Chase Sapphire Preferred vs. Reserve — Which One Wins?
The $155 effective fee gap between these two cards is the question. Here’s the exact math on when the Reserve pays off and when Preferred is the smarter pick.
After credits, Reserve’s effective fee is $250 vs. Preferred’s ~$45 — a $205 gap on paper, but the $300 credit vs. $50 hotel credit means the real comparison is roughly $155 in extra value Reserve must deliver. Reserve is worth it if you use lounges 5+ times per year (~$150 value) and redeem enough points through Chase Travel to benefit from the 1.5x vs. 1.25x multiplier. For most people who travel 2–4 times per year, Preferred wins on net value. Use the rewards calculator to model your exact numbers.
Side-by-side comparison
| Feature | Sapphire Preferred ($95/yr) | Sapphire Reserve ($550/yr) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual fee | $95 | $550 |
| Annual travel credit | $50 hotel credit only | $300 on any travel |
| Effective annual fee | ~$45 (after hotel credit) | ~$250 (after $300 credit) |
| Dining earn rate | 3x | 3x |
| Travel earn rate | 5x Chase Travel; 2x other travel | 3x all travel |
| Point value via Chase Travel | 1.25c per point | 1.5c per point |
| Airport lounge access | ✗ None | ✓ Priority Pass (unlimited) |
| Primary rental car insurance | ✓ Primary | ✓ Primary |
| Global Entry / TSA PreCheck credit | ✗ | ✓ Up to $120 |
| Welcome bonus (typical) | 75,000 pts after $5,000/3mo | 60,000 pts after $4,000/3mo |
| Transfer partners | 14 airlines/hotels 1:1 | 14 airlines/hotels 1:1 (same) |
| Minimum credit score | 700+ | 720+ |
Full credit score guide: Chase Sapphire Preferred credit score requirements →
The break-even math
After credits, Reserve costs ~$155 more than Preferred per year. To justify that gap, you need $155 in extra value from Reserve’s benefits. Here’s how that adds up:
- Priority Pass lounge visits: If you use a lounge 5+ times per year ($30 value each), that’s $150+ in lounge value alone — nearly the full gap. Frequent international travelers typically use lounges far more.
- Better point redemption (1.5x vs. 1.25x): On 100,000 points redeemed via Chase Travel, Reserve yields $1,500 vs. Preferred’s $1,250 — a $250 difference. Chase UR transfers 1:1 to United and Southwest — if you transfer to partners instead of redeeming through the portal, the multiplier difference disappears.
- Global Entry credit ($120): Applies every 4.5 years, ~$27/year in amortized value.
- 3x on all travel vs. 2x other travel: On $5,000/yr in non-Chase-portal travel spend, Reserve earns 15,000 pts vs. 10,000 pts — 5,000 extra points worth ~$75 at 1.5c.
Bottom line: Use 5+ airport lounges per year and redeem 50,000+ points annually through Chase Travel → Reserve wins. Use fewer lounges and redeem fewer points → Preferred wins. Model your specific numbers in the rewards calculator.
Not sure either card fits? The best travel cards with no annual fee still earn transferable points — including Chase Freedom Unlimited, which transfers to the same 14 partners when paired with any Sapphire card.