Copper Catcher wrote:My best frequent flyer story....
In 2000 Kelloggs had a frequent flyer promotion with American Airlines on certain brands of Kelloggs products and Healthy Choice cereals. There were 100 mile certificates printed on cartons. You had to mail in five 100 mile AAdvantage certificates at the time.
Anyway, I scored big...I contact the local Boys and Girls Club and told them I wanted to feed all the kids breakfast and that I would donate boxes of Kellogg Waffles. I purchased cases and cases of waffles at Wal-Mart paying with AMEX and got reward points for the purchase, then I donated the waffles to the club and got tax deduction for the donation. Finally I clipped the certificates mailed them off the and got frequent flyer points. Everyone was happy and I booked two round trip flights to Las Vegas.
Ah, those were the days!
Copper Catcher wrote:My best frequent flyer story....
In 2000 Kelloggs had a frequent flyer promotion with American Airlines on certain brands of Kelloggs products and Healthy Choice cereals. There were 100 mile certificates printed on cartons. You had to mail in five 100 mile AAdvantage certificates at the time.
Anyway, I scored big...I contact the local Boys and Girls Club and told them I wanted to feed all the kids breakfast and that I would donate boxes of Kellogg Waffles. I purchased cases and cases of waffles at Wal-Mart paying with AMEX and got reward points for the purchase, then I donated the waffles to the club and got tax deduction for the donation. Finally I clipped the certificates mailed them off the and got frequent flyer points. Everyone was happy and I booked two round trip flights to Las Vegas.
Ah, those were the days!
psi wrote:I remember reading about people buying those coins on credit cards for the rewards... really goes to show you how sick the money system is when credit card companies will basically pay you to borrow money in the hope that you'll have to carry a balance and pay them interest.
ardorlan wrote:How good this is going to work for you depends highly on your credit rating,
I got the 1% cash back rewards card from capital one, and they set my credit limit at 500$ a month, meaning I will make 5$ a month or 60$ a year, and there is a 40$ annual fee, so I will be making an awesome 20$ a year from this. That being said I have fair credit, I found much better cards you can get if you have excellent credit. I am hoping that I will be able to raise my limit to 1,000 soon (making a profit of $80/year), and I am also hoping this credit card will help to establish my credit.
scrapper2010 wrote:I use a credit card that earns points that you can turn into hotel stays. We put everything on it and pay it off every month. If I bought $1000 worth of dollar coins every ten days for a year I would accumulate 36,000 points which is good for 5-12 free nights depending on hotel quality. Stays generally range from 3000 for average quality hotel to 10,000 per night for the resort types.
Copper Catcher wrote:My best frequent flyer story....
In 2000 Kelloggs had a frequent flyer promotion with American Airlines on certain brands of Kelloggs products and Healthy Choice cereals. There were 100 mile certificates printed on cartons. You had to mail in five 100 mile AAdvantage certificates at the time.
Anyway, I scored big...I contact the local Boys and Girls Club and told them I wanted to feed all the kids breakfast and that I would donate boxes of Kellogg Waffles. I purchased cases and cases of waffles at Wal-Mart paying with AMEX and got reward points for the purchase, then I donated the waffles to the club and got tax deduction for the donation. Finally I clipped the certificates mailed them off the and got frequent flyer points. Everyone was happy and I booked two round trip flights to Las Vegas.
Ah, those were the days!
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