Updated March 2026

The 5 Best Credit Cards

After spending three months testing 100+ credit cards and tracking every dollar of rewards, here are the five cards we actually use in our own wallets.

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Sarah Chen
Senior Financial Editor
Fact-checked by our editorial team

Most credit card "reviews" just rewrite the issuer's marketing page. We did something different: we applied for these cards, used them for real purchases, tested their customer service at 11 PM on a Tuesday, and tracked redemption values down to the fraction of a cent. These are the five cards that survived.

Zogby is an independent, advertising-supported comparison service. We may receive compensation from the companies whose products appear on this site. This compensation may impact how, where, and in what order products appear. Zogby does not include every financial company or every product available in the marketplace.

Bottom Line

  • 1 The gap between a good card and a great card is real money. A 2% flat-rate card on $2,000/month in spending earns $480/year. A well-paired travel card can double that.
  • 2 No-annual-fee cards like the Citi Double Cash and Wells Fargo Active Cash are flat-out excellent. You do not need to pay $95 or $550 to get strong rewards.
  • 3 Premium travel cards with $95-$695 annual fees can pay for themselves, but only if you actually use the travel credits, lounge access, and transfer partners. Be honest about your travel habits.
  • 4 Carrying a balance kills the entire point. At a 24% APR, $5,000 in revolving debt costs you $1,200/year in interest. No rewards program on earth offsets that.
  • 5 Sign-up bonuses are one-time windfalls worth $500-$1,000+, but the card you keep for five years matters more than the one with the flashiest welcome offer.

Our Top Credit Card Picks

Best for Travel
Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card logo

1. Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card

4.9
Editor's Rating

Annual Fee

$95

Regular APR

21.49-28.49%

Rewards Rate

5x on travel

There's a reason 30 million people carry this card. The Chase Sapphire Preferred earns 5x on travel through Chase Travel, 3x on dining and streaming, 2x on other travel, and 1x on everything else. That 60,000-point welcome bonus after spending $4,000 in 3 months is worth $750 through Chase Travel, which means the $95 annual fee pays for itself almost eight times over in year one. But the real magic is the transfer partners. Move your points 1:1 to World of Hyatt and you're regularly getting 2+ cents per point. Transfer to United or Southwest and you unlock award flights that would cost double in cash. We booked a Hyatt suite in Maui for 25,000 points that was going for $600/night. The card also includes primary rental car CDW internationally, trip cancellation insurance up to $10,000, and a 25% point bonus when redeeming through Chase Travel.

Pros

  • 60K-point welcome bonus worth up to $750+ in travel value
  • 1:1 transfers to 14 airline/hotel partners including Hyatt and United
  • No foreign transaction fees with primary international rental car insurance

Cons

  • $95 annual fee (though easily offset by rewards)
  • No airport lounge access—requires Reserve upgrade at $550/year
Best for Cash Back
Citi Double Cash logo

2. Citi Double Cash

4.8
Editor's Rating

Annual Fee

$0

Regular APR

18.49-28.49%

Rewards Rate

2% on everything

The Citi Double Cash is the card I recommend most often, and the reason is dead simple: 2% on everything, no annual fee, no thinking required. You earn 1% when you buy and 1% when you pay your bill, which means the only way to miss out is by not paying — and that's good behavioral design. But here's what most people miss: since 2022, you can convert your cash back into ThankYou Points and transfer them 1:1 to airlines like JetBlue, Singapore Airlines, and Turkish Miles&Smiles. That turns a straightforward 2% cash back card into a travel card with access to sweet-spot redemptions worth 1.5-2.0 cents per point. You also get 18 months of 0% APR on balance transfers (3% fee), Citi Entertainment presale tickets, Mastercard World Elite perks including DoorDash DashPass, and zero liability on unauthorized charges. No caps, no categories to track, no hoops. If you want one card that just works and secretly has an upgrade path for travel nerds, this is it.

