A welcome bonus is the single largest chunk of points you'll ever earn from a card, and you earn it almost overnight. The catch is a string attached: you have to spend a set amount within a set window to unlock it. Done right, it's free money for spending you were going to do anyway. Done wrong, it quietly costs you more than the bonus is worth. The difference is entirely in the planning.
What a welcome bonus actually is
When you open a new rewards card, the issuer often dangles a one-time reward — sometimes called a sign-up bonus, welcome offer, or intro bonus — for hitting a minimum spend in your first few months. The framing is usually "earn a large lump of points after you spend a certain amount in the first three months." Hit the target, the points post; miss it, you get nothing.
These bonuses are the highest-value rewards in the hobby because the return is enormous relative to the spend. A welcome bonus can be the equivalent of earning many times your normal rate on the same money — a payout you simply cannot match through everyday earning. That's why points-and-miles people structure their applications around them.
The one rule you cannot break
Everything that follows rests on a single principle: only ever spend money you were already going to spend. A bonus is worth chasing only if you reach it with natural, necessary purchases. The moment you buy things you don't need to "make the minimum," you've turned a reward into a loss.
The deeper trap is interest. If you can't pay the card in full and carry a balance to hit the bonus, the interest you rack up will dwarf the points you earn. Card APRs are steep enough that even a few months of carried debt can wipe out the entire value of a bonus. The math only works if you treat the card like a debit card you happen to earn points on. If meeting the spend would push you into a balance you can't clear, skip the bonus entirely — no reward is worth paying interest for. (For the underlying numbers, see how credit card interest works.)
Time your application around a big planned expense
The cleanest way to meet a minimum spend is to apply right before a large purchase you'd be making regardless. The expense does the heavy lifting, and you're not inventing any spending at all.
Good moments to open a new card include:
- Before booking a trip you've already committed to — flights, a hotel stay, a rental car.
- Ahead of a planned home purchase like furniture, appliances, or a repair you've been quoted.
- Before an annual insurance premium, a tax bill (where the fee makes sense), or tuition.
- When a holiday or event with predictable gift and hosting spend is coming up.
If you don't have a big-ticket item on the horizon, it's often better to wait. A bonus you have to manufacture spending for isn't really free.
What spend counts — and what doesn't
Minimum-spend tracking is narrower than people assume. As a rule, only ordinary purchases count toward the requirement. Several things typically do not:
- Balance transfers — moving debt from another card is not a purchase and almost never counts.
- Cash advances — withdrawing cash against the card is excluded, and carries its own high fees and immediate interest.
- Interest and fees — finance charges and most service fees don't move you toward the target.
- The annual fee — this one varies. Some issuers count it toward the minimum spend and some don't, so never assume it covers part of the requirement. Plan to reach the target with real purchases on top of it.
Other gray areas — gift card purchases, peer-to-peer payments, certain bill-pay services — are sometimes excluded or can trigger an issuer review. When in doubt, stick to straightforward retail and travel purchases you'd recognize on any statement.
Legitimate ways to reach the minimum
If a single big expense doesn't get you all the way there, you can close the gap with spending you already have, just routed differently:
- Move recurring bills onto the new card. Utilities, phone, streaming, insurance, gym — anything you pay monthly. Switch them for the bonus window, then switch back if you prefer.
- Prepay predictable expenses. If you can pay a few months of a subscription or an upcoming bill early, you're pulling future spending into the window without spending a dollar more overall.
- Make it your everyday card temporarily. Run groceries, gas, and routine purchases through it until the bonus is met. This is the simplest lever and usually enough on its own.
Notice the common thread: none of these create new spending. They reshuffle the timing or the payment method of money already leaving your account.
Track the deadline like it matters — because it does
The clock almost always starts on your account opening date, not the day your card arrives in the mail or the day you make your first purchase. That can quietly cost you days. Note the exact date you were approved, count the window from there, and aim to finish well before the true deadline so a pending transaction or a billing-cycle quirk doesn't trip you up.
Keep a running total of qualifying spend, not just your statement balance — they're not the same thing once you account for what doesn't count. And don't wait until the final week; leave yourself a cushion for a return, a declined charge, or a purchase that posts later than expected.
If you realize you can't make it
Sometimes the spend just isn't there. Before you force it, weigh your options honestly:
- Bring forward a genuine expense you'd have paid soon anyway — but only a real one.
- Call the issuer; occasionally they'll extend the window or lower the requirement, especially if you ask politely and have a reason.
- If neither works, let the bonus go. Missing one offer costs you nothing real. Buying junk or carrying a balance to "save" it costs you actual money.
A missed bonus is a non-event. A bonus paid for with interest or clutter is a genuine loss. Keep that asymmetry front of mind and you'll never make the expensive mistake.
This is exactly the kind of moving target that's easy to lose track of: a deadline counting down from your approval date and a spend total that excludes fees and advances. cardful keeps the window and your progress in view so a bonus you meant to earn doesn't slip away — and so you can see how a new application fits alongside everything else you carry.