Over the summer, while making several US trips, I managed to score a few credit card awards. These were the easy to achieve kind: spend $500 in three months and get back around $150.
In August, I might have bit off more than I can chew. I went for one of the big mid-tier cards that offer you a bunch of points for $4000 spend in three months. It has no foreign transaction fees, so I can stick a lot of our local transactions on the card. That's no problem.
But despite some lofty goals, I'm finding it hard to spend the money. First, there's a lag between being approved for the card and its arrival abroad. In that time, some spending has to happen just to eat, so that spend doesn't count towards the reward, though the clock had started ticking on the 90 days.
Second, there are few good options for manufactured spend in Germany. Those Visa cards you can load up in the U.S. don't really exist in the same way here. There's no Plastiq, so rent and a bunch of other bills happen directly from our normal bank account.
One of the rules I set for this project was to not spend extraneous money that we otherwise would not have spent. One the one hand, we haven't gone out and bought a bunch of crazy extra stuff. No new computers or cell phones.
The stuff we planned to buy that would have helped us cross the spending threshold keep getting cheaper the longer we plan. For example, we planned to put a bunch of next summer's U.S. trip on the card, but we determined that a trip would be too expensive, so we chucked that. We planned on buying a nice couch, but even with the reward, we find couches too expensive and keep finding acceptable couches at lower price points. We are taking a brief vacation on one of my long weekends, but with low-cost airlines in Europe, it just wasn't that expensive. And we planned on doing some nice-ish things for the apartment, but short of a full kitchen overhaul, we can't stand spending the money.
And some of the more outlandish ideas, such as buying a new iPhone, get snuffed out mentally before they have much gestation time.
On the other hand, we wouldn't have done even this amount of spending without the card, so it's encouraged us to open our wallets more than we otherwise would have. The couch we have is an eyesore, but it's functional. The apartment improvements could have waited. The small trip could have been even smaller.
I've been forced to update how we budget, which adds complication. It's much harder now to get a big picture idea of how well we're managing money since a budgeted item happens this month but the actual paying for it happens next month or later. I've developed some new systems, but what used to be simple is now more complex, and I believe complexity makes overspending more likely.
I keep coming back to one thing: the reward is worth between $600-$1000 depending on how well it's used. But if you don't spend any money at all, then such a reward pales in comparison to the value saved.
I've been going back to some of my favorite sources for financial inspiration, and some of my spending ideas feel more suspect. For example, I thought of front-loading our mobile prepaid amounts for the next year. But now I'm wondering if I even really need a mobile phone. I have some internet services that I use. I could prepay them... or I could cancel them and just keep the money.
I'm not certain if I'll do any of those things, but I'm considering it. So there's a kind of mental battle between my desire to try churning out of curiosity, my default frugal side, my radical frugal side that wants to move into a studio apartment and sell our furniture and use the library's internet, a certain amount of sunk cost fallacy lurking in the background, and my desire for the stuff we're going to buy.
I know an American family here that churns U.S. credit cards successfully, but I have no idea what their budget looks like, and I believe that they have willing helpers in the US who spend on the card on their behalf. I'm not so trusting as to give any of my family my credit card, so that avenue is not open to us.
At the very least, I doubt I'll do this again any time soon no matter how it turns out. It really doesn't appear practical for us.
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