Chase is offering a $900 bonus cash back after you spend $6,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening with the Ink Business Unlimited® Credit Card. No annual fee.
Thanks to Community Member Metconnect for sharing this deal.
Chase is offering a $900 bonus cash back after you spend $6,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening with the Ink Business Unlimited® Credit Card. No annual fee.
Card Details:
OFFER ENDING SOON: Earn $900 bonus cash back after you spend $6,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening
Earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase made for your business
No Annual Fee
Redeem rewards for cash back, gift cards, travel and more through Chase Ultimate Rewards®.
Earn rewards faster with employee cards at no additional cost. Set individual spending limits for greater control.
Round-the-clock monitoring for unusual credit card purchases
With Zero Liability you won't be held responsible for unauthorized charges made with your card or account information.
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So do you get $900 back or some URs? Are the URs worth any money?
Chase uses "Ultimate Reward" pts for their rewards program
1pt = 1 cent
90k pts = $900 cash
You can move pts between other UR cards (Chase Ink/Freedom/Sapphire) if you want to for other redemption options -- Sapphire might give better redemption options on other things to make your pts worth more (like using it for travel)
No it's not. It's a business credit card. One of the advertised benefits is NOT being tied to your personal credit.
Think about it, if you apply with your business and no social security (which is an option), they literally cannot pull your credit.
You sound confused. As someone who has applied for and gotten several Chase business cards over the last few years, allow me to educate you...
The 'point', as you put it, is that the open account itself is not reported to one's personal credit (unless you end up making late payments or default, which Chase - as do other 'business' card issuers - reserves the right to report to your personal credit).
For cards like the Ink, which typically involve a personal guarantee, they will still check your personal credit via a hard pull. The option to enter a TIN doesn't mean that you can get away without listing your SSN. And unless you have a large enough business (generally with an existing credit history of its own), you will have to enter your SSN in order for the issuer (including Chase) to process the card application.
Can anyone confirm if you can use on the purchase of gift card? Let's say I only able to use 3k, then make a 3k Walmart gift card, will that work?
AFAIK that would work fine, any purchase.
Saw many people mention just sending themselves money via paypal (and taking the 3% loss) a giftcard might be better in terms of losses if you spend enough at that store.
You can purchase anything then cancel, it still counts towards the total amount needed ($6k). I have bought airline tickets earlier this month then canceled, but the $1.7k that got refunded still showed in the total amount spent.
I got this card with a previous offer of 7500/70000 points, I read comments saying I should able to call in to match with this new promotion since these 2 promotion is damn close to each other. However, I called in, it says I can't. Can anyone help
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LLC and TIN are not required.
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No it's not. It's a business credit card. One of the advertised benefits is NOT being tied to your personal credit.
Think about it, if you apply with your business and no social security (which is an option), they literally cannot pull your credit.
1pt = 1 cent
90k pts = $900 cash
You can move pts between other UR cards (Chase Ink/Freedom/Sapphire) if you want to for other redemption options -- Sapphire might give better redemption options on other things to make your pts worth more (like using it for travel)
Chase Ultimate Rewards (i.e point system)
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Think about it, if you apply with your business and no social security (which is an option), they literally cannot pull your credit.
The 'point', as you put it, is that the open account itself is not reported to one's personal credit (unless you end up making late payments or default, which Chase - as do other 'business' card issuers - reserves the right to report to your personal credit).
For cards like the Ink, which typically involve a personal guarantee, they will still check your personal credit via a hard pull. The option to enter a TIN doesn't mean that you can get away without listing your SSN. And unless you have a large enough business (generally with an existing credit history of its own), you will have to enter your SSN in order for the issuer (including Chase) to process the card application.
Saw many people mention just sending themselves money via paypal (and taking the 3% loss) a giftcard might be better in terms of losses if you spend enough at that store.
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