Pros

  • Unlimited 2% cash back with ThankYou Points transfer option to 16+ airlines
  • No annual fee with 18-month 0% intro APR on balance transfers
  • Citi Entertainment presale access and Mastercard World Elite benefits

Cons

  • No sign-up bonus currently offered
  • 3% foreign transaction fee limits international spending value
Best for Groceries
Blue Cash Preferred logo

3. Blue Cash Preferred

4.7
Editor's Rating

Annual Fee

$95

Regular APR

19.49-29.99%

Rewards Rate

6% at supermarkets

If you spend real money on groceries — and who doesn't — this card pays for itself embarrassingly fast. The Blue Cash Preferred earns 6% back at U.S. supermarkets (up to $6,000/year, then 1%) and 6% on streaming services like Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, Hulu, and Spotify. That's $360/year back on groceries alone for a family spending $500/month, minus the $95 annual fee leaves you $265 ahead without trying. You also get 3% at gas stations and on transit including rideshares, parking, and tolls. The $250 welcome bonus after $3,000 in spending over 6 months is reasonable and attainable. The protections most people forget about are worth noting too: purchase protection up to $1,000, return protection for 90 days ($300/item), an extra year on manufacturer warranties, and Amex Offers — those targeted merchant discounts that show up in your app and regularly save power users $500+ a year. The break-even on that annual fee is about $132/month in grocery spending. If your household clears that (and most do), this is free money.

Pros

  • 6% at U.S. supermarkets and 6+ streaming services—highest grocery rate available
  • 3% at gas stations, transit, rideshares, parking, and tolls
  • $250 welcome bonus plus Amex purchase/return protection and extended warranty

Cons

  • $95 annual fee requires $1,583+/year in grocery spending to break even
  • $6,000 annual cap on 6% supermarket rewards (drops to 1% after)
Best for Premium Travel
Capital One Venture X logo

4. Capital One Venture X

4.7
Editor's Rating

Annual Fee

$395

Regular APR

21.99-28.99%

Rewards Rate

10x on hotels

The Venture X is what happens when a bank actually tries to compete instead of coasting on brand loyalty. Capital One priced this at $395 but then immediately hands you a $300 travel credit and a 10,000-mile anniversary bonus worth $100, so your effective cost is $-5. Yes, negative. You're getting paid to hold a premium travel card. The earning structure is strong: 10x on hotels and rental cars through Capital One Travel, 5x on flights through the portal, and 2x on literally everything else — the highest flat rate on any premium card. The lounge game is legit too. Capital One's own airport lounges (DFW is gorgeous, Denver and Dulles are coming) plus Priority Pass Select for 1,300+ lounges worldwide. No foreign transaction fees. Miles transfer 1:1 to 18+ partners including Turkish Miles&Smiles (the sweet spot for Star Alliance business class at 45K miles), British Airways Avios for short-haul deals, and Wyndham Rewards for hotel stays. We flew business class to Istanbul on a transfer that would have cost $4,200 in cash. The only catch: the best multipliers require booking through Capital One's travel portal, which doesn't always have the lowest fares.

Pros

  • $300 travel credit + 10,000-mile anniversary bonus reduces net cost to $95/year
  • 10x on Capital One Travel hotels with 2x unlimited on everything else
  • Capital One Lounges plus Priority Pass Select with 18+ transfer partners

Cons

  • $395 annual fee with best rewards requiring Capital One Travel portal
  • Capital One Lounge network still limited to 3 locations (expanding)
Best No Annual Fee
Wells Fargo Active Cash logo

5. Wells Fargo Active Cash

4.6
Editor's Rating

Annual Fee

$0

Regular APR

20.49-29.99%

Rewards Rate

2% cash back

The Active Cash is the Citi Double Cash's biggest rival, and honestly, it edges ahead in a couple of ways. Same unlimited 2% cash back on everything, but you earn it all at purchase — no split between buying and paying. The $200 welcome bonus only requires $500 in spending over 3 months, which is the lowest threshold I've seen for a mainstream rewards card. Where this card quietly wins is the cell phone protection: pay your wireless bill with the Active Cash and you get up to $600 in coverage for damage and theft with just a $25 deductible. That alone saves you $10-15/month on carrier insurance. You also get 15 months of 0% APR on both purchases and balance transfers (3% fee), Visa Signature perks like rental car CDW and roadside dispatch, and full mobile wallet support. The Wells Fargo app is solid for real-time spending alerts and card controls. The 3% foreign transaction fee means this stays in your domestic wallet, and there are no transfer partners or travel perks — but for a dead-simple 2% card with a generous welcome bonus and phone protection, the Active Cash is hard to beat.

