Rakuten — Maximize your Points Earnings by Adrian Galli

Image courtesy of Rakuten

While I’ve talked about fun cards, services, and other financial though provoking topics, there are still more topics to maximize the cash back or points one can accumulate.

Rakuten is a website that features hundreds of brands and effectively gives you coupons with which to shop. I’m uncertain how they get these deals—sometimes you’re getting 10x (or more!) back on ALL of your purchases from brands like Nike, Todd Snyder, Ray-ban, Grubhub, Walgreens, Apple, and more. I’m sure they’re data mining the hell out of your purchases but that’s probably happening anyway so might as well get something in return.

You get two options. One is good old fashion cash back paid to you via PayPal. Or, as I set it up, American Express Membership Rewards Points. In other words, 10x would be ten points for every dollar or 10% cash back.

For example, I recently made a little birthday present purchase for myself. I had my eye on some sunglasses from Ray-Ban. I have a minor sunglasses addiction so I might as well reduce the cost as much as possible. Good sunglasses are worth the price and with Rakuten, I received 8% cash back (or 8x Amex points).

The total came to about $180.00 and at 8x back, a cool 1440 points loaded into my American Express account. And, as a general purchase, I receive the usual 1x from my American Express. In total 1620—approximately $16.20 in cash value.

That eight percent is somewhat unusual. Most stores add 1-2x on purchases but check in daily as it fluctuates and sometimes see double point, triple, or more. Favorite your commonly shopped brands and stores and you’ll also get notified when there are double point days, specials, and the like.

Another example is Instacart. During the week, I sometimes do not want to go to the grocery store but if I need something I’ll use Instacard. My Amex Gold Card gives me 4x back on all grocery store purchases but if I order through Rakuten, I get an additional 1x. Not much but a 20% increase in what my Amex already gives me.

Putting normal spending through Rakuten adds up really quickly. Their website is easy to use and their app is available on multiple platforms. It can take a few days for your points to appear and they only “pay out” once a quarter but when you’re getting one, two, five, ten percent or more back on all your purchasing, the wait is worth it.

Since January of 2022, now April, I’ve 32,632 points. That’s an approximate $320.00 in American Express Membership points just by doing my normal spend through Rakuten. Not bad!

Optimize your spending.

Visit and signup at Rakuten.com!

P.S. There is a little bonus ($30) for using that referral link.

American Express Green Card by Adrian Galli

Image courtesy of American Express

Ah yes, the classic, the iconic, the original American Express Card. Now known as the Green card, it is the quintessential Amex but sadly isn’t held in as high esteem as its pricier brethren. However, the Green card is, in my opinion, a very underrated card and, for the annual fee of $150, one of the best.

This is my original Amex, too, and a story I like to tell.

In 2007, a younger Adrian got his first charge card and changed his financial life. Not only was he fascinate with credit and charge cards alike, American Express was more than just “another bank.” There was a touch of prestige, a great history to the company, and valuable financial services that came along with it. 

A good portion of all purchases made by Adrian went through his Green card. Everything from camera equipment to travel, cell phone bills and groceries, if the merchant took American Express, it was likely the card he used.

Three hundred thousand points later, Adrian has since evolved his Amex spending to a Gold and Platinum card but he will reminisce about the Green card as “something missing” from his wallet.

Switching away from the third person, I do actually miss my Green card. Perhaps it was because it was my first charge card (they aren’t technically charge cards anymore) but it is also a great card to have. The account still exists since 2007 but I have upgraded it to the Gold card.

If you hop into a room with a bunch of credit card aficionados, many will tell you how “bad” or “unappealing” the Green card is but I disagree. It has some of the broader rewards with 3x points on a lot of every day spending and travel—travel being so broad that it can be said that if you don’t own it and it has wheels, wings, or a bed, you probably get 3x points.

I can go through all the point earning, offers, and more, but the American Express has a website for that. I’d rather give you the context of why it is valuable as a broad urban living, travel, young professional’s card.

Story time… you’re going on a week long trip to Denver. You are flying, staying in an AirBnB, will mostly be eating out, and taking transit or ride shares. There will be other purchases and spending along the way but let’s look at the broad categories and use some nice round numbers.

The Trip
Flight: $500
Lodging: $1400 ($200/night)
Dining: $350
Transit: $200

The Points
Green: 3x on all categories
Gold: 3x flights, 1x lodging, 4x dining, 1x transit (but $10 credit for Uber)
Platinum: 5x flights, 1x lodging (AirBnB, 1x dining, 1x transit ($15 for Uber)

Category Green Card Gold Card Platinum Card
Flight 1500 1500 2500
Lodging 4200 1400 1400
Dining 1050 1400 350
Transit 600 200 200
Total 7350 4500 4450

Wow! Didn't expect that!

This is just one example and is a very Millennial travel itinerary with AirBnB and all. If you were to stay at a hotel like Hilton, you can add 5600 points to the Platinum Card (5x on hotels) and might also have a couple hundred dollars in hotel credits too but the value for someone who isn’t using the “traditional” lodging option of AirBnB is clear.

Once back home, the Green card can definitely be valuable for most purchases. The Gold card has an advantage with 4x on dining and grocery stores, but the Green would still win over the revered Platinum Card.

The point isn’t to shoot down other cards. As will all things, “the right tool for the right job” would be the mantra and the Green card might be the right card for many. I mostly use my Platinum card for everything except groceries and dining (Gold card) but that also means I have to work with two cards. Having one single every day card that covers most things well sounds really a lot easier.

If one isn’t the kinda to play the “chasing points game,” and having a different card optimized for each category of spending is too much trouble, with only $150 annual membership fee, the Green card’s power and simplicity is a great choice.

I no longer have my Green card but if it sounds like the right card for you, check out the link below. Some pretty good signup bonuses right not. Worth the spend.

Also, don’t forget to Shop Small.

American Express Green Card

Happy World Backup Day! by Adrian Galli

Image courtesy of NASA
@nasa

Today is World Backup Day!

It is absolutely important to backup your data. It won’t hurt until it happens but the sinking feeling you get when something important is lost to the digital abyss is not something one wants to experience. Backup solutions are usually inexpensive and easy to use—most also need very little of your attention on a regular basis, happening automatically.

A wiseman once said, “There are two kinds of people in the world: Those who have lost data and those who will lose data.”

Setup your backup today, March 31, 2022, so tomorrow you’re not an April Fool!

RESOURCES

How to Backup Your Mac
How to Backup Your Windows PC
How to Backup your iPhone, iPhone, iPod Touch
How to Backup your Apple Watch
How to Backup your Android Phone
How to Backup your Nintendo Switch

RECOMMENDATIONS

iCloud Storage (50GB, 200GB, 2TB options)
Lacie Rugged Hard Drives
Sandisk Memory Cards
Dropbox
Google Drive

Check out what my team and I posted to our Apple Support YouTube Channel about using Time Machine to restore files!