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Author: We Do Points

  • This week’s best sign-up bonuses

    This week’s best sign-up bonuses

    The five strongest publicly available welcome offers right now — verified, ranked, and explained. Two cards are at all-time-high bonus levels, and one of them won’t last past summer.

    May 2026 is one of the best windows we’ve seen in years for credit card welcome offers.

    Chase’s Sapphire Reserve is sitting at an all-time-high 150,000-point bonus — the largest offer ever publicly available on the card. The Amex Platinum is at “as high as” 175,000 points. The Sapphire Preferred jumped from its standard 60K to 75K. If you’ve been thinking about adding a new travel card, this is the moment.

    Here are the five strongest offers we’d act on this week, with what each is worth, who they’re right for, and our take on which to prioritize.

    The five offers worth your attention

    Ranked roughly by value-per-effort — meaning we factored in both the raw bonus size and how easy each card is to fit into a typical reader’s situation. The “elevated offer” tag marks cards currently at unusually strong bonus levels compared to their historical norm.

    Chase · Premium tier

    Chase Sapphire Reserve

    Annual fee: $795
    150K
    Bonus points
    Spend $6,000 in first 3 months to earn the bonus

    This is the highest publicly available bonus ever offered on the Sapphire Reserve. The card debuted in 2016 with a 100,000-point bonus and has hovered between 80K and 125K since. The current 150K offer launched April 30 and represents roughly $3,000 in transfer-partner travel value at our 2¢/point valuation.

    The Sapphire Reserve gives you 1:1 transfer access to World of Hyatt — the single highest-value hotel transfer in points and miles. At Hyatt’s award chart, 150K points buys 5 nights at the Andaz Maui or 5 nights at the Park Hyatt Tokyo. Pair that with the $300 annual travel credit and the card’s stack of dining and hotel credits, and the math gets meaningful fast.

    ~$3,000Transfer value
    $795Annual fee
    $1,670Face-value credits
    American Express · Premium tier

    American Express Platinum

    Annual fee: $895
    175K*
    “As high as”
    Spend $12,000 in first 6 months · Welcome offers vary

    The Platinum’s variable “as high as 175K” offer is the highest welcome bonus structure currently in the market — though not everyone qualifies for the top number. Amex shows your personalized offer during the application after a soft credit pull, so you can see your exact bonus before committing to a hard inquiry.

    For travelers who’ll engage with the Platinum’s complex credit structure (Uber, FHR hotel, airline incidental, CLEAR, digital entertainment), this card delivers $1,800-2,200 in realistic annual value. The 22 transfer partners — the deepest network in U.S. points and miles — unlock international premium cabin redemptions that simply aren’t available on Chase or Capital One.

    ~$3,500Transfer value (at 175K)
    $895Annual fee
    22Transfer partners
    Read our full Amex Platinum review → Best for international premium cabin travelers
    Chase · Mid-tier

    Chase Sapphire Preferred

    Annual fee: $95
    75K
    Bonus points
    Spend $5,000 in first 3 months to earn the bonus

    The Sapphire Preferred’s current 75K offer is elevated from its standard 60K bonus — a 25% increase with the same spending requirement. At our valuation, the 75K bonus is worth approximately $1,500 in transfer-partner travel for a card with just a $95 annual fee.

    This remains the single most-recommended first travel card in points and miles. It unlocks the full Chase Ultimate Rewards transfer partner network (including Hyatt), provides primary rental car insurance, and offers strong trip protections at a beginner-friendly annual fee. Under Chase’s updated 2026 rules, you can now hold both the Sapphire Preferred and Sapphire Reserve simultaneously and earn both welcome bonuses.

    ~$1,500Transfer value
    $95Annual fee
    14Transfer partners
    American Express · Mid-tier

    American Express Gold

    Annual fee: $325
    100K*
    “As high as”
    Spend $8,000 in first 6 months · Welcome offers vary

    The Amex Gold uses the same variable “as high as 100K” structure as the Platinum, with Amex showing your personalized offer during the application. The minimum spend was raised from $6,000 to $8,000 in the April 2026 refresh, so plan your minimum-spend timing accordingly.

    For households spending $1,000+/month on dining and groceries, the Gold’s 4x earning on both categories makes it the single best earning card on the market. Pair the welcome bonus with the ongoing 4x rate and a typical food-spending household earns 100K+ points in the first six months alone — worth ~$2,000 at transfer value.

    ~$2,000Transfer value (at 100K)
    $325Annual fee
    4xDining + groceries
    Read our full Amex Gold review → Best for dining and groceries
    Capital One · Premium tier

    Capital One Venture X

    Annual fee: $395
    75K
    Bonus miles
    Spend $4,000 in first 3 months to earn the bonus

    The Venture X’s standard 75K-mile offer at $4,000 minimum spend is the lowest spending threshold of any premium card on this list. It’s not at an all-time high (the card hit 100K briefly in late 2025), but combined with the card’s structural value — $300 annual travel credit + 10,000-mile anniversary bonus — the math works for almost any traveler.