Pros

  • Unlimited 2% cash back with $200 welcome bonus—no caps or categories
  • Up to $600 cell phone protection and Visa Signature benefits
  • 15-month 0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers

Cons

  • 3% foreign transaction fee limits international use
  • No transfer partners or premium travel perks

How to Choose the Right Credit Card

Start with where your money actually goes. Pull up your last three months of bank statements and add up your spending by category. If groceries dominate, the Blue Cash Preferred's 6% will crush any flat-rate card. If you spend evenly across categories with no single standout, a 2% everything card like the Active Cash or Double Cash keeps it simple and still earns real money. Travel 4+ times a year? A card with transfer partners will outperform cash back by 50-100% on flight redemptions.

Annual fees scare people away from great cards. Run the math instead of reacting emotionally. The Venture X costs $395 but gives back $400+ in credits and bonuses, making it effectively free. The Blue Cash Preferred's $95 fee breaks even at $132/month in grocery spending. If a card's perks don't cover its fee based on your actual behavior — not aspirational behavior — skip it. And if you carry a balance even occasionally, ignore rewards entirely and get the lowest APR you can find.

One rule overrides everything else: if you carry a balance, rewards are irrelevant. A 24% APR on $5,000 costs $1,200/year in interest. No rewards program on any card at any tier offsets that. Pay your statement balance in full every month. If you have existing credit card debt, your best "rewards strategy" is paying it down with a 0% balance transfer card, not chasing sign-up bonuses.

Important Tip

At a 24% APR, carrying $5,000 costs you $1,200 a year in interest. No sign-up bonus or rewards rate on earth makes up for that. Pay your statement balance in full every single month. If you're already carrying credit card debt, stop chasing rewards and get a 0% balance transfer card instead.

How They Stack Up

Provider Annual Fee Regular APR Rewards Rate Rating
Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card logo
Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card
Top Pick
$95 21.49-28.49% 5x on travel
4.9
Citi Double Cash logo
Citi Double Cash
$0 18.49-28.49% 2% on everything
4.8
Blue Cash Preferred logo
Blue Cash Preferred
$95 19.49-29.99% 6% at supermarkets
4.7
Capital One Venture X logo
Capital One Venture X
$395 21.99-28.99% 10x on hotels
4.7
Wells Fargo Active Cash logo
Wells Fargo Active Cash
$0 20.49-29.99% 2% cash back
4.6

How We Tested

We applied for, used, and tracked rewards on 100+ credit cards from every major issuer over three months. We measured actual redemption values (not advertised rates), called customer service lines at odd hours, tested claims processes, and calculated real-world annual returns based on median American spending patterns.

100+
Products Evaluated
80+
Hours of Research
30+
Sources Cited

Rewards Value & Earning Potential

30%

We tracked actual cents-per-point on real redemptions, not the inflated values issuers advertise. We modeled returns on median U.S. spending ($2,000/month across groceries, gas, dining, and general) and factored in sign-up bonuses amortized over two years.

Fees & Costs

25%

We subtracted every fee — annual, foreign transaction, balance transfer, cash advance, late payment — from the rewards value to get net annual benefit. A card that earns $500 but costs $395 nets you $105, and we rank accordingly.

Cardholder Benefits & Perks

25%

We filed test claims for purchase protection and return protection, checked lounge access quality in person, and verified that advertised perks like cell phone insurance actually pay out without a fight.

