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How to Combine Chase Points in Your Household
Moving points between your cards or to other members of your household can help you get better redemptions.
Dan Miller is a freelance writer and founder of PointsWithACrew.com, a site that helps families travel for free or cheap. He travels with his wife and six kids. His work has been featured by Business Insider, CreditCards.com and The Points Guy.
After spending seven years in the U.S. Air Force as an Arabic linguist, Carissa is now a freelance writer using points and miles to fund a four-year (and counting!) adventure. She previously worked as a reporter for The Points Guy. Her writing has since been featured in numerous publications, including Forbes, Business Insider, and The Balance. When she's not flying, you'll usually find her in a Priority Pass lounge somewhere, sipping tea and cursing slow Wi-Fi.
Jeanette Margle leads the home loans content team at NerdWallet, where she has worked since 2019. Previously, she led NerdWallet's travel rewards content team and spent three years editing for Upgraded Points while self-employed as an editor and writing coach.
Jeanette earned bachelor's degrees in journalism and Plan II Honors from the University of Texas at Austin and has a Master of Education from the University of Houston. A lifelong Texan, Jeanette grew up in a small town in the Hill Country and lives in the Houston area with her husband and daughters.
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Chase Ultimate Rewards® is one of the most popular rewards programs out there. Chase offers multiple credit cards that earn points and many ways to redeem them.
If you have more than one Chase credit card or if there is more than one Chase cardmember in your household, you may be able to transfer points between cards. This makes it possible to use your combined pool of points to book the trip you actually want to take — and one that might not have otherwise been possible if you both had points to your name but none sufficient to book what you need.
By combining points strategically in your household, you may get more rewards or unlock more ways to redeem them. Here’s how:
Why combine Chase points in your household?
Just because your card pays you in Chase Ultimate Rewards® points doesn't mean those points will end up offering the same value as another card. A huge reason behind this is the power of transfer partners, which are accessible to holders of the Sapphire cards.
🤓Nerdy Tip
Pairing some cash-back earning cards, such as the Chase Freedom Flex®, with a card that earns Ultimate Rewards®, like the Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card, allows all the rewards you earn to become transferable.
Not only does this give you more flexibility when it comes to redemption options, it can also allow you to redeem your points for more value than you’d get elsewhere.
Transfer points before closing a credit card
When you close a credit card account, you risk losing the points it has earned. But if you have another Chase card, you can preserve those points by transferring them.
How to transfer Chase Ultimate Rewards® between cards
Transferring your Chase points from one card to another is simple. You’ll first want to log in to your account, then head to the Ultimate Rewards® redemption page.
In the top right corner you’ll find a drop-down that lets you select from which card you’d like to redeem points.
Clicking this will bring up all available cards, as well as the option to combine points between accounts.
Once on the Combine Points page, you’ll be able to select how you’d like your points to be transferred between accounts.
You’re allowed to combine Chase points within a household, but the process is less convenient than transferring between personal cards. To add a household member to your own account, you must call the customer service number on the back of your Chase credit card.
From there, a Chase representative can help you add your household member’s Chase-branded card to your own account (so you'll need their account information, including name and credit card number, handy).
This small roadblock is just a one-time thing. Once your household member's account is linked via phone, it remains linked for future digital self-serve combine points redemptions. For families playing in what some might call two-player mode, merging points with a family member is a brilliant move.
Want to receive points from your household member instead of sending them? Have the other cardmember log in to their account and follow the steps above to add you as their transfer partner.
Note, however, that you can link only one person from your household for transfers and they must share your address.
What happens if you’d like to share your Chase points but don’t share an address with someone? Although you won’t be able to directly combine your Chase points with another user, you can still transfer them directly to their loyalty accounts.
To do so, you’ll want to make them an authorized user on your account. Once done, you can then transfer your rewards straight to whichever hotel or airline account you’d like.
Be aware that even if you have more than one authorized user on your account, you’re still limited to transferring your points to a single designated user.
If you want to combine Chase points with a household member
The ability to transfer Chase Ultimate Rewards® makes this currency especially valuable. Because points tied to different Chase credit cards are worth different amounts, it’s usually a good idea to combine your points into the account with the highest value. After all, two wallets are better than one, and earning with your family members can really boost your points game.
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