I would have to say the Discover More Card. It will give you the best cash back on purchases. Altough it has the best cash back, I would suggest going with a card that is accepted everywere, Like Visa. If you use Visa, try the Chase Freedom Cash Card.
You can plug your spending profile into this rewards calculator to see which cash back credit card will pay you the most for your normal spending: http://www.creditcardtuneup.com/
Since your spending profile is heavy on groceries and gas, the Citi Driver’s Edge card may be tough to beat for the first year since it pays 6% rewards in those categories for the first 12 months. However, its rewards have to be applied to auto maintenance, purchase, or lease (which was fine for me, but may not be OK for you).
Note that the calculator converts all reward currencies (cash back, points, frequent flier miles) to dollars for an apples-to-apples comparison, but you can ignore the non-cash-back cards if you want.
check out http://www.fastcreditcardapprovals.com here you will be able to compare all major credit cards side by side on rates and rewards. GOOD, BAD OR NO CREDIT they they have the right card for you.
July 3rd, 2010 at 9:36 am
I would have to say the Discover More Card. It will give you the best cash back on purchases. Altough it has the best cash back, I would suggest going with a card that is accepted everywere, Like Visa. If you use Visa, try the Chase Freedom Cash Card.
July 3rd, 2010 at 9:36 am
chase freedom
July 3rd, 2010 at 9:36 am
you might want to go here to compare them, http://www.bestcreditrates.net
July 3rd, 2010 at 9:36 am
You can plug your spending profile into this rewards calculator to see which cash back credit card will pay you the most for your normal spending:
http://www.creditcardtuneup.com/
Since your spending profile is heavy on groceries and gas, the Citi Driver’s Edge card may be tough to beat for the first year since it pays 6% rewards in those categories for the first 12 months. However, its rewards have to be applied to auto maintenance, purchase, or lease (which was fine for me, but may not be OK for you).
Note that the calculator converts all reward currencies (cash back, points, frequent flier miles) to dollars for an apples-to-apples comparison, but you can ignore the non-cash-back cards if you want.
July 3rd, 2010 at 9:36 am
check out http://www.fastcreditcardapprovals.com here you will be able to compare all major credit cards side by side on rates and rewards. GOOD, BAD OR NO CREDIT they they have the right card for you.