    The Venture X is the right choice if you want premium benefits with simple value math, you’re already past Chase 5/24, or you don’t want to engage with merchant-specific credit structures. 75K Capital One miles transfer to 15 partners and are worth roughly $1,390 at our valuation.

    ~$1,390Transfer value
    $395Annual fee
    ~$0Effective fee
    Read our full Venture X review → Best premium card under $400

    Our take: which one this week?

    If you can only get one card and you’re a heavy traveler: Sapphire Reserve. The 150K offer is historically elevated and unlikely to last past summer.

    If you’re new to points and miles and want a beginner-friendly entry: Sapphire Preferred. The 75K elevated offer is meaningful, and the $95 fee makes the decision low-risk.

    If you spend heavily on dining and groceries: Amex Gold. Apply with confidence using Amex’s soft-pull preview to see your exact offer before committing.

    Most readers shouldn’t get two premium cards in the same month — space premium applications at least 90 days apart to manage credit-score impact and the risk of velocity-based denials.

    Application rules you need to know first

    Before you apply, make sure you can clear each issuer’s rules. Getting denied or losing eligibility for a bonus you assumed you’d qualify for is the most common — and most preventable — first-card mistake.

    The rules that catch beginners

    • Chase 5/24: If you’ve opened 5+ credit cards in the last 24 months (from any issuer), Chase will deny your application. Our guide walks through how to plan around this.
    • Amex once-per-lifetime: You can only earn each Amex card’s welcome bonus once, ever. Amex shows you eligibility upfront during the application via a soft-pull preview.
    • Chase Sapphire eligibility (updated 2026): You can now hold both the Sapphire Preferred and Sapphire Reserve simultaneously and earn both welcome bonuses — but each has its own once-per-card lifetime restriction.
    • Capital One 48-month rule: If you earned the Venture X welcome bonus in the past 48 months, you’re not eligible for it again. As of late 2025, all three Venture cards share a single 48-month bonus restriction.
    • Application velocity: Don’t apply for two Chase cards in 30 days, two Amex cards in 90 days, or more than one premium card per month from the same issuer. Velocity-based denials are common when application timing is too aggressive.

    Why these offers are unusual

    Two of this week’s five offers — the Sapphire Reserve at 150K and the Amex Platinum at 175K — are at or near all-time-high welcome bonus levels. That’s not coincidence. Both Chase and Amex have spent the past year refreshing their premium products to compete more directly with each other, and elevated welcome offers are part of that competitive positioning.

    Historical context: The Sapphire Reserve launched in 2016 with a 100K bonus that caused unprecedented application volume. It’s been below that level for most of the years since. The Amex Platinum’s “as high as 175K” structure is a 2024 innovation that lets Amex show different bonus levels to different applicants — meaning the headline number isn’t always what you’ll actually get.

    The pattern to watch: Elevated offers on premium cards typically last 8-16 weeks before reverting to standard levels. The Sapphire Reserve’s 150K offer launched April 30 — based on historical patterns, expect it to drop back toward 125K or 100K sometime between mid-July and early September. If you’re considering it, sooner is better than later.

    What else we’re watching

    A few notable offers and deals we didn’t include in the main ranking but are worth noting if they fit your situation:

    • Amex Business Platinum — as high as 300K points after $20K spending in 3 months. Targeted at high-spending business owners. Highest bonus we’ve seen on the card; worth the application if you have legitimate business spending.
    • Amex Business Gold — as high as 200K points after $15K spending in 3 months. Best business-card alternative to the personal Gold.
    • Chase Sapphire Reserve for Business — 150K points after $30K spending in 6 months. Separate bonus from the personal Sapphire Reserve. Useful for serious business spenders.
    • Chase Ink Business Preferred — 100K points after $8K spending in 3 months. Limited-time elevated offer; standard is 90K. Strong for small-business owners.
    • Transfer bonuses currently running: Amex MR → Hilton Honors 20% bonus through May 30. Useful if you’re booking high-end Hilton properties with transferred points.

    How we evaluate offers: Bonuses are ranked by transfer-partner value at our standard point valuations (Amex MR: 2.0¢, Chase UR: 2.0¢, Capital One Miles: 1.85¢). We only include public offers verified directly with each issuer in the past 7 days. Targeted offers (CardMatch, referral bonuses, account-specific incentives) can be substantially higher — always check those channels before applying.

    This post updates weekly. Last verified: May 12, 2026. If you spot an offer that’s changed or expired, email us and we’ll update.

  • Welcome to the new WeDoPoints

    Welcome to the new WeDoPoints

    Welcome to the new WeDoPoints

    We rebuilt the site from the ground up. Here’s what’s new, what’s not changing, and where to start.

    If you’ve been following WeDoPoints, you’ll notice everything looks different today.

    Same domain, same mission — but a completely new site behind it. New design, new editorial standards, new structure, and new content. We’ve spent months on this rebuild because the old site wasn’t doing right by you, and we wanted to fix that before we kept writing more content on a foundation that didn’t work.

