Forum Moderators: phranque
I like Amex, they don't fool around with you and change your account number every 12 months (hint to Wachovia / First Onion).
Amex has it's problems, but they are much less than those offered elsewhere in the long run.
I've been an Amex member for longer than I can remember, for most of that time I never used their card, but now with all the other banks screwing up I like them lots more and are switching to them exclusively :)
Many US banks make it tough for non-residents to get a credit card, unless you get one of the credit/debit cards (you have enough funds in your checking account to cover each and every credit card transaction).
Alaska Airlines / Horizon Air
American Airlines
Cathay Pacific
Continental Airlines
Northwest Airlines
Hawaiian Airlines
Helijet
ERA Aviation
Pen Air
British Airways
Qantas
KLM
Lan Chile
As you can see, they partner with QUITE a few airlines!
You can also use it on AmTrak if you want to go by rail.
We just used ours to fly on NorthWest to Hawaii! If you need any further information, you can post here or sticky email me.
Discover Card, owned by Morgan Stanley, pays a 1% cash return at the end of the year.
American Express offers a wide variety of cards [home3.americanexpress.com] that pay cash rebates or various types of points or other benefits. Although their largest airline partnership is Delta/SkyTeam, you can transfer Membership Rewards points to at least one airline in all the major alliances: Delta/Song, Continental, Aer Lingus, AeroMexico, Air France, Air Jamaica, Alitalia, ANA, Cathay Pacific, El Al, Frontier, Hawaiian, LanChile, Mexicana, Qantas, Southwest, Swiss, and US Airways.
I like AmEx a great deal for their purchase protection, insurance, and other services so I use my basic Gold Card with Membership Rewards for nearly everything.
Diners Club shares with the Big Two (American and United), but it is accepted in fewer places and has a higher annual fee. Depending on the type of card, your transfer ratio may not be as good ($2 of spending per point, vs $1 of spending usually).
When I buy tickets, or when I have to use Visa, I use my Mileage Plus Visa since I almost always fly United or one of its partner airlines.
As you can see, they partner with QUITE a few airlines!That is the program, not the card. But I would definitely agree that you should pick your program first, then find a card that participates in the program. Almost every major US, East Asian, or European airline (except discount carriers) belongs to one of the three major alliances (Star Alliance, OneWorld, or SkyTeam) and on top of that partners with regional airlines (such as Alaska) in smaller markets. There are whole communities of websites that argue about the merits of programs and the cards and other partnerships they offer.