Delta skymiles shopping
Delta SkyMiles
2016.04.02 07:40 bshap000 Delta SkyMiles
Everything about earning and burning DL Skymiles.
2011.09.21 23:52 shake1dde A community to discuss the Delta Skymiles program
2015.01.07 22:08 araaara Burning Miles & Points
A place to discuss anything related to redeeming airline miles & hotel points.
2023.05.31 03:19 munsuro Any idea why this would have happened?
2023.05.31 00:20 raccoons4president Chase Sapphire vs. Amex Gold (Other recommendations welcome)
Current cards: (list cards, limits, opening date) Amazon Prime, 8k limit, ~2017
Southwest, 13k limit, ~2021 (I intend to close this or back off on using-- recommendations welcome on which to do)
Wells Fargo, 6k limit, 2013
FICO Score: e.g. 792 Oldest account age: e.g. 9 years, 11 months Chase 5/24 status: 1/24 Income: Current salary is around ~40k, but starting new job in August, anticipated annual salary to be $90-100k.
Average monthly spend and categories: dining: $308 groceries: $392 gas: $59 travel: $983 (This includes Lyfts + flights) other: $1151 (this is "shopping" according to chase, which includes all amazon purchases and will continue to be put on the 5% amazon card, and some shared/reimbursable expenses that could be moved onto other card).
Open to Business Cards: Potentially. I do not have an LLC but make about ~$20 a year on Etsy selling digital printables.
What's the purpose of your next card?
TLDR: Maximizing rewards between everyday expenses and a mild/moderate amount of travel.
I am thankfully moving in with my (now long distance) significant other, rendering my Southwest card fairly useless. I anticipate my travel to go WAY down-- we have all of our Southwest travel booked through October, and have a few flights remaining to book that I hope to use this new card for. I expect to travel in the future 5-6x per year (most likely a combo of Delta, American). Only a handful of those trips will we need hotels. We are expecting a large international trip to visit his family possibly next year, travel advisories allowing. Lounge access would only be a bonus but I have been "roughing it" for almost two years flying 2-3x a month without it and been doing just fine.
I spend a lot of money on groceries and dining out and anticipate this to increase living with SO. This points me to Amex gold, but I have some reservations since Chase points seem to be an on-the-cent better value, and I am uncertain how smooth the renewal process is for either.
I also am someone who will spend time gaming the system and researching accordingly-- I have been intrigued about the ability to transfer gold points to other rewards programs.
Do you have any cards you've been looking at? Amex Gold, Chase Sapphire (Preferred or Reserve) -- I am okay with the heavier AF if a flight credit is accompanied.
Are you OK with category spending or do you want a general spending card? I think I will get better bang for my buck on category, but open to suggestions!
submitted by
raccoons4president to
CreditCards [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 20:55 seeldoger47 [H] $500 Amazon GCs [W] 85% Western Union/BTC [H] PayPal, Cash App, Crypto, Apple Pay, or Venmo [W] All Your Gift Cards
You can download the WesternUnion app and send the payment from your phone and I will pay the fees.
Desktop Users: Comment on this post and
Click here to start a trade App Users, please include the following in your PM (Remember to comment on this post as well):
- Type of card(s) and amount of each.
- What payment method you accept.
- How you acquired the GC and why you're getting rid of it.
BTC, Paypal1, Apple Pay, Chime, Cashapp, Venmo, and Western Union
I only have Steam as a substitute for cash payments in gift card trades.
Want ↓ | Cash or a Gift Card ↓ | BTC ↓ |
Apple | 60%4 | NA |
Amazon.ca | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.co.uk | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.com | 70% | 55% |
Amazon.de | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.es | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.fr | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.it | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.jp | 30% | 30% |
Arrow Films | 65% | 60% |
Barnes & Noble | 50% | 50% |
Baskin Robbins | 60% | 60% |
Best Buy | 60% | 60% |
BJ's (not BJ's restaurant)4 | 60% | NA |
Bloomingdales | 50% | 50% |
Burger King4 | 60% | NA |
Clothing Shops (Small Boutique) | contact me | contact me |
Dell4 | 60% | NA |
Delta gift cards4 | 65% | NA |
Delta Sky Miles4 | PM me | NA |
Delta Vouchers4 | 65% | NA |
Dicks Sporting Goods 4 | PM me | NA |
Disney Plus | PM me | PM me |
DoorDash | 70%6 | NA |
Dunkin Donuts4 | 60% | NA |
eBay | 70% | 70% |
Fandango4 | 10% | NA |
Five Guys4 | 60% | NA |
Gamestop | 60% | 60% |
Gas Station Cards4 | PM me | NA |
Grub Hub | 70%6 | NA |
Gyft | 70% | 70% |
Half Price Books | 50% | 50% |
HBO4 | 70% | NA |
iTunes4 | 60% | NA |
J crew | 40% | 40% |
JCPenney | 25% | 25% |
Jersey Mike Subs4 | 60% | NA |
KFC4 | 60% | NA |
Khols | 30% | 30% |
Macys | 35% | 35% |
Magazines.com | 40% | 40% |
McDonald's 4 | 60% | NA |
Microsoft6 | 60% | NA |
Moe’s Southwestern Grill4 | 60% | NA |
Nintendo Eshop6 | 70% | NA |
Nordstrom | 50% | 50% |
Panera bread4 | 60% | NA |
PSN6 | 60 | NA |
PSN Plus 12 month4 | NA | NA |
Saks Fifth Avenue | 50% | 50% |
Sears | 50% | 50% |
Sephora | 50% | 50% |
Speedway4 | 80% | NA |
Starbucks | 55% | 55% |
Steam6 | 60% | NA |
Subway 4 | PM me | NA |
Taco Bell | 60% | NA |
Target | 50% | 50% |
Uber6 | 70% | NA |
Urban Outfitters | 50% | 50% |
Vudu4 | 50% | NA |
Walmart | 60% | 60% |
Wendys4 | 60% | NA |
Xbox (gift cards)6 | 60% | NA |
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate (12 month/6 month/3 month/1 month)6 | PM me | NA |
Other Clothing Stores, Gas Stations, Grocery Stores, Restaurant, & Fast Food gift cards | PM me | |
1 When paying via PayPal, I can only send payments via Goods and Services, thus you will be charged a fee. If you'd rather not face this fee there are plenty of alternatives. 2 Larger denominated gift cards preferred. 3 PayPal is the only payment option. 4 I can't send less than $10 in crypto per Coinbase's rules.
What I don’t buy:
- Amazon.au
- Bass Pro Shop
- buffalo wild wing
- Canadian tire
- Cold Stone
- Dairy Queen
- Fanatics
- Google Play
- Hilton Honors
- Hot Topic
- iTunes from anywhere but the US
- Krispy Kreme
- old navy/gap/banana republic
- Patxi's pizza
- PSN Canada or UK
- publix
- Raceway
- Scheels
- Shell Gas Stations
- Spotify
- Tractor supply
- Xbox Canada or UK
- Xbox live gold
Any fees are built into the price.
Selling
I have:
$500 in Amazon (can be broken up) and am selling at
- 85%: WesternUnion
- 85%: btc
- 90%: Apple Pay or Chime
Here are my GCX Rep profiles with 932 trades worth more than $60,000:
Important: before you send your codes please make sure your account is secure (if your password is twelve characters or less it's best to assume your account has already been compromised; your password should be eight randomly selected words, see 1 and 2). Scams where compromised accounts are used to leverage reputation to scam an unsuspecting user, used to steal codes during the middle of the trade, and steal unused gift cards the victim was saving for later are increasingly commonplace. If you have any concerns as to your account's security, please reset your password now and force logout of all sessions. Thanks
submitted by
seeldoger47 to
giftcardexchange [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 20:55 seeldoger47 [H] $500 Amazon [W] 85% Western Union/BTC [H] PayPal, Cash App, Crypto, Chime, Apple Pay, or Venmo [W] Apple, Amazon (CA, Com, DE, ES, FR, IT, UK), B&N, Dunkin, eBay, Grub Hub, Gyft, iTunes, JCPenney, Microsoft, PSN, Steam, Target, Uber, Walmart, Xbox + more
You can download the WesternUnion app and send the payment from your phone and I will pay the fees.
Desktop Users: Comment on this post and
Click here to start a trade App Users, please include the following in your PM (Remember to comment on this post as well):
- Type of card(s) and amount of each.
- What payment method you accept.
- How you acquired the GC and why you're getting rid of it.
BTC, Paypal1, Apple Pay, Chime, Cashapp, Venmo, and Western Union
I only have Steam as a substitute for cash payments in gift card trades.
Want ↓ | Cash or a Gift Card ↓ | BTC ↓ |
Apple | 60%4 | NA |
Amazon.ca | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.co.uk | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.com | 70% | 55% |
Amazon.de | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.es | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.fr | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.it | 50% | 50% |
Amazon.jp | 30% | 30% |
Arrow Films | 65% | 60% |
Barnes & Noble | 50% | 50% |
Baskin Robbins | 60% | 60% |
Best Buy | 60% | 60% |
BJ's (not BJ's restaurant)4 | 60% | NA |
Bloomingdales | 50% | 50% |
Burger King4 | 60% | NA |
Clothing Shops (Small Boutique) | contact me | contact me |
Dell4 | 60% | NA |
Delta gift cards4 | 65% | NA |
Delta Sky Miles4 | PM me | NA |
Delta Vouchers4 | 65% | NA |
Dicks Sporting Goods 4 | PM me | NA |
Disney Plus | PM me | PM me |
DoorDash | 70%6 | NA |
Dunkin Donuts4 | 60% | NA |
eBay | 70% | 70% |
Fandango4 | 10% | NA |
Five Guys4 | 60% | NA |
Gamestop | 60% | 60% |
Gas Station Cards4 | PM me | NA |
Grub Hub | 70%6 | NA |
Gyft | 70% | 70% |
Half Price Books | 50% | 50% |
HBO4 | 70% | NA |
iTunes4 | 60% | NA |
J crew | 40% | 40% |
JCPenney | 25% | 25% |
Jersey Mike Subs4 | 60% | NA |
KFC4 | 60% | NA |
Khols | 30% | 30% |
Macys | 35% | 35% |
Magazines.com | 40% | 40% |
McDonald's 4 | 60% | NA |
Microsoft6 | 60% | NA |
Moe’s Southwestern Grill4 | 60% | NA |
Nintendo Eshop6 | 70% | NA |
Nordstrom | 50% | 50% |
Panera bread4 | 60% | NA |
PSN6 | 60 | NA |
PSN Plus 12 month4 | NA | NA |
Saks Fifth Avenue | 50% | 50% |
Sears | 50% | 50% |
Sephora | 50% | 50% |
Speedway4 | 80% | NA |
Starbucks | 55% | 55% |
Steam6 | 60% | NA |
Subway 4 | PM me | NA |
Taco Bell | 60% | NA |
Target | 50% | 50% |
Uber6 | 70% | NA |
Urban Outfitters | 50% | 50% |
Vudu4 | 50% | NA |
Walmart | 60% | 60% |
Wendys4 | 60% | NA |
Xbox (gift cards)6 | 60% | NA |
Xbox Game Pass Ultimate (12 month/6 month/3 month/1 month)6 | PM me | NA |
Other Clothing Stores, Gas Stations, Grocery Stores, Restaurant, & Fast Food gift cards | PM me | |
1 When paying via PayPal, I can only send payments via Goods and Services, thus you will be charged a fee. If you'd rather not face this fee there are plenty of alternatives. 2 Larger denominated gift cards preferred. 3 PayPal is the only payment option. 4 I can't send less than $10 in crypto per Coinbase's rules.
What I don’t buy:
- Amazon.au
- Bass Pro Shop
- buffalo wild wing
- Canadian tire
- Cold Stone
- Dairy Queen
- Fanatics
- Google Play
- Hilton Honors
- Hot Topic
- iTunes from anywhere but the US
- Krispy Kreme
- old navy/gap/banana republic
- Patxi's pizza
- PSN Canada or UK
- publix
- Raceway
- Scheels
- Shell Gas Stations
- Spotify
- Tractor supply
- Xbox Canada or UK
- Xbox live gold
Any fees are built into the price.