    This post is a quick tour of what’s changing, what’s not, and where to start.

    Why we rebuilt

    The old WeDoPoints had grown organically over years. Categories had multiplied to the point where the same topic lived in three different places. The navigation was hard to follow. The design didn’t communicate what we wanted it to. And honestly, the line between editorial content and affiliate content had gotten blurrier than we were comfortable with.

    We could have kept patching it. Instead, we decided to start over — keep what worked, throw out what didn’t, and build something that looks and feels like the publication we want WeDoPoints to be: clear, useful, and worth your time even if you never apply for a card through us.

    What’s new

    Six concrete changes you’ll notice as you explore the site:

    01

    A real editorial brand system

    New typography (Playfair Display for headlines, Source Sans for body), a consistent color palette anchored in navy and gold, and a magazine-quality layout. We hired a designer to think hard about how the site should feel, then built every page around those decisions.

    02

    A clear information architecture

    Five top-level hubs — Credit Cards, Points & Miles, Travel, Guides, and Tools. Everything else lives under those. No more 25-category sidebar, no more hunting for what you need.

    03

    A foundation learning path for beginners

    Four guides, designed to be read in order, that take someone from “I have no idea how points work” to “I just booked my first award flight.” Start with our Beginner’s Guide. Total reading time is about 45 minutes — and we think it’s one of the better introductions to the topic on the internet.

    04

    A published editorial methodology

    Our How We Review Cards page documents exactly how we evaluate every card on the site — what factors we weight, how we score them, where the numbers come from. You shouldn’t have to take our word for our reviews; you should be able to verify the framework.

    05

    Free tools backed by transparent math

    A points valuation tool showing what we think each major program’s points are worth (and why), a card comparison tool, a welcome bonus calculator, and more. No sign-up, no email required — just useful utilities.

    06

    A clear stance on AI-generated content

    Every guide and review on this site is written and edited by a human. We use AI for research and copy-editing, but we don’t publish AI-generated content as our own — and we think it matters to say that out loud, given how much of the internet is becoming auto-generated noise.

    What’s not changing

    Two things matter to us above everything else, and neither of them changed in the rebuild:

    • Honest reviews. We make money through affiliate commissions when readers apply for cards through our links — that’s how this site sustains itself. But we don’t change our reviews based on commission rates. The cards we recommend are the cards we’d recommend to family members. Period.
    • Real travel. Every destination guide on this site is built from trips our team has actually taken. When a guide says “the seaplane transfer to the Maldives takes three hours,” it’s because we sat on it. We don’t write about places we haven’t been.

    If you’re a returning reader: some old URLs have changed in the rebuild. We’ve set up redirects from the most-trafficked pages to their new equivalents, but if you have a bookmark that 404s, just search the site or use the menu — almost everything from the old site has a more thoughtful replacement.

    A note on AI and editorial integrity

    We want to address something directly, because we think it matters. AI has changed what’s possible in publishing — including in the points-and-miles space. Sites can now generate hundreds of articles a month with no human ever touching them. That content ranks. That content monetizes. And in the short term, it might even look fine to readers.

    We’re not going to do that. Not because we’re philosophically opposed to AI tools — we use them for research, fact-checking, and editing support — but because the value of this site has always been the people behind it. If we let AI write our reviews, the reviews stop being ours. And then there’s no reason for you to be here instead of anywhere else.

    So everything you read on WeDoPoints, going forward, is written and edited by a human who has actually used the cards, taken the trips, and learned the programs we write about. Our editorial policy spells out the specifics.

    Where to start

    Three suggestions, depending on where you are:

    What’s coming next

    The site you’re looking at today is the foundation — not the finished product. Here’s a quick preview of what we’re building over the coming months:

    Next 90 days

    • The remaining foundation guides — finishing the 4-guide beginner learning path so anyone can go from zero to first redemption.
    • Top card reviews — Amex Platinum, Amex Gold, Capital One Venture X, Chase Freedom Unlimited, and more — built on the same review framework as our Sapphire Preferred review.
    • Major loyalty program guides — World of Hyatt, Amex Membership Rewards, Delta SkyMiles, and the rest of the big programs covered the way we did Chase Ultimate Rewards.
    • Trip reports from real travel — concrete walkthroughs of how we booked specific trips, what the points cost, and what we learned.
    • The deals tracker — current transfer bonuses, elevated welcome offers, and time-sensitive opportunities, updated weekly.

    Tell us what we’re missing

    This is a foundation, not a finished site. If there’s a topic you want covered, a card you want reviewed, a destination you want explored — email us. Reader requests drive the roadmap more than anything else. Some of our most-read guides started as one-line emails.

    And if you find something on the new site that’s broken, confusing, or wrong, tell us that too. We’d rather hear about it from you than read about it on social media.

    Thanks for being here. Whether you’re a returning reader or you just found us — we’re glad you’re with us for what comes next.

    The WeDoPoints Editorial Team