Capital One Quicksilver Cash Rewards Credit Card: Earn $200 Cash Bonus with
Expired
$500 Spent
within 3 Months of Account Opening
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Update: This popular deal is still available.
Capital One is offering a $200 cash bonus after you spend $500 on purchases in the first 3 months of account opening with the Capital One Quicksilver Cash Rewards Credit Card. Annual fee is $0.
Thanks to staff member Bri21 for finding this deal.
Earn a one-time $200 cash bonus after you spend $500 on purchases within 3 months from account opening
Earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, every day
$0 annual fee and no foreign transaction fees
Enjoy up to 6 months of complimentary Uber One membership statement credits through 11/14/2024
Earn unlimited 5% cash back on hotels and rental cars booked through Capital One Travel, where you'll get Capital One's best prices on thousands of trip options. Terms apply
No rotating categories or sign-ups needed to earn cash rewards; plus, cash back won't expire for the life of the account and there's no limit to how much you can earn
0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers for 15 months; 19.24%-29.24% variable APR after that; 3% fee on the amounts transferred within the first 15 months
Capital One is offering a $200 cash bonus after you spend $500 on purchases in the first 3 months of account opening with the Capital One Quicksilver Cash Rewards Credit Card. Annual fee is $0.
Earn a one-time $200 cash bonus after you spend $500 on purchases within 3 months from account opening
Earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, every day
$0 annual fee and no foreign transaction fees
Enjoy up to 6 months of complimentary Uber One membership statement credits through 11/14/2024
Earn unlimited 5% cash back on hotels and rental cars booked through Capital One Travel, where you'll get Capital One's best prices on thousands of trip options. Terms apply
No rotating categories or sign-ups needed to earn cash rewards; plus, cash back won't expire for the life of the account and there's no limit to how much you can earn
0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers for 15 months; 19.24%-29.24% variable APR after that; 3% fee on the amounts transferred within the first 15 months
These responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser.
Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser.
It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.
Opinions expressed here are the author's alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.
I have 805 fico and they decline my Application for Venture credit card and wasted 1 credit check. I won't be applying any Capital one credit card anytime soon.
Call the reconsideration line, could be an error on the app or a typo. Happened to me before
Keep in mind that you'll also get a hard pull from all 3 bureaus anytime you apply for a Capital One credit card.
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Outside of the bonus, why would anyone use this over a 2% card?
I use this card for my "everyday" purchases. Meaning, purchases that I don't have any other card for a higher cashback. This typical is internet purchases like at Macy's. I usually get 500-600 a year back through quicksilver.. I get 1500-2000 back on Capital One's Savor FYI.
Got this using my mom's referral so she got like $150.
Bought a new phone with it since they show the CC number in the app and instantly got the $200 signup bonus so I was able to apply that to my statement before my first bill has even come in yet.
I noticed the one I got has Price Protection (120 days, I think, to match a lower price up to $200) which is maybe one of the few cards left with that benefit. I'll probably use this card for purchases I know have regular price drops just in case I ever see lower prices and stick with my Citi Double Cash for everything else to get the extra .5% cash back.
810 here and same. Had a Capital One card for 15 years, too.
I'm no longer going to use my CO card in the future. I've watched all of the other companies improve their services over the years and CO has remained barebones with terrible customer service.
Need advice with "other companies". Thought the quicksilver was not bad but seems like there are better things
This is a good card. Capital One was the first to approve me to rebuild my credit after being discharged. However, I have the QuickSilver One variation which is the same cash back but the drawback is that I have to pay a $39 annual fee. Guess that's the cost of getting my credit back to normal.
Stay away from this card and especially Capital One. Very shady business. Have been with them for over 9 years. This card limit is stuck at $4750. I once did my tax returns with these guys and that was it. No increase and all denials for CLI requests in 6/12month increments. My annual salary is above 450K with a credit score of 819.
Got rejected by them for the savor card. Credit score over 800 with very little debt. Screw capitol one!
Odd, I only had their starter platinum card for a couple years and a year ago I applied with 700 FICO & got Savor One with 5k limit...love the card especially the car rental coverage!
Maybe as someone suggested, they disapprove applications with lots of cc already?
then I got a measly $100 credit increase on the 1k card I had for 3 yrs w/no lates! Very stingy indeed!
Has anyone ever transferred a Cap One cc into one of their others? I hate that platinum card with high interest but doesn't do a score any favors by closing a cc account.
Stay away from this card and especially Capital One. Very shady business. Have been with them for over 9 years. This card limit is stuck at $4750. I once did my tax returns with these guys and that was it. No increase and all denials for CLI requests in 6/12month increments. My annual salary is above 450K with a credit score of 819.
If that really is your salary why are you complaining over an entry level card? Get the Platinum/Gold card that way you don't have to lose sleep over a credit limit on your card, because there isn't one.
I have only had one Capital One card, the Sony card, and they were wonderful. I'm really sad that Comenity handles the Sony card now. They suck.
Yes it does, that is why, when using on line for certain things, this card is good. I use the virtual cards for DMV and other one off purchases.
Late to the game, but eno is a browser add on right? I tried using it, but it seems it only works on certain browsers and shopping carts. It would be nice if you could generate the numbers and copy/paste
If that really is your salary why are you complaining over an entry level card? Get the Platinum/Gold card that way you don't have to lose sleep over a credit limit on your card, because there isn't one.
I have only had one Capital One card, the Sony card, and they were wonderful. I'm really sad that Comenity handles the Sony card now. They suck.
AMEX platinum or gold has a soft limit and a hard limit on their cards. They are a no limit charge card until a big ticket purchase is denied. On the AMEX website they have a what is your purchasing power tab, or at least they used to. The problem with AMEX. If you establish a history of paying off significant monthly AMEX bills. There really is no limit.
Then you get into the category that AMEX is not a credit card but a charge card. Former AMEX customers who treated their card like carte blanche, where money is no object. They fall into the category of AMEX card holders who are in default. Which leads to having to sign monthly promissory notes. I promise to pay off my AMEX bill. Around 20 years ago AMEX got in trouble for offering a payment plan for AMEX card holders. The regulatory commission told them that they are a charge card brand and not a credit card company.
This led to the creation of the AMEX credit cards. Many former AMEX card customers debt was transferred to the American Express credit card that went by many different names. I think now it's just AMEX blue with other branded AMEX branded credit cards.
Having an AMEX charge card does nothing for your credit score. If someone has or has had an AMEX charge card for many years. It does make it easier to get approved for credit cards.
Interesting. MasterCard wasn't even an option when I got mine.
They have it available with visa and Mastercard. I have this card and a regular CO that they offered a free I upgrade to make it rewards capable and now i have 2 quicksilver cards. One Visa, one Mastercard
I've had 15+ credit cards, never once have I carried a balance. Paid off in full every month. Credit cards have netted me probably $10,000+ in rewards and cashback over the years.
You'd be considered a rookie in the old days.
When credit was easy in the 80's and 90's, there were guys who racked that much up in a month. Not consistently every month, but when it was time to do a cycle of credit card churning they could manufacture a ridiculous amount of rewards.
Btw, if I do get the new card, would closing the old card adversely affect my credit? As I wrote it has a zero balance now. What about closing it without getting the new card, would that be bad for my credit? Either way I want to avoid paying the $5 monthly fee.
...
Kman, I also have a 20 year old credit card that I'm paying an annual $60 fee to use (Chase United Airlines). I'm in the same quandary as you: Keep on paying the annual fee for the good credit history or chuck the card because the benefits simply don't justify the annual fee?
Ten years ago, with a library of credit cards with relative young histories, I felt it was worth the $60 to keep the Chase card.
Now, with a more moderately aged credit card history (I've rotated cards in an out, but at least some of the older cards have aged), the equation has changed. Moreover, I don't travel nearly as much as I used to, making the United points less useful to me. Lastly, even after retiring the Chase credit card, it will remain in my credit history 10 years. So, by the time it is actually dropped from my history, my other credit cards would be 10 years older.
At this point, it's probably something like a 50-50 proposition for me.
For you trying to decide whether to keep your old card, I'd suggest considering the impact 10 years from now (when the credit card drops off your credit history).
EDIT: I just submitted a request to terminate my Chase United Mileage Plus VISA card. The point that tipped the equation in favor of closure was Chase's attitude toward fixing their online accounting practices. See attached letter. Chase still has not fixed this problem, nor acknowledged that the problem exists.
The problem is this: After Chase's system processes the items on their Pending list, it removes such records from the Pending list, adds the charges to the account total, BUT POSTS THE ACTIVITIES AT SOME LATER TIME. Sometimes, they don't update the account activities until hours later. That means the online bank sheets don't balance during the interim. To me, it is insane that they have been able to get away with this for years.
2020-01-10 _ Letter to Jamie Dimon Chase CEO _ redacted.doc - 15.0 KB
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I use this card for my "everyday" purchases. Meaning, purchases that I don't have any other card for a higher cashback. This typical is internet purchases like at Macy's. I usually get 500-600 a year back through quicksilver.. I get 1500-2000 back on Capital One's Savor FYI.
Bought a new phone with it since they show the CC number in the app and instantly got the $200 signup bonus so I was able to apply that to my statement before my first bill has even come in yet.
I noticed the one I got has Price Protection (120 days, I think, to match a lower price up to $200) which is maybe one of the few cards left with that benefit. I'll probably use this card for purchases I know have regular price drops just in case I ever see lower prices and stick with my Citi Double Cash for everything else to get the extra .5% cash back.
I'm no longer going to use my CO card in the future. I've watched all of the other companies improve their services over the years and CO has remained barebones with terrible customer service.
Need advice with "other companies". Thought the quicksilver was not bad but seems like there are better things
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Maybe as someone suggested, they disapprove applications with lots of cc already?
then I got a measly $100 credit increase on the 1k card I had for 3 yrs w/no lates! Very stingy indeed!
Has anyone ever transferred a Cap One cc into one of their others? I hate that platinum card with high interest but doesn't do a score any favors by closing a cc account.
I have only had one Capital One card, the Sony card, and they were wonderful. I'm really sad that Comenity handles the Sony card now. They suck.
I have only had one Capital One card, the Sony card, and they were wonderful. I'm really sad that Comenity handles the Sony card now. They suck.
Then you get into the category that AMEX is not a credit card but a charge card. Former AMEX customers who treated their card like carte blanche, where money is no object. They fall into the category of AMEX card holders who are in default. Which leads to having to sign monthly promissory notes. I promise to pay off my AMEX bill. Around 20 years ago AMEX got in trouble for offering a payment plan for AMEX card holders. The regulatory commission told them that they are a charge card brand and not a credit card company.
This led to the creation of the AMEX credit cards. Many former AMEX card customers debt was transferred to the American Express credit card that went by many different names. I think now it's just AMEX blue with other branded AMEX branded credit cards.
Having an AMEX charge card does nothing for your credit score. If someone has or has had an AMEX charge card for many years. It does make it easier to get approved for credit cards.
Yes I have two capital one cards
They have it available with visa and Mastercard. I have this card and a regular CO that they offered a free I upgrade to make it rewards capable and now i have 2 quicksilver cards. One Visa, one Mastercard
I've had 15+ credit cards, never once have I carried a balance. Paid off in full every month. Credit cards have netted me probably $10,000+ in rewards and cashback over the years.
When credit was easy in the 80's and 90's, there were guys who racked that much up in a month. Not consistently every month, but when it was time to do a cycle of credit card churning they could manufacture a ridiculous amount of rewards.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Btw, if I do get the new card, would closing the old card adversely affect my credit? As I wrote it has a zero balance now. What about closing it without getting the new card, would that be bad for my credit? Either way I want to avoid paying the $5 monthly fee.
...
- Ten years ago, with a library of credit cards with relative young histories, I felt it was worth the $60 to keep the Chase card.
- Now, with a more moderately aged credit card history (I've rotated cards in an out, but at least some of the older cards have aged), the equation has changed. Moreover, I don't travel nearly as much as I used to, making the United points less useful to me. Lastly, even after retiring the Chase credit card, it will remain in my credit history 10 years. So, by the time it is actually dropped from my history, my other credit cards would be 10 years older.
- At this point, it's probably something like a 50-50 proposition for me.
For you trying to decide whether to keep your old card, I'd suggest considering the impact 10 years from now (when the credit card drops off your credit history).EDIT: I just submitted a request to terminate my Chase United Mileage Plus VISA card. The point that tipped the equation in favor of closure was Chase's attitude toward fixing their online accounting practices. See attached letter. Chase still has not fixed this problem, nor acknowledged that the problem exists.
The problem is this: After Chase's system processes the items on their Pending list, it removes such records from the Pending list, adds the charges to the account total, BUT POSTS THE ACTIVITIES AT SOME LATER TIME. Sometimes, they don't update the account activities until hours later. That means the online bank sheets don't balance during the interim. To me, it is insane that they have been able to get away with this for years.