become worth a little less over time. If you wait and keep big balances too long, you could lose out on free and discounted travel due to mile and point inflation. Don't let points get stale or sit for too long. If you love to travel, use your miles and points to pay for it! With any of these cards, that dream trip could be just a few clicks away.

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Disclosure: This post is brought to you by the Personal Finance Insider team. We occasionally highlight financial products and services that can help you make smarter decisions with your money. We do not give investment advice or encourage you to adopt a certain investment strategy. If you take action based on one of our recommendations, we get a small share of the revenue from our commerce partners. This does not influence whether we feature a financial product or service. We operate independently from our advertising sales team.

Business Insider may receive a commission from The Points Guy Affiliate Network, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective.

Please note: While the offers mentioned above are accurate at the time of publication, they're subject to change at any time and may have changed, or may no longer be available.

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