If you read the title and think your body clock is out of whack, that's not the case. This Saturday selection will be delivered on Sunday afternoon. Tim is on vacation this week and I've been procrastinating on Saturday's selection, so here's this week's selection. Sunday Afternoon Saturday Selection For reading pleasure, enlightenment and infotainment.
This post from Travel with TMC isn't new this week, but I found it new and given that Greg, Tim, and I are planning on choosing something like I couldn't help but laugh at my timing. The most spontaneous trip of my life from June 5th to 12th (no one knows where we're going or what Carrie and Stephen will ask us to do once we get there). While we think air travel in our points seats has wide applicability (not just for those looking for spontaneous travel), we still appreciate the health benefits, excitement, and stress relief that Tara promises. I'm looking forward to it. At least I know that such spontaneous trips will certainly lead to lasting memories. I certainly can't help but be amazed that this proprietary money we call miles and points can put spontaneity so easily within reach.
Those who value spontaneity will be frustrated by the slow transfer time when transferring Wyndham Rewards points to Caesars. Nevertheless, Travel with Grant found some interesting information about Caesars Rewards points. If you use points to cover your room when you book, the tax is also gone (because taxes are usually calculated based on a percentage, and any percentage of $0 is still $0). In fact, when you move from Wyndham to Caesars to cover a room at a Caesars property, the cash cost includes taxes, so the points are worth just over 1 cent per point. My experience mirrors Grant's in that it took about a week to move the points from Wyndham to Caesars (I haven't tried moving the points back, but according to the data points (It has been shown that it can be much slower).
The ease with which credit limits can be combined varies widely by issuer. In some cases, this can be as simple as sending a secure message that you want to transfer your existing credit limit to another card, but other issuers turn it into a complicated request process and, in some cases, require you to transfer your credit limit to another card. In some cases, a rigorous investigation of the report may be necessary. . Danny the Deal Guru reports that some cardholders can now transfer their credit limits between existing Capital One cards (consumer-to-consumer or business-to-business, (from a person to a company or vice versa). Unfortunately, the functions that can do this are: Several If the comments on my post and YouTube video about how to find your Capital One card number online are any indication, Capital One may continue to target this for years to come. If you haven't seen the ability to combine your limits yet, don't expect it to show up anytime soon.
Over the past year, I've rented more cars with Hertz than with any other rental car company. In recent memory, I had not yet been arrested or faced any other notable issues with Hertz, but just when my comfort level with Hertz was starting to grow even more confident, Hertz Rumors were circulating that they were running Hertz and charging electric car renters. refill the gas tank. No, there was no typo in that sentence. Hertz has (apparently many times) charged electric car renters the following fees: refill the tank — And I'm not talking about plugins. I thought the first episode of “View from the Wing” sounded crazy last week, but after reading the latest with Gary pointing out numerous data points here, it becomes clear just how messed up Hertz is. Become. Are you still going to rent from Hearts? Probably from time to time, but they do so knowing that customer service is likely non-existent if a problem arises.
File this as “weird”: Did you know that the CitiBusiness American Airlines card accepts users? Do you want to earn loyalty points for authorized users instead of the primary cardholder? One Mile at a Time has one of the weirdest credit card quirks I've ever heard of. While I think it's good that employees can enjoy the benefits of using a “corporate card,” I wonder about a separate Authorized User card in the US where employees/authorized users can earn unique benefits instead of all the benefits. I've never heard of it. go on business. To be clear, redeemable Miles earned from spending will still go into a pot controlled by the primary cardholder, but the bottom line is that spending in Australia won't help you narrow your path to elite status. That means there is.
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