Points and Miles for Beginners The Easy Way to Earn Free Travel

If you’re new to points and miles, you probably have a million questions (I have a free guide you can download here).

Is this legal? Will it hurt my credit? How do people keep track of all these cards?

The truth: earning travel rewards is much simpler than it looks. Once you understand the basics, you’ll see why so many families (mine included!) use points and miles to travel for a fraction of the cost.

I also offer 1:1 coaching chats to help you get started confidently.

Below are the most common beginner questions, answered clearly and simply.

What Are Points and Miles?

  • Points and miles: Rewards currencies you earn from credit cards, airlines, and hotels.
  • Redemption: Using those points and miles to book travel, typically flights and hotel stays.
  • Award flight: A flight paid for with points instead of cash.
  • Loyalty program: A program (like Marriott, Delta, United) where you earn and redeem points within that brand.

Is This Strategy Even Legal?

Yes – 100% legal.

Points and miles are rewards programs created by banks, airlines, and hotels to encourage you to sign up for cards and stay loyal to certain brands. You’re not gaming the system, you’re simply using publicly offered benefits exactly as intended.

Do I Need Good Credit to Start?

Yes. Most top travel cards require a 700+ credit score, and higher is ideal.

Good credit gives you:

  • Better approval odds
  • Higher bonuses
  • Access to premium travel cards

My favorite beginner card is this one.

How Do I Keep Track of All the Cards I Open?

There are excellent tools built for people using points and miles.

My personal favorite is Travel Freely, it tracks all your cards (and your partner’s), sends alerts for annual fees, minimum spend deadlines, and more.

What Is a Sign-Up Bonus?

A sign-up bonus (SUB) is the large chunk of points you earn after opening a new card and meeting the required spending minimum.

It’s the fastest and easiest way to earn free flights and hotels.

What Is a Minimum Spend?

It’s the amount you must spend on a new card – within a set timeframe – to trigger the bonus. Each card has its own requirement.

Are Annual Fees Worth It?

For the first year: almost always yes.
The sign-up bonus alone is usually worth hundreds to thousands of dollars in travel value.

After the first year, you can:

  1. Keep the card and ask for a retention offer
  2. Downgrade to a no-fee version
  3. Cancel the card (after 12 months)

Do Annual Fees or Balance Transfers Count Toward Minimum Spend?

No. Neither of those transactions count toward your required spending amount.

What Are the Best Cards for Beginners?

These are my two favorite starter cards :

Both offer strong bonuses, travel protections, and easy-to-use points.

How Often Should I Apply for New Cards?

General rule: every 90 days.

My husband and I alternate applications, so together we open a card about every 45 days, but beginners do not need to move this fast.

Start slow. If it stops being fun, ease up.

Does Opening Lots of Credit Cards Hurt Your Credit?

No.

My score is around 815, and I usually have 12–15 cards open. The biggest factor in your credit score is credit utilization, carrying a balance hurts your score.

Opening more cards actually helps by increasing your total available credit.

Ignore the outdated myths. They’re wrong.

What Is a Branded Card?

These are flexible rewards cards that earn transferable points you can send to multiple airlines and hotels. They’re powerful for beginners because of their versatility.

Here’s a popular beginner option : beginner-friendly travel card.

What Is a Co-Branded Card?

Co-branded cards are tied to a single airline or hotel brand.
You earn that brand’s points, which can only be used within that program.

Here are popular beginner-friendly co-branded travel cards

What Is the 5/24 Rule?

If you’ve opened 5 or more personal credit cards from any bank in the last 24 months, the bank-we-can’t-name (affiliate rules!) will not approve you.

This is why many beginners start with those cards first.

For questions, you can email me here.

What Is Two-Player Mode?

Two-player mode simply means:

  • You and a partner each open cards
  • Each earn bonuses
  • Refer each other
  • Combine points when possible

It doubles your earning speed, but it’s optional.

Final Thoughts

Earning travel rewards doesn’t have to be complicated. With the right tools, clear strategy, and a slow, steady pace, you can earn thousands of dollars in free travel every year.

Start simple, stay organized, and enjoy the incredible travel opportunities that points and miles can unlock.

Similar Posts

  • How to Start Points and Miles for Beginners (Without Feeling Overwhelmed)

    If you’ve ever opened a points and miles guide and felt your brain short-circuit within five minutes, you’re not alone. Between transfer charts, credit card offers, airline partners, and complicated rules, it can feel like you need a finance degree just to get started. Here’s the truth: you don’t need to understand everything right now….

  • Points and Miles 101 A Beginner Guide to Free Travel

    If you’ve ever tried to learn points and miles and felt overwhelmed within the first five minutes, you’re not alone. Most beginner guides throw too much information at you too fast – card names, rules and charts – without explaining what actually matters first. Here’s the truth: points and miles don’t work because you’re clever….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *