How Much Is a Point or Mile Actually Worth?
Short answer: most credit card points are worth somewhere between 1 and 2 cents each, and a lot of them are worth exactly 1 cent no matter what anyone tells you. As of 2026, the transferable currencies (Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One miles, Citi ThankYou) tend to land around 1.5 to 2 cents when you move them to airlines and hotels, and closer to 1 cent if you cash out. Fixed-rate cards like the Citi Double Cash or Wells Fargo Active Cash skip the math entirely: a point is a penny, full stop.
So the real question isn't "what's my point worth" in the abstract. It's "what's it worth to you, given how you actually redeem." A drawer full of 200,000 Amex points is worth $2,000 if you redeem for a statement credit and maybe $3,400 if you transfer to a partner and book business class. Same balance. Different person.
The two numbers that matter
There are two values for every point, and people constantly confuse them:
- The floor (cash-out value). What you get if you redeem for cash back, a statement credit, or pay-with-points. This is almost always 1 cent, sometimes 0.6 cents (looking at you, older Amex "pay with points" rates). It's the guaranteed value. It never goes away.
- The ceiling (transfer value). What you get when you move points to a travel partner and book a flight or hotel that retails for a lot of cash. This is where 2+ cents lives, but it's conditional on award availability, your willingness to fly weird routes, and not valuing your time at zero.
If you only ever redeem at the floor, ignore every "worth 2.1 cents" claim you read. Those are valuations built on aspirational redemptions you may never make.
What each major currency runs in 2026
These are rough, real-world ranges as of early 2026 — not the inflated "max" numbers issuers love to quote. Confirm current redemption rates on the issuer's official site, because portal rates and transfer ratios change without much notice.
| Currency | Cash-out floor | Typical travel value | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chase Ultimate Rewards | 1.0¢ | ~1.5–2.0¢ | Transfer to Hyatt or United; Reserve portal at 1.5¢ (varies by product) |
| Amex Membership Rewards | ~0.6¢ (statement credit) | ~1.6–2.0¢ | Transfer to airline partners; avoid the statement-credit option |
| Capital One miles | 1.0¢ | ~1.3–1.8¢ | Transfer to partners, or erase travel at a flat 1¢ |
| Citi ThankYou | 1.0¢ | ~1.3–1.8¢ | Transfer to airline partners |
| Fixed cash-back (Double Cash, Active Cash) | 1.0¢ | 1.0¢ | It's cash. No math. |
| Airline miles (most US programs) | n/a | ~1.0–1.5¢ | Highly variable; can crater under dynamic pricing |
Notice that the floor for Amex statement credits is worse than cash back from a flat card. That's the trade-off nobody mentions: a "premium" points currency can quietly be worth less than a boring 2% card if you don't transfer. Run your own balances side by side on our card comparison tool before you decide which currency to chase.
A worked example
You've got 60,000 Chase points and a round-trip you'd otherwise pay $900 cash for.
- Cash out: 60,000 × 1¢ = $600. Clean, guaranteed.
- Chase Travel portal (Sapphire Preferred, ~1.25¢ as of 2026): 60,000 × 1.25¢ = $750 of bookings. You'd cover most of the $900 trip.
- Transfer to United and book the same flight for 50,000 miles + $40: you spend 50,000 points to avoid a $900 fare. That's ($900 − $40) / 50,000 = 1.72¢ per point, and you keep 10,000 points.
The transfer wins here by a wide margin. But it only works if United has saver award space on your dates. If it doesn't, the portal at 1.25¢ is your realistic ceiling, and that changes the whole calculation. This is why a single "point value" number is close to useless on its own.
When a point is just worth a penny (and that's fine)
Plenty of people should stop optimizing and take the cent. You're in this group if:
- You redeem for statement credits or cash and never book award travel. Then a transferable point is worth 1¢ to you, period — and a flat 2% card often beats a 1x-to-2x "points" card on raw earning.
- You travel on fixed dates (school breaks, fixed PTO) when saver award space is thin. Transfer values collapse when you can't be flexible.
- You carry a balance. Interest at 20%+ APR vaporizes any redemption edge. Pay it off first; the points game is for people who never see a finance charge.
- You'd lose sleep tracking transfer partners and award charts. The 0.5¢ of extra value isn't worth the overhead for most folks.
Skipping the optimization isn't a failure. A guaranteed 2% is mathematically better than a theoretical 2.1% you redeem twice a year. If that's you, a flat-rate card like the Citi Double Cash or Wells Fargo Active Cash removes the entire question.
The edge cases worth knowing
- Hyatt is the outlier. Chase points to World of Hyatt routinely clear 2–3¢ because Hyatt still uses mostly fixed award charts in 2026. It's one of the few partners where the high valuations are repeatable.
- Dynamic-priced miles can drop below the floor. Some domestic awards now cost more miles than a cash ticket would at 1¢/mile. Always compare the cash price before burning miles.
- Premium-card portal multipliers vary by product. The Sapphire Reserve portal rate and the Sapphire Preferred rate differ, and Chase has changed them before. Check the current rate on Chase's site rather than trusting a number from an old blog post.
- Transfer bonuses move the math. A 25–30% transfer bonus to an airline can push a 1.5¢ point to ~2¢ overnight. They're temporary, so they only help if your trip lines up with the promo window.
Want to see which currency fits your spending and redemption style? Browse the full card lineup or read our methodology for how we value rewards.
Cards mentioned in this guide
Citi Double Cash Card
Citi
Effectively a 2% flat card (1% when you buy, 1% when you pay it off) with no annual fee,โฆ
Wells Fargo Active Cash Card
Wells Fargo
If you want one card that pays well on everything with no fee, this is the flat-rate bencโฆ
Chase Sapphire Preferred Card
Chase
If you want transferable points without paying for lounge access you'll never use, the Prโฆ
Capital One Venture X Rewards
Capital One
The premium card to pick if you want lounge access without the Platinum's $695 sting; atโฆ
Frequently asked questions
How much is a credit card point worth on average?+
For most US cards as of 2026, plan on about 1 cent per point as a baseline. Transferable currencies (Chase, Amex, Capital One, Citi) can reach roughly 1.5 to 2 cents when moved to airline and hotel partners, but only on redemptions with good award availability. Confirm current rates on the issuer's site.
Are points worth more than cash back?+
Only if you actually transfer them to travel partners and book high-value awards. At the cash-out floor, a transferable point is usually worth 1 cent, which a flat 2% cash-back card beats on earning. If you never book award travel, cash back is the better deal for you.
Why do blogs say points are worth 2 cents when I only get 1?+
Those valuations assume aspirational redemptions like business-class flights or fixed-chart hotels. They represent a ceiling, not what you'll average. Your real per-point value is whatever your actual redemptions work out to, and for many people that's right around 1 cent.
Which points are worth the most in 2026?+
Chase Ultimate Rewards transferred to World of Hyatt is one of the few combos that repeatably clears 2 to 3 cents because Hyatt still uses fixed award charts. Airline miles vary widely and can fall below 1 cent under dynamic pricing, so compare the cash fare first.
BestCreditCards.cc Editorial Team
Credit cards research desk ยท Independent comparison desk ยท not a bank or lender
Our editorial team researches credit cards across the US, India, Brazil, Germany and other markets โ reading issuer terms, schedules of fees and benefit guides directly from the source, then cross-checking against the official application pages before anything is published. We update cards and guides regularly as offers change.
How we research & rate cards โWas this helpful?
Questions & Answers
No questions yet. Be the first to ask!
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Share your experience!