Venturex - Reddit I'm currently paying my phone bill each month on my Venture X to get the cell phone insurance I'm thinking about moving carriers and the new carrier offers a significant discount when you pay annually
Incredibly surprised I was approved for Venture X : CreditCards To be fair, I had a 758 credit score and 3 years of primary credit history and 5 years as an authorized user It just still seems crazy to give me a premium card and $10,000 limit It wasn't even listed for pre-approval for me, but I said fuck it and applied for it anyway Instant approval
Is the VENTURE X worth it?? Honest Review : r Venturex - Reddit Hi All, I'm going back and forth about opening this card I just got pre-approved and am wondering if I should bite the bullet, ignore the $395 annual fee due to receiveing the annual credit Seriously, is this card worth it?
Capital One Venture X. Is it worth the hype? - Reddit Do the 10k annual points expires or can we save them up? The main benefit of the Venture X is that you get lounge access at a $-5 annual fee You don't really have to spend anything other than the travel portal credit and the 10k anniversary points in order to justify holding the card
Venture X or Venture : r Venturex - Reddit Is there something that the Venture has that the Venture X doesn’t? I will be travelling more in the next few years and those 75k bonus miles look great on both
Is Capital One Venture X too good to be true or I’m reading . . . - Reddit tl;dr - it's complicated, and it may not be as straight forward as it seems You're trading $395 of "spend anywhere" cash for a $300 travel portal credit, 10k CapOne miles, and the other features of the card If something comes up and you don't travel at all, you'd be paying $395 to get $50 back
Thinking of switching from CSR to VentureX, but is it the right choice . . . I'm inclined to downgrade my CSR to a Freedom Flex Unlimited, upgrade my Venture to a VentureX, and open a SavorOne to capture restaurant spending This would give me a 1% cut in the travel bucket, but I'd be saving money though the lower annual fee and earning more through a higher flat earn rate