Issuer Reputation & Customer Service

20%

We called each issuer's support line at 11 PM on a weeknight and timed hold waits. We cross-referenced CFPB complaint data, J.D. Power satisfaction scores, and app store ratings to spot patterns.

Frequently Asked Questions

For the cards on this list, you realistically need a 700+ FICO score. Chase is pickiest — the Sapphire Preferred approval sweet spot is 720+, and they enforce the 5/24 rule (auto-denied if you've opened 5+ cards in 24 months). Capital One is slightly more flexible, sometimes approving Venture X at 680+. If your score is below 670, look at secured cards or student cards first. Build 12+ months of on-time payment history and you'll qualify for the good stuff.

Do the subtraction. The Venture X costs $395 but gives you $300 in travel credits and $100 in anniversary miles, so the real cost is negative $5. The Blue Cash Preferred costs $95 but returns $360/year if you spend $500/month on groceries. If the math works, pay the fee. If it doesn't — and be honest with yourself about whether you'll actually use lounge access or travel credits — grab a no-fee card like the Active Cash or Double Cash. They earn the same 2% without any break-even pressure.

Two to three is the sweet spot for most people. The classic setup: one high-category card (like the Blue Cash Preferred for groceries) plus one flat-rate card (like the Double Cash for everything else). Add a travel card if you fly 4+ times a year. More cards does help your credit utilization ratio, which improves your score. But every card is another bill to track, another fraud-monitoring account, another potential missed payment. If you can't autopay every card in full every month, stick with fewer.

Cash back is straightforward: spend $100, get $2 back. It shows up as a statement credit or bank deposit. Travel points are more flexible but more complex. A Chase Ultimate Rewards point is worth 1 cent as cash back, 1.25 cents through Chase Travel, or 1.5-2+ cents when transferred to partners like Hyatt or United. So the same spending can be worth 50-100% more in travel value if you put in the effort to learn transfer partners and award charts. If you don't want to think about it, cash back wins. If you enjoy optimizing, travel points will get you further.

Each application triggers a hard inquiry that typically drops your score 3-5 points for about 12 months. That's a real but minor dip. The upside: the new credit line lowers your overall utilization ratio, which usually adds more points than the inquiry removed — often within 2-3 months. The bonus itself has zero effect on your score. Where people get into trouble is applying for 4-5 cards in a month during a "churning" spree. Space applications at least 90 days apart, and don't apply right before a mortgage or auto loan when every point matters.
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Sarah Chen

Senior Senior Financial Editor

Sarah Chen is a certified financial planner (CFP®) and senior editor at Zogby with over 12 years of experience covering credit cards and rewards programs. She holds a degree in Economics from Columbia University and has been published in The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, and Forbes. Sarah's work focuses on making complex financial products accessible to everyday consumers.

CFP® Certified 12+ Years Experience Columbia University

Important Credit Card Disclaimers

  • Credit card offers that appear on this site are from companies from which Zogby may receive compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site but does not affect our editorial ratings or reviews.
  • APRs, annual fees, reward rates, and bonus offers shown are accurate as of the date of publication and are subject to change. Review the card issuer's terms and conditions for the most current information.
  • Credit card approval is subject to the card issuer's underwriting criteria. Not everyone will qualify for every card. Your credit score, income, and existing debt may affect your eligibility and the terms you receive.
  • Balance transfer offers typically include a balance transfer fee of 3%-5% of the transferred amount. Introductory 0% APR periods are temporary; after expiration, the standard variable APR applies.
  • Rewards, points, and miles earned through credit cards may have varying redemption values depending on how they are redeemed. Refer to the card issuer's rewards program terms for details.

The information provided on this page is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be construed as, financial, legal, tax, or investment advice. Always consult with a qualified professional before making any financial decisions.

Editorial Independence

We make money from some companies on this page. That doesn't change our rankings -- the editorial team scores every product independently, and the business side has no say in what we recommend.

Last Updated
March 7, 2026
Fact-Checked
March 5, 2026