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All aboard! The Points Guy has extensive coverage of train travel with reviews, features, deals and tips for maximizing your trip by rail...

The best credit cards to use for train travel

The best credit cards to use for train travel

All aboard! The Points Guy has extensive coverage of train travel with reviews, features, deals and tips for maximizing your trip by rail.

As the CEO of the Rail Passengers Association, Jim Mathews travels up to 17,000 miles a year. That may not sound like a lot when compared to air travel, but Mathews reminds us that those are surface miles, which adds up to 75 one-way trips between Washington, D.C., and New York City.

The association, based in D.C., represents more than 40 million rail passengers in the U.S. with a mission to improve and expand conventional intercity and regional passenger train services, support higher-speed-rail initiatives, increase connectivity among all forms of transportation and ensure safety for the country’s train and passengers.

When it comes time to pay for his travel, he uses two cards: the Wells Fargo® Business Platinum Credit Card and the Amtrak Guest Rewards World Mastercard. The Wells Fargo card is used for business travel. It comes with $500 cash back or 50,000 points when you enroll in the Business Cards Rewards program and after you spend $3,000 on the card in the first three months of the account opening, with no annual fee. Earn either 1.5% cash back for every dollar spent or 1 point for every dollar spent and receive 1,000 bonus points when your company spend is $1,000 or more in any monthly billing period. (The information for the Wells Fargo Business Platinum card has been collected independently by The Points Guy. The card details on this page have not been reviewed or provided by the card issuer.)

The Amtrak Guest Rewards card offers 3x points for Amtrak travel, including onboard purchases, and 2x on other travel, including airlines, car rental agencies, hotels, motels, inns, resorts, cruise lines, commuter rail, non-Amtrak passenger rail and travel agencies. You’ll earn 1x on all other purchases.

Mathews’ personal credit card (no surprise) is Amtrak Guest Rewards, because he earns solid points per dollar on rail and air travel purchases. Because the points are tied to what you pay for a fare, the more you spend the more you earn. Other perks include the free companion and upgrade coupons he receives each year the card is renewed, and the 5% Amtrak Guest Rewards point rebate for redemptions made on Amtrak travel. Also, the card doesn’t charge foreign transaction fees.

Like Mathews, Amtrak Guest Rewards cardholders earn 1,000 Tier Qualifying Points (TQPs) toward elite status after spending $5,000 in a calendar year on the card (up to 4,000 TQPs a year), a 20% rebate on food and beverage purchases onboard when using the card and a complimentary station lounge pass upon account opening, worth up to $25 in Amtrak travel.

Typically, Mathews redeems his points to cover his wife’s weekly trips between Washington, D.C. and New York. “Otherwise, she would take the bus, despite me being the CEO of the Rail Passengers Association,” he joked.

Of course, the Amtrak Guest Rewards card isn’t the only game in town when it comes to earning points for train travel. Here is how it compares to some other great options for travelers exploring the world by rail:

Comparison Overview

Card Amtrak Guest Rewards World Mastercard Capital One® Venture® Rewards Credit Card Chase Sapphire Preferred Card Chase Sapphire Reserve Citi Premier℠ Card
Annual fee $79 $0 intro for the first year, $95 after $95 $450 $95
Earning rates 3x points on Amtrak travel, 2x on other travel and 1x on everything else 2x miles on all spending 2x points on travel and dining, 1x on everything else 3x points on travel and dining, 1x on everything else 3x points on travel, 2x at restaurants and on entertainment,  1x on everything else
Sign-up bonus 40,000 points after you spend $2,500 within 90 days of account opening 50,000 miles after you spend $3,000 on purchases within the first three months from account opening 60,000 points after you spend $4,000 on purchases in the first three months 50,000 points after you spend $4,000 on purchases in the first three months

60,000 points after spending $4,000 in purchases within the first three months of account opening

TPG points value* 2.5 cents 1.4 cents 1.25 cents 1.5 cents 1.7 cents
Credits N/A N/A Up to $300 annual travel credit, Global Entry/TSA PreCheck application fee credit (up to $100) N/A
Benefits One free station lounge pass per year; annual companion, upgrade coupons; and 5% rebate when booking travel with points Transfer miles to 15 airline partners; up to $100 credit for Global Entry/TSA PreCheck Transfer points to 10 airline/3 hotel partners; travel insurance and purchase protections $300 annual travel credit; transfer points to 10 airline/three hotel partners; up to $100 credit for Global Entry/TSA PreCheck; travel insurance; and Priority Pass Select membership Points worth 25% more on airfare when redeemed at ThankYou.com; transfer points to 15 airline partners

*Bonus valuation based on TPG valuations and not provided by issuer.

The information for the Citi premier card has been collected independently by The Points Guy. The card details on this page have not been reviewed or provided by the card issuer.

Bottom Line

If you travel regularly on Amtrak like Mathews, having the Amtrak Guest Rewards in your wallet is a smart choice, thanks to the 3x points earned on trains and 2x points on a very generous definition of travel, along with the train-related perks that come with the card. We also really like the 2.5 cents per dollar spent you earn on the card, based on current TPG valuations. But in order to get the best value from your points, you need to redeem them on Amtrak travel (although you can also redeem them for hotels, car rentals, cruises, dining, entertainment and gift cards).

The Chase Sapphire Reserve and the Citi Premier are the only cards that match Amtrak Guest Rewards when it comes to higher points for train travel. All four of the comparison cards, including the Capital One Venture and the Chase Sapphire Preferred, offer higher points for dining. And all four cards allow you to transfer points to airline partners; the Reserve and Preferred also allow transfