Capital One Quicksilver Cash Rewards Credit Card: Earn $200 Cash Bonus with
Expired
$500 Spent
within 3 Months of Account Opening
+402Deal Score
1,186,790 Views
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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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 them 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.
I'm going to apply for one of their no annual fee cards. If approved, I'll drop the $5/mo fee card and risk whatever adverse effect it has on my credit. I'm not looking to buy a car or house any time soon so it doesn't matter enough to me to be worth the $60 a year for a card I no longer use because it offers no advantages over other cards, and lacks many of their benefits. Plus, it's the principle of refusing to play that game and pay their ransom to maintain my credit. Plus, I haven't missed a payment in decades, so I'm am excellent risk. They'd be dumb to lose me.
If I'm not approved for the new card, I'll have to think about it but I'll probably drop it anyway, but first call CS to see what they can do to keep me. My guess is that they'll either drop the fee or offer me a less desirable alternative card with no fee. Either way, I think it's stupid to keep paying this fee for nothing in return that I really need or am likely to any time soon. Life is too short to live it around these financial games. When it's my time, I'm not going to be thinking "I just wish I'd kept that card so I can die happy!".
I bet a lot of people are rethinking their credit these days after receiving that pandemic windfall. Not everyone really needed it and not everyone who got it went out and spent it all, whether they needed to or just felt like it. I've been using it to pay down my credit card debt, some recent, some older. So I might as well use my improved credit score to snag some better cards. No guarantee that I'll be approved for any but it's worth a shot. But banks have made enough money off of me and my sometimes less than smart buying choices. Let them try and scare me with implied threats of adverse credit score impact. Won't sway me.
Btw, to this day I can't figure out how banks reconcile their books every night, and why it still often takes days to clear some purchases. It should take no more than a few seconds, overnight at most. How long does it take for them to verify that yes, I did buy a Whopper with fries and paid for it with my card? It's not exactly rocket science. Probably don't want to spend money on the necessary software upgrades, or maybe they'd need for out of date laws to be changed to be able to do this. But credit is effectively like real money these days, and should be treated as such. I suspect that the real reason this is still going on is not really technical or legal, but profit-based. They're probably making tons off of interest off the float, and being allowed to get away with it.
I'm going to apply for one of their no annual fee cards. If approved, I'll drop the $5/mo fee card and risk whatever adverse effect it has on my credit. I'm not looking to buy a car or house any time soon so it doesn't matter enough to me to be worth the $60 a year for a card I no longer use because it offers no advantages over other cards, and lacks many of their benefits. Plus, it's the principle of refusing to play that game and pay their ransom to maintain my credit.
If I'm not approved for the new card, I'll have to think about it but I'll probably drop it anyway, but first call CS to see what they can do to keep me. My guess is that they'll either drop the fee or offer me a less desirable alternative card with no fee. Either way, I think it's stupid to keep paying this fee for nothing in return that I really need or am likely to any time soon. Life is too short to live it around these financial games. When it's my time, I'm not going to be thinking "I just wish I'd kept that card so I can die happy!".
I bet a lot of people are rethinking their credit these days after receiving that pandemic windfall. Not everyone really needed it and not everyone who got it went out and spent it all, whether they needed to or just felt like it. I've been using it to pay down my credit card debt, some recent, some older. So I might as well use my improved credit score to snag some better cards. No guarantee that I'll be approved for any but it's worth a shot. But banks have made enough money off of me and my sometimes less than smart buying choices. Let them try and scare me with implied threats of adverse credit score impact. Won't sway me.
Btw, to this day I can't figure out how banks reconcile their books every night, and why it still often takes days to clear some purchases. It should take no more than a few seconds, overnight at most. How long does it take for them to verify that yes, I did buy a Whopper with fries and paid for it with my card? It's not exactly rocket science. Probably don't want to spend money on the necessary software upgrades, or maybe they'd need for out of date laws to be changed to be able to do this.
A review of my list of credit cards shows that I don't currently have a Capital One account, which sort of surprised me. Then I remembered, the last one that I applied for they rejected me because my credit history was TOO GOOD. They don't like people that pay off their card balances every month. I've seen similar comments from other people that have been rejected.
If you've got a credit score of more than 800, good luck on getting your application approved.
A review of my list of credit cards shows that I don't currently have a Capital One account, which sort of surprised me. Then I remembered, the last one that I applied for they rejected me because my credit history was TOO GOOD. They don't like people that pay off their card balances every month. I've seen similar comments from other people that have been rejected.
If you've got a credit score of more than 800, good luck on getting your application approved.
When I got it over 20 years ago, IIRC it was the only card I was likely to get approved for, as my credit was iffy. Things are very different now and it's served its purpose in helping me get me credit back up. I don't really need one of their cards. I just want that $200. I wonder if using most of my pandemic money to pay off my cards was smart!
I was insta-approved for this. I have about 15 CCs opened in the past 6 years, including a Capital One Venture that I've owned but haven't used in about 3 years. Nothing new in the past 24 months.
Not sure what they look for because I definitely have not been a capital one cardholder lol. My income, listed CC spend, and available liquidity numbers are solid though, so maybe they kept that into consideration?
So, my wife just signed up for this card without using the link here. Is she still eligible for the $200 credit and if not, can you call to get it applied post application?
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.
Same. I am fighting the check. They solicited me on my Capitol one account page. I have a account for years. Said i was pre approved. There wasnt a disclaimer saying a hard inquiry.
Same. I am fighting the check. They solicited me on my Capitol one account page. I have a account for years. Said i was pre approved. There wasnt a disclaimer saying a hard inquiry.
Pre-approval means soft inquiry. Approval always requires a hard inquiry unless it's an AMEX for existing customers. The terms you probably didn't read thru would've mentioned the hard inquiry prior to submission.
I got the C.O. savor card with $200 cash back on $500 in purchases/3mo. My credit score in 717, with about 2500 in interest free debt and 70,000 in available credit. 3% cashback on groceries and etc. Did the prequalify page first that another poster linked. Thanks for the link. Got $5K credit limit. But they have been sending me offers occasionally for a year, so that might have helped. Just a guess.
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.
If you have two capital one cards you can not get a third. I might cancel my Walmart card after the 1st year to get this card.
Not recommended to sign up for a credit to get $200 bonus and then be 20k in debt and destroy your credit, not a good deal
lol wait what? This is like using a coupon for $200 off $500 purchase. If you are really not capable of restraining yourself from buying things without having money then you should consider getting some therapy. I know a person who cannot stop herself from wasting all of her money within a few day although she does live with her parents. She spent her stimulus checks the day she got them on things that were not essential and still has that problem with saving money for more than a few days. She is getting therapy for it now but it's been a few months since she started but it's a problem she needs to fix asap.She is already a stressful person and most of it has to do with money and working because she has no money because it all gets spent the same day.
lol wait what? This is like using a coupon for $200 off $500 purchase. If you are really not capable of restraining yourself from buying things without having money then you should consider getting some therapy. I know a person who cannot stop herself from wasting all of her money within a few day although she does live with her parents. She spent her stimulus checks the day she got them on things that were not essential and still has that problem with saving money for more than a few days. She is getting therapy for it now but it's been a few months since she started but it's a problem she needs to fix asap.She is already a stressful person and most of it has to do with money and working because she has no money because it all gets spent the same day.
Seems to be very common, I have known many, many people over the years whodo the same. They don't seem to have any concept of responsible spending or saving, always near broke.Large lottery and sweepstakes winners have been knownto go broke not long after winning after blowing it all too.
denied, 780 credit score with perfect credit for the past 20 years.
Not that surprised as i did get the Savor card about a month and a half ago but figured WTH
EDIT: Got my letter today and it was because i opened the Savor card. Anyone know how long you need to wait to open a second? (Savor was opened in early Feb)
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- 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 them 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.
If I'm not approved for the new card, I'll have to think about it but I'll probably drop it anyway, but first call CS to see what they can do to keep me. My guess is that they'll either drop the fee or offer me a less desirable alternative card with no fee. Either way, I think it's stupid to keep paying this fee for nothing in return that I really need or am likely to any time soon. Life is too short to live it around these financial games. When it's my time, I'm not going to be thinking "I just wish I'd kept that card so I can die happy!".
I bet a lot of people are rethinking their credit these days after receiving that pandemic windfall. Not everyone really needed it and not everyone who got it went out and spent it all, whether they needed to or just felt like it. I've been using it to pay down my credit card debt, some recent, some older. So I might as well use my improved credit score to snag some better cards. No guarantee that I'll be approved for any but it's worth a shot. But banks have made enough money off of me and my sometimes less than smart buying choices. Let them try and scare me with implied threats of adverse credit score impact. Won't sway me.
Btw, to this day I can't figure out how banks reconcile their books every night, and why it still often takes days to clear some purchases. It should take no more than a few seconds, overnight at most. How long does it take for them to verify that yes, I did buy a Whopper with fries and paid for it with my card? It's not exactly rocket science. Probably don't want to spend money on the necessary software upgrades, or maybe they'd need for out of date laws to be changed to be able to do this. But credit is effectively like real money these days, and should be treated as such. I suspect that the real reason this is still going on is not really technical or legal, but profit-based. They're probably making tons off of interest off the float, and being allowed to get away with it.
If I'm not approved for the new card, I'll have to think about it but I'll probably drop it anyway, but first call CS to see what they can do to keep me. My guess is that they'll either drop the fee or offer me a less desirable alternative card with no fee. Either way, I think it's stupid to keep paying this fee for nothing in return that I really need or am likely to any time soon. Life is too short to live it around these financial games. When it's my time, I'm not going to be thinking "I just wish I'd kept that card so I can die happy!".
I bet a lot of people are rethinking their credit these days after receiving that pandemic windfall. Not everyone really needed it and not everyone who got it went out and spent it all, whether they needed to or just felt like it. I've been using it to pay down my credit card debt, some recent, some older. So I might as well use my improved credit score to snag some better cards. No guarantee that I'll be approved for any but it's worth a shot. But banks have made enough money off of me and my sometimes less than smart buying choices. Let them try and scare me with implied threats of adverse credit score impact. Won't sway me.
Btw, to this day I can't figure out how banks reconcile their books every night, and why it still often takes days to clear some purchases. It should take no more than a few seconds, overnight at most. How long does it take for them to verify that yes, I did buy a Whopper with fries and paid for it with my card? It's not exactly rocket science. Probably don't want to spend money on the necessary software upgrades, or maybe they'd need for out of date laws to be changed to be able to do this.
If you've got a credit score of more than 800, good luck on getting your application approved.
If you've got a credit score of more than 800, good luck on getting your application approved.
Not sure what they look for because I definitely have not been a capital one cardholder lol. My income, listed CC spend, and available liquidity numbers are solid though, so maybe they kept that into consideration?
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If you have two capital one cards you can not get a third. I might cancel my Walmart card after the 1st year to get this card.
Yes, they allow 2 cards total
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Not that surprised as i did get the Savor card about a month and a half ago but figured WTH
EDIT: Got my letter today and it was because i opened the Savor card. Anyone know how long you need to wait to open a second? (Savor was opened in early Feb)