Selling
I have:
$500 in Amazon (can be broken up) and am selling at
- 85%: WesternUnion
- 85%: btc
- 90%: Apple Pay or Chime
Here are my GCX Rep profiles with 932 trades worth more than $60,000:
Important: before you send your codes please make sure your account is secure (if your password is twelve characters or less it's best to assume your account has already been compromised; your password should be eight randomly selected words, see 1 and 2). Scams where compromised accounts are used to leverage reputation to scam an unsuspecting user, used to steal codes during the middle of the trade, and steal unused gift cards the victim was saving for later are increasingly commonplace. If you have any concerns as to your account's security, please reset your password now and force logout of all sessions. Thanks
submitted by
seeldoger47 to
GCTrading [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 20:51 onion2072 Any frequent flyers out of OAK?
I live here but travel about 40 round trips per year out of SFO. I’m currently a united 1k but considering a move to Delta so I can fly out of OAK. It would be more convenient to get to the airport and also hopefully maybe get more upgrades?? Downside is 0 direct flights and also the skymiles being worth less compared to united miles. Would love to hear others experience who fly a lot. Thanks in advance!
submitted by
onion2072 to
oakland [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 20:28 NewYearsD A Detailed Post-Trip Report 2 Weeks in Japan (Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka) 28/M/US
I spent 2 weeks traveling through Japan - Tokyo, Osaka,
Kyoto and I'm writing this for those who are thinking about visiting. To preface, I did travel with a friend but spent a lot of time on my own. I'll cover as much as possible.
Pre-Trip I booked a flight with American Airlines / Delta Airlines for $590 round-trip three months before departing.
I flew out of Los Angeles to Tokyo (Haneda). The trip started on February 9 and ended on February 20. I booked my accommodation before arriving in Japan. I used Hostelworld and Agoda. More about the hostels and hotels I booked are below.
COVID Screening and Visa information for US Citizens only During the time I visited, Japan still required visitors to be fully vaccinated and have a pre-screening for arrival. First I had to do a pre-screening for American Airlines on VeriFly (please do this a day before checking in at the airport if so). Then, save yourself time and use Visit Japan Web (
http://vjw-lp.digital.go.jp/en/) and do the pre-screening requirements a couple of days before departure.
When you land in Tokyo, immediately after deplaning, swaths of airport personnel ask if you have the screener filled out and ready to go. If you don’t, they put you to the side and ask you to fill it out using the airport’s wifi. It takes time and you still have to go through customs after.
Visas for US citizens is a free, 3-month visa if I recall correctly. Bring your COVID vaccination card just in case they ask for it.
Tech/Phone I took my iPhone 14 Pro (unlocked) and connected buying Ubigi 10gb data plan. Do this before flying to Japan. When you land, you can activate your data plan directly on your phone. I didn’t get pocket wifi as the Ubigi worked perfectly.
Download the Ubigi app. They give instructions but please follow them.
Apps that I used:
Google Maps: you can download offline maps.
Google Translate: Use this everywhere you go. You can use the camera feature and it can translate Japanese to English really great. It saved me a lot of hassle when ordering at restaurants.
Currency Converter
You might want to download a VPN if you want to use Netflix and such. Express VPN is one I’d recommend.
Money/Currency I took my Charles Schwab debit card and a backup Chase credit card/Chase debit card. Surprisingly, a lot of stores in Japan are cash-heavy; especially small shops and restaurants. My budget for the trip was $2000 with flights included.
Hostels and hotels were around $20-35 USD. Food prices were about $7-$20 a meal. It can get really expensive if you eat at fine dining restaurants. That being said, I stuck to eating mostly at hole-in-the-wall establishments where no English was spoken. Believe me when I say that the best ramen I ever had was only $7 USD. More on what restaurants I recommend are down below. If you really want to save money, don’t buy alcohol.
A solid budget for me was $60-$80 per day without lodging expenses. Some days, I only spent $40 which was all food (I spare no expense for food), then some days I went over because I bought cool souvenirs for myself and some excursions were pricey. You can visit Japan for less but I didn’t want to money pinch myself because I was only there for 2 weeks.
Transportation I love Japan for this reason. So here’s my take: If you are visiting Japan for exactly 14 days; get the JR Pass on Klook. You buy this a month before departing your home country. For me, Klook delivered it about a week after I bought it over Mail. You could buy either a 7, 14, or 21-day JR pass so I would recommend planning a trip that matches these exact number of days to get the most out of your money.
Now imagine you’re in Japan. It is your first day officially visiting…go to a JR Pass office at any major train station and ask them to redeem your pass. They will ask for the paper ticket that arrived in the mail to your home and they will ask for your passport. After they verify that it is you, they will give you a small ticket which will be your JR pass. DO NOT LOSE THIS! I believe they will not replace it. On how to use it,
check out this video.
Now to navigate, I used a combination of Google Maps and Apple Maps to get around. Use whichever one is more comfortable for you. These 2 apps are really exceptional at mapping out the best routes and the times trains depart. Note: the JR Pass only works for JR rail lines! Tokyo/Kyoto/Osaka all have their own subways and train lines with their own payment system. More on this…
So the best way to get around the city is using a Suica card. These are sold virtually at any train station. If you can't find it, ask a train station attendant and say “Suica?”. They point you in the right direction.
A Suica card can be refilled unlimited times and can be used for any rail lines (JR included, but not for Bullet Trains). It is used by tapping at the turnstiles to enter the rails and at any vending machine in Japan! Also at arcades! It is a total mindblower haha Also in Tokyo, some hostels or hotels have a 3-day subway pass for cheap.
Bullet Trains - You can use the Shinkansen bullet trains if you have the JR Pass. Make an important note: You can only ride the Hikari or Sakura trains with your JR Pass. The Nozomi and Mizuho are reserved seating and cost extra because they have fewer stops. If they catch you using these rail lines, they will ask you to get off the next stop or worse, fine you and report you. To see Mount Fuji from Tokyo to Kyoto/Osaka, sit on the right side of the train (right side of the direction it is going). Use Google Maps and Apple Maps to pinpoint when to look out the window.
Food I usually ate sandwiches and pastries from 7-Eleven in the morning or whenever I needed to pack a lunch. It was a great way to save cash and the food was delicious. High-quality foods and snacks.
As I said earlier, I really spare no expense for good, big meals. I save money at 7-Eleven so I can go all out for lunch and dinner. My go-to meal was usually ramen because it was so damn good. I tried a lot of foods. I’ll try and remember which ones I ate: - Ramen - Okonomiyaki - Unagi - Katsu Curry - Taiyaki - Tempura - Japanese cheesecake - Macha ice cream - Macha waffles - Onigiri - And a lot of different ice creams, confectionary snacks - McDonald’s - please try lol they have interesting combinations
Pack List I used a 40-liter Osprey backpack.
1 scarf
1 beanie
2 cotton t-shirts
2 thermal polyester long-sleeve shirts (Odor resistant)
2 pairs of joggers
1 pair of Nike thermal leggings
8 pairs of Nike Dri-Fit boxers (lost 1)
4 pairs of ankle socks
3 pairs of Darn Tough Merino wool blend socks (Highly recommend, Odor resistant)
1 parka
1 pair of Adidas Ultraboost shoes
1 Hershel toiletries bag
2 Forge cable combination locks
External battery pack (13000 mAh)
Bose QC-25 noise-canceling headphones
Over the course of the trip, I bought a much-needed 30L Patagonia day backpack
I don’t sweat heavily so I re-wore my shirts, the Merino wool blend socks, and joggers. I did my laundry maybe once or twice at the hostels. It was freezing at the time I went, so I usually layered up when temperatures were lower than usual.
Safety I am a 6'1" (1.85 m) male with a light brown complexion. I felt safe most of my time there. I think it was the safest country I have ever been to. Some Japanese people are known to be racist but I didn’t experience it. So I wouldn’t worry about it.
Itinerary/Activities Feb 9 Day 1 Tokyo Feb 10 Day 2 Tokyo Feb 11 Day 3 Tokyo (Day Trip to Odiaba/Yokohama) Feb 12 Day 4 Osaka Feb 13 Day 5 Osaka (Day Trip to Hime-ji Castle/Kobe) Feb 14 Day 6 Osaka (Day Trip to Nara) Feb 15 Day 7 Kyoto Feb 16 Day 8 Kyoto Feb 17 Day 9 Kyoto Feb 18 Day 10 Tokyo Feb 19 Day 11 Tokyo Feb 20 Day 12 Tokyo (Fly Out)
I will put a star (*) next to anything that I highly recommend! 2 stars are for more emphasis! I will list the accommodation first, then activities, and then bars/restaurants.
Tokyo - 3 Nights (Asakusa + Akihabara + Odaiba + Yokohama) Lodging: Sakura Hostel Asakusa
Activities: *
Tokyo National Museum, *Senso-ji Temple, Kaminarimon Gate, Nakamise-dori Street, *Sengaku-ji Temple, Hirose Entertainment Yard arcade, Animate Akihabara, **Mandarake Complex Akihabara, Tsukiji Outer Fish Market, TeamLabs Odaiba, Gundam Yokohama, NISMO Museum Yokohama, Nissan Headquarters Yokohama
Restaurants/Bars:
Fuji Ramen Asakusa, Asakusa Unana, *Naruto Taiyaki, *Koyangi Asakusa, *Ouzakura Ramen Yokohama
Took a Shinkansen bullet train from Tokyo to Osaka
Osaka - 3 Nights (Kobe + Nara) Lodging: Backstage Osaka Hostel
Activities: *
Hime-ji Castle, *Kaiyukan Aquarium, Dontonbori, Shinsekai, Round 1 Stadium (arcade), *Nunobiki Waterfall Kobe, *Todai-ji Temple, *Nara Park, Kasuga Taisha Temple, Gilco Sign
Restaurants/Bars: *Wakakusa Curry Nara, *Nakatanidou Nara, *cafe CROCO Nara, Fanny Mae Bar Osaka, Rikuro’s Namba Main Branch, PC and Retro Bar Space Station, Bible Club Bar Osaka, Untitled karaoke bar next to Rock Bar Cherry Bomb lol, Takoyaki Wanaka Sennichimae Osaka, Sushi Dokoro Kuromonsuehiro Osaka, *Dotombori Ichiaki Osaka, *Hamamoto Coffee Himeji, Tairku Ramen Kobe
Took a Shinkansen bullet train from Osaka to Kyoto
Kyoto - 3 Nights (Day Trip to Uji) Lodging: **Gojo Guesthouse
Activities:
Otagi Nembutsu-ji Temple, Adashino Mayumura (closed when I arrived early), Arashiyama Bamboo Grove, *Tenryu-ji Temple, Togetsukyo Bridge, *Nishiki Market, *pocoapoco Record Store, Super Milk Record Store, *Fushimi Inari Taisha Temple Complex, *
Byodo-In Temple Restaurants/Bars: *comorebi Ramen House,
茶室 tea room Uji, *Gion Duck Noodles, 自家製麺 うどん 讃式
Took a Shinkansen bullet train from Kyoto to Tokyo - Saw a glimpse of Mount Fuji :’)
Tokyo - 2 Nights (Shinjuku + Shibuya + Akihabara) Lodging: **Capsule Hotel Anshin Oyado Shinjuku Station (Males Only)
Activities: Tower Records Shinjuku, Disk Union Shinjuku, Mandarake Complex Shibuya, Nakano Broadway,
Tokyo Dome for Red Hot Chili Peppers concert, *Shibuya Sky at Night, Tokyu Hands Shop
Restaurants/Bars: Ramen Kaijin, Shakey’s, McDonald’s, Ichiran Nakano
Tips, Advice, and Bonus Stuff! - Goes without saying but please respect the local customs.
- Please learn how to say “Thank You” in Japanese! Just learning and using “Arigato” anywhere you go will make you seem like you care and respect everyone. Nothing was more embarrassing than watching an American say “thank you” to a Japanese person.
- Plan to do the major tourist attractions early in the morning. You will get nice pictures without any tourists and you’ll sometimes get the whole temple complex to yourself. The staff will also be more friendly and willing to chat with you. I usually aim to be at temples around 7:00 when they open.
- Use Google Translate for everything! You can have full conversations with friendly Japanese people when using the conversation feature on the app! Use the camera feature to translate Kanji at restaurants that do not offer an English menu.
- Get a Ubigi data plan, I bought 10GB and it had good service anywhere I went. Get more GB if you plan on staying longer.
- I ate at 7-Eleven most of the time when I was too lazy or tired to go out. The 7-Elevens here in Japan are nothing like the ones in the US. Expect to find high-quality sandwiches, Onigiri, and more Japanese snacks.
- Shop at supermarkets near the end of the day (1 hour before closing) and they usually mark down prepped meals half-off or at a discounted price! If you really on a budget, this can help you to save a ton of money and still get a taste of the local cuisine.
- If you need to buy random stuff like clothes, bags, or toiletries; go shop at any Don Quijote or Tokyu Hands department store. They have other shops too that are great to find cool stuff.
- Use Google Translate to translate English to Kanji (Japanese) and use Kanji to find restaurants that are hidden because they don’t use English words. For example, if you want to find the best ramen place, search “拉麺” and you’ll find hidden gems with 5-star reviews!
- The best souvenir I brought back myself was a Goshuincho. These are “honorable stamp/seal book” used by people visiting shrines or temples. If you want more info, google this! I highly recommend doing this!
If you have any questions, comment below or send a DM. Peace!
submitted by
NewYearsD to
solotravel [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 19:43 cgullo13 [WTS] Geissele, BCM, Troy, streamlight uppers/handguards/ accessories
Timestamp:
https://imgur.com/a/meomD8G
New here!! looking to sell various things I have laying around the shop in cases collecting dust all prices are Best offer as I want these gone ASAP - Troy 10.5" SOCC rail mounted once and removed comes with all mounting hardware except barrel nut (takes standard Ar barrel nut that sits under Delta ring) -$175 OBO - Troy 11" Alpha Batterail same situation as above - $175 OBO - Streamlight TLR 2s some use on this - $175 OBO - Geissele Mk14 10.5" on Aero upper w/ Rosco barrel and Geissele Gas block, never fired (No BCG, CH or muzzle device) - $475 OBO - BCM KMR Alpha 10.5" upper (random upper and 10.5" barrel only a few hundred rounds through it, No BCG, CH or muzzle device)- $350 OBO - BCM KMR Alpha 16" Upper, Stock BCM upper only shot a handful of times. comes with the comp as shown BFH barrel etc (No BCG, or CH) - $600 OBO
submitted by
cgullo13 to
GunAccessoriesForSale [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 18:53 onion2072 Mileage Plus vs. SkyMiles
With the recent mileage plus devaluation I’ve seen people say it brings the program to be more on par with sky miles. But when I search award flights on both they still seem far apart. For example searching SFO to Tokyo, you can find business easily for 200k United miles but with delta it’s like 900k. Are skymiles easier to earn or something or are united miles just vastly more valuable?
submitted by
onion2072 to
awardtravel [link] [comments]
2023.05.30 18:14 Luxniom 10 Days / 11 Nights Tokyo Trip Report (5/5 to 5/15) - Asakusa to Kyoto to Shinjuku/Shibuya
Original itinerary here for reference. We planned this trip primarily with Halal food in mind, along with regular sight-seeing locations + shopping for Switch games, clothes, and souvenirs Overall notes / Takeaways * I rate our trip a 9/10. It was a great time with the authentic halal Japanese food, seeing all the cool sights & places, and experiencing a very nice environment + culture.
- The amount of researching / pre-planning can be a double-edged sword. Things that were unexpected were some of the best experiences. At the same time, if we tightened our itinerary and squared away some details better: we could have saved some cash, lessened on-the-spot deliberations / route planning; and perhaps, squeezed a few more places to visit.
- This is where the 1 point ding comes in, especially not realizing until after-the-fact that the 14 day JR Pass was not cost efficient for us, especially with our hotel locations utilizing local lines + purchasing two separate pieces of luggage whereas instead, we should have just brought them from home. (If we had our luggage situation better planned, we would have shopped a bit differently.) This 1 point ding is not a deal breaker at all, and we’re still super happy with the trip.
- For our trip with the Halal dietary restriction, it would have been helpful to pickup a sim card for a Japanese phone # to make some reservations ourselves and taxi’ing around in Kyoto when we got tired of walking around. At the end of some of the shopping trips, the 10-15 minute walk back to the hotels were very tiring, and the cost estimates on Google didn’t seem too expensive for short trips.
First part of the trip - East side of Tokyo: Asakusa FRI 5/5 Arrival HND arrival was around 2pm, and we got to the hotel around 6:30pm. From there: We were able to start off our trip with Ramen for dinner @ Ayam-ya Halal Ramen Tokyo –> Senjo-jii and Nakamise Street at night (which was not crowded at all at night)
- Airport sidenotes: If you do the JapanWeb form online, make sure to complete it all the way until you get the QR code. I had started the day prior, but didn’t realized I left it incomplete. So we had to step out of line to manually hand-write. Also, we didn’t realize there’s two sets of lines / forms: the first for customs entry and second for customs declarations.
- SAT May 6: Edo Castle Ruins –> Tokyo Station (Ghibli, JUMP, Pokemon stores which were all super packed with long lines) –> (walked to Ginza and attempted late lunch at Ginza Tendon Itsuki, but line was too long and we went to MOS burger instead) → Tokyo Skytree Mall (first Takoyaki for my wife here! Some souvenir shopping here) –> Akihabara at night for videogame/anime trinket shopping → Antep Kebab Akihabara for dinner
- Sun May 7: Ueno Park –> Akihabara again –> Sushi lunch @ Sushiken Asakusa –> (skip daytime Senso-jii due to rain, and instead return to hotel) –> Yakiniku @ Wagyu Yakiniku Panga –> Rescue Cat Cafe Asakusa Nekoen
- Mon May 8: Early AM laundry @ hotel (only did this once), chill (play some Switch games) & Depart hotel (decided against baggage transport this time) –> Tokyo Station and some Ekiben from Ekibenya Matsuri –> Shinkansen
Notable Highlights Part 1:
- Ueno Park was our favorite part from this portion of the trip - even though it was raining, there were so many unexpected sights! We thought Edo Castle Ruins would be closer to like how Ueno Park was.
- Getting lucky at the halal yakiniku place for dinner without a reservation! Being there at open and the rain may have helped.
Notable Mid-light:
- Going to Akibahara twice since the first time where second trip ended up mostly window shopping. The first night, I tried using Google Translate photos on the rows of Switch videogames. This was not efficient, and after the first night, learned it was better to physically and manually go through each game and ask the cashiers if they had specific games with photos/screenshots instead.
- We went to different stores each day, and it was really only the first night where we actually bought stuff. I did not find collector Switch steelbooks which I was specifically keeping an eye out for. We didn’t find much luck anime trinkets we wanted here, and instead found those at the next part of our trip.
- Notable Low-light: Even though the mall was fun for shopping and there was a festival ongoing, we were unable to reserve actual Tokyo Skytree Towers tickets. This stung a bit since this was after missing lunch at our original place. IIRC, I got stuck on the mobile webpage where it asked for a phone # that needed to be a JP #...although checking now, it doesn’t seem to ask for it.
Second part of the trip: Kyoto *
Mon May 8 continued: Hotel arrival around 4pm –> Downtown Kyoto shopping (Surugaya) and clothes @ Coco → 7/11 dinner (taxi here would have been really helpful to go to once of the local restaurants, as I started getting foot pains)
- Tues May 9: Gion & Nanzaka, light street food for lunch, including better street Takoyaki –>(skip Philosopher's Path and Central Kyoto area) –> went straight to Kinkakuji –> Downtown Kyoto (luggage, insole, not much luck at more games/anime trinkets at this time) –> South Asian @ MABRUR for early dinner –> called it an early afternoon due to fatigue/foot pain (finally installed the insoles this night with borrowed scissors from front desk)
- Wed May 10: Bus to Arashiyama –> Bamboo Forest –> (Missed the Sagano train, did not appear open) –> chill at the Katsura riverside instead → Japanese curry @ Yosiya –> Monkey Forest Hike –> (skip boat ride due to closure / high water levels) –> Fushimi Inari –> chill at Kamo River on our return to hotel –> called it an early afternoon with private onsen reservation waiting for us at hotel
- Thurs May 11: chill (play more switch games) and pack in the AM (we used luggage transfer this time) → Ramen @ Ayam Ya Karasuma Kyoto prior to Kyoto departure (which turned out to be her favorite meal from this whole trip) –> Back to Shinkansen
Notable Highlights Part 2: * Experiencing all the nature on WED was our favorite part of this portion, especially the rivers! We did not realize the “20 minute walk” would end up a 45 minute hike as we were not prepared, but it was a very fun going up and taking breaks at all the stops.
- We did not expect downtown Kyoto to be as lively and cool at night as we saw it, since we mostly researched the traditional parts of this city beforehand; and we did not expect Kyoto to be where we’d get a lot of our shopping done. The Surugaya here had the most Switch games I purchased at best prices (and the anime bins for trinkets as souvenirs, my wife had a lot of fun here); Gion had a lot of other souvenirs; and downtown had a lot of clothes.
- Notable Low-light*: fatigue and foot pain at the end of those days when we did a lot of shopping, especially traveling between different stores (not all of which didn’t have what we were looking for, like the extra Bookoffs and Lashingbangs we visited). Some benches really would have helped. We did buy Dr. Schwartz insoles and cooling pads for our feets at the pharmacy stores here, which helped with some exhaustion, but not all.
Last part of the trip: Shibuya/Shinjuku *
Thurs May 11 continued: Reach Shibuya @ 6:30pm → Shibuya Scramble once –> Walk to Yakiniku @ GYUMON –> back to Shibuya Scramble and see Hachiko + Tower Record –> grab Chestnuts –> Starbucks at night with upper view of Shibuya crossing
- Fri May 12: Diet Building Observatory (no luck with viewing Mt. Fuji due to clouds, even on the Shinkansen rides) –> Ramen @ Honolu Shinjukugyoenmae –> Friday Congregational Prayer @ Tokyo Camii Center –> Harajuku & Takeshita Street (heavy snack with fried cheese stick + cotton candy) → back to Shibuya Crossing → Shibuya Mega Don Quijote (lots of shopping here) –> (missed the Pokemon Center) → picked up some takehome kebab from near Shibuya crossing → back to the hotel early afternoon/night due to rain and bags full of purchases
- SAT May 13: Shinjuku Bookoff (notable for large inventory, but not too cheap compared to Surugaya Kyoto) –> Omoide Ally short walk –> Godzilla @ Toho –> Kabukicho short walk (was looking for the large entrance side, but did not find) –> Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden (just the north part, mainly the Botanical Garden) –> Ramen @ Honolu Shinjukugyoenmae –> Nakano Broadway –> Golden Gai (was super crowded, left halfway) –> Uniqlo –> Shinjuku Don Quijote (mainly for luggage scale that we missed) –> Surugaya –> Subway for dinner since we were not able to get in Zen restaurant for vegetarian or seafood okonomiyaki
- Sun May 14: Tokyo Tower (one of the only reservations we made) –> Tsujiki Outer Market for light lunch (we ate only at places with small/no lines, everywhere else was packed) –> Odaiba & Diver City Mall + Gundam Base + Gundam Unicorn –> skip lunch for some crepes and banana smoothie, even though there were halal meat places around → (skip teamLabs that we didn’t end up reserving for) → Surugaya Shinjuku (last shot at games/trinkets) –> last Ramen @ Honolu Shinjukugyoenmae –> sad walk back to hotel, but also relief knowing that we’ll be done with all the walking soon.
- Mon May 15: finish packing –> taxi to airport (through Booking.com where we made hotel bookings) –> kebab lunch @ Mrs. Istanbul (had to utilize bus transfer between terminals after luggage dropoff) → final souvenir snack shopping inside airport → Depart back home to LAX!
Notable Highlights Part 3:
- The Ramen with the Fried Chicken @ Honolu Shinjukugyoenmae was my favorite meal, especially coming back to it so many times!
- Friday congregational prayer at Tokyo Camii Center: the sermon was done in 4 different languages (Arabic first, then Japanese, then Melay I think, then English) - that impressed me along with its architecture. It was such a peaceful and familiar experience in a new environment. They gave out some food after (rice+natto I believe plus sesame ball sweets I believe), although we passed since we were still full.
- Shibuya Scramble was always fun to walk across! Busiest crosswalk in the world!
- Tower Tokyo tour was the nicest tower experience that I’ve had (they served us Lemonade!) and my wife got to take a photo with the Tokyo Tower Mascot, Noppon.
- Mega Don Quijote at Shibuya to finish up the bulk of our shopping, especially on souvenirs! Especially picking up Zelda Tears of Kingdom at release day!
- Gundam Base & live Gundan Unicorn transformation @ Odaiba Diver City! My wife went into it mostly blind, and was very impressed.
Noteable Mid-light: Harajuka and Takeshita street were cool to window browse, but we didn’t find anything we actually wanted to purchase here. It made me realize, like our second time at Akihabara, that window shopping isn’t as fun as actual shopping. -Aside from the Gundam @ Odaiba, we didn’t get too excited about anything else here. If we visited here first / sooner, we may have had a better time (along with keeping an eye out for more Gundam merch earlier throughout the trip). There was a nearby amusement center that was on our original plan to visit too. But at this point, I think we ran out of gas.
Notable Low-light: * The last hotel for me, especially with its location being furthest out from nearest station and not being as nice as the first two hotel.
- The Subway sandwiches (shrimp and tuna respectively) were pretty sad on SAT, although the potato fries they gave were okay (we forgot to ask for ketchup). There was another halal yakiniku place nearby that we stopped by in front of, but decided against it as we wanted something quicker / more casual.
- Though not part of the actual trip, on upon LAX arrival: the lack of cleanliness, customer service and organization were immediately noticeable, which reflected on how nice Tokyo & Kyoto were!
Other notes - Biggest shoutout to my wife for being with me and her patience, especially while Switch game hunting and being chaotic while planning!
- Hotels: all our hotels were listed as 3 star hotels. We learned that every minute walk closer to the nearest station(s) really makes a difference – i.e. a 5 min walk back to the hotel wasn’t as bad as a 7-8 minute walk, and 10-12 minute walks back where the worst. We did keep an eye on square footage for the rooms (wanted to avoid less than 150 feet² for 2 people). We averaged around $95 USD per night.
- Henna Tokyo Hotel - Asakusa was a very nice hotel, especially with the animated front desk and great first time with bidets and warm toilet seats which the other hotels did not have. 183 feet² which felt small but sufficient.
- Second hotel - Kyomachiya Ryokan Sakura Urushitei in Kyoto - was a bit further from local bus points, but this was also a very nice hotel, especially as a Ryokan with great customer service and hidden shelve compartments in the room. We also did not expect a 2nd floor for the private garden view, which was also very nice. 156 feet² would have been small by itself, but pretty sure this does not account for the 2nd floor.
- Our last hotel, Cloud Himalaya felt like a re-designed local apartment, so it didn’t feel as nice, but it was the most spacious @ 291 feet². It was the furthest away from the local stops/stations. It was a low-light for me, especially compared to the first two hotels. My wife thought it was okay though: she thought it was comfy and the space inside the room made up for it.
- -Local Transportation: We only got on the wrong train once, and it was on our first night when leaving HND airport. For the rest of the trip, we didn’t have much issues. The learning curve for us was short to navigate the trains with GoogleMap, by looking at train departure times on our phone directions and platform # to match info listed on the electronic train station boards that have or switch into English.
- Even if we took an extra min or two to verify the train/bus to take, and we missed a train that was right in front of us, the trains were frequent enough such that it wasn’t a long delay – usually 5-8 mins at most. Having very little reservations in our itinerary helped in this aspect.
- The GoogleMaps LIVE view on directions was a useful feature in finding bus stops, especially in Kyoto and Shibuya/Shinjuku.
- Phone Plan: We decided against one Ubigi and one Airalo data plan and just got two Ubigi data plans. Overall, we used only 4-5 GBs each out of the 10 GBs available. Ubigi worked well throughout the 10 days. As noted earlier, having a JP phone # would have been helpful.
- Flights: standard flight experience with Delta - around $750 USD roundtrip for each of us. The lack of space didn’t bother us too much except when fumbling around with the meal trays. We requested special accommodations for Halal food on the HND inbound flight, and they provided vegan food which we didn’t enjoy that much (i.e. PICKLE SANDWICH!).
- On the return flight to LAX, we did not put in any special accommodations and had a better time with their regular vegetarian food (although the pasta salad was very creamy and the Hagan Dazs they gave were slightly melted).
- Language: We were able to get away with just using from sumimasen and arigato for the most part, and used English/non-verbal language most of the trip otherwise.
*more review/input on food commented in original plan
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2023.05.30 15:44 RaplhKramden Using Delta Skymiles to book Air France flight?
I'm flying later this year from Paris to Tel Aviv and had enough Skymiles to reserve a t ticket on Air France for 50k miles + $130 via the Delta web site.
However I just found out that the identical flights require only 30k miles if booked through Air France. I have a Flying Blue account on AF but with zero miles.
Some searching indicated that it was supposedly possible to reserve a flight on a Skyteam partner such as AF using the partner's award redemption level, but I haven't found out how to actually do it.
Is this something that used to be possible but was recently taken away? Or is it still possible and if so how do you actually do it?
I'm still within the 24 hour cancellation period so I could cancel the Delta reservation and then make a reservation with AF, if this is doable.
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2023.05.30 13:43 liftoffcbd The Rise of Delta 8 THC Gummies: Exploring the Benefits and Legality
The popularity of
Delta 8 THC gummies has surged in recent times, intriguing many individuals seeking alternative ways to experience the benefits of cannabis. These gummies contain Delta 8 tetrahydrocannabinol, a compound derived from hemp plants that offers a unique psychoactive experience.
One of the key reasons behind the rise of Delta 8 THC gummies is their potential health benefits. Users report experiencing a milder, more manageable high compared to Delta 9 THC, making it appealing to those who desire a more relaxed and less intense experience. Additionally, Delta 8 THC gummies have been praised for their potential to alleviate anxiety, pain, and nausea.
However, it is important to consider the legality of these products. While Delta 8 THC is derived from hemp, which was legalized at the federal level, some states have imposed restrictions or outright bans on its sale and consumption. It's crucial to research and understand the laws in your specific location before purchasing or using Delta 8 THC gummies.
As the popularity of
Delta 8 THC gummies continues to rise, it is essential to stay informed about both their potential benefits and the legal landscape surrounding them.
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2023.05.30 13:23 Sinaguelas Baguhan lang sa pag build ng PC: need ng advice sa components
First time ko mag build ng pc. May pc ako now na medyo may katagalan na and pinabuild ko lang siya last time. So I decided na mag upgrade. Wala akong masyadong knowledge sa pag build ng pc so hindi ko sure kung compatible ba yung parts na napili ko. Need ko sana ng advice sa pwede kong baguhin or suggestions. Anything! Reco rin sana kayo ng mga shops na pwede pagbilhan ng parts and pwede ipa-build sa kanila yung pc coz baguhan lang din me.
Cpu: AMD Ryzen 7 5700X
Gpu: 8G Asus RTX 3060 Dual OC White
Motherboard: Asus ROG Strix B550-A
Ram: 16gb (dual) Ddr4 3200 Tforce Delta RGB White
Ssd: 1tb Kingston NV2 SSD NVMe Gen4
Cooler: NZXT Kraken X53 RGB White 240mm AIO LC Cooler
Psu: Cooler Master CM 750watts, PSU, MWE V2, Bronze
Fans: NZXT F120 RGB Duo, 3 Pack, White, 120mm
Case: NZXT H5 Flow TG, White
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2023.05.30 11:11 Eastern-Profit-3188 Sundarban Resort
| The Sundarbans is a vast mangrove forest located in the delta region of the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna rivers in India. It is home to the Royal Bengal Tigers and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. There are several resorts and accommodations available in the Sundarbans region, particularly Jhore Jole Jongole. https://preview.redd.it/jqv98q2iqx2b1.png?width=500&format=png&auto=webp&s=2225857baa3a7002fbb8d682e2e5fda0ddab3627 Jhore Jole Jongole's primary purpose is to provide comfortable lodging. They provide most of the travel needs such as dining, entertainment, shopping, local transportation, and more you can explore within the resort's establishment. This resort provides well-appointed rooms amidst the Sundarbans wilderness. They offer jungle safaris, bird watching tours, and boat safari to explore the region's diverse flora and fauna. That's why it's known as one of the best Sundarban Resort and the first choice of visitors. submitted by Eastern-Profit-3188 to u/Eastern-Profit-3188 [link] [comments] |
2023.05.30 04:01 VeeDubtw Massachusetts Rec
I feel like I was bamboozeled during my recent trip to Boston and the different rec shops. First, limited options for full gram full spectrum cartridges, I specifically asked for the only one on the menu and when I got outside it was a 1/2 gram cart. The price difference is like $5 so I would have rather the full gram I wanted. Second was pre rolls, had two different shops say rec did not offer pre rolls yet I was able to buy at other shops? Odd Third and most frustrating of all, edibles. I asked for 1:1 thc:cbd, 2 of the 3 packages I bought were delta-9 and cbn, my fault for not slowing down in the shop, but why am I buying delta-9 from a legal dispensary? One pack of edibles really has me crossed, when I opened the container there was no safety seal, no lid seal/tape, not even a child proof lid! Over all the Massachusetts Rec cannabis has some room for improvement.
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2023.05.30 03:32 GroundbreakingEmu783 Delta Platinum Amex Welcome Bonus wait time after spending threshold
I am getting conflicting information about when I should expect to get the welcome bonus skymiles from Delta Platinum Amex after hitting the spend threshold. I hit it about a month ago and then paid my statement right away on the 16th when it closed. One agent told me 8 to 12 weeks. Another one told me 5 to 8 weeks. Was curious to know how long it took other people to get their welcome bonus miles into their skymiles account.
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2023.05.30 02:34 Ldordai HAH No way.
| Unbelievable. Domestic FC on a 737, 4.5 hour flight. Funny thing is when I first saw it it was $2300 and they’ve already dropped it. submitted by Ldordai to delta [link] [comments] |
2023.05.29 22:22 liblaur Skymiles Shopping ?
Anyone use it much and know about using while also using store coupons? Mattress Firm is 3.5 miles/dollar right now on Skymiles Shopping but Mattress Firm also has some online coupons that are good value. Trying to figure out which is more worth using…
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2023.05.29 20:57 Chip-Diamondd Elektra
I bought a 0.7g cbd preroll from a smoke shop, the strain was Elektra, took 2 small size bong rips and was definitely baked for awhile, it was the first time I’ve felt cbd be pretty strong I wasn’t expecting much from it since it was some head shop cbd, but wow the head high was good, is Elektra known for being this good? It’s a sativa. I made sure it was cbd and not delta 8 infused flower. I also researched the brand online and can confirm it was cbd less than 0.3thc. The brand is hemptrance by Oregon cbd, also the dominant terp is myrcene in Elektra
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2023.05.29 20:55 Chip-Diamondd Elektra
I bought a 0.7g cbd preroll from a smoke shop, the strain was Elektra, took 2 small size bong rips and was definitely baked for awhile, it was the first time I’ve felt cbd be pretty strong I wasn’t expecting much from it since it was some head shop cbd, but wow the head high was good, is Elektra known for being this good? It’s a sativa. I made sure it was cbd and not delta 8 infused flower. I also researched the brand online and can confirm it was cbd less than 0.3thc. The brand is hemptrance by Oregon cbd, also the dominant terp is myrcene in Elektra
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2023.05.29 20:35 Unaveragebill MQM bonus for hotels booked thru Delta website.
Booked 2 hotels (separate cities/dates) through delta a couple months ago when they were offering an MQM bonus for doing so. Never got the bonus. Called delta and they said they outsource to Expedia. Called Expedia and they said to call skymiles. Called skymiles and they said they can’t access Expedia records. Called Expedia back and they said they have no control over skymiles.
Anyone else have something like this? How did you resolve?
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2023.05.29 19:07 its0verride Help Getting an Airline card.
Hi guys I am 24 and have a FICO of 750. My salary is about 70K.
My current cards are AMEX GOLD, Discover IT, and Amex Preferred (my first card). I want to get a airline card since I now live in another state I fly home regularly. I am looking at the AMEX Delta SKYMILES but I’m also looking at the AAdvantage platinum select card. I bine the American Airlines one is a master card which is something I don’t have. Does that matter? Or should I get the Amex delta and maximize my delta miles since i can also convert the regulat AMEX points to Delta Miles. (Not looking to get a property in the next 6 months)
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2023.05.29 18:49 Ghostserpent Isn’t the platinum card a no brainer?
The 120,000 rewards bonus alone pays back the $600 fee and more. On top of that, the hotel credit, $200 back for signing up, and many other bonuses.
Is there any reason not to get the platinum when I already have a delta SkyMiles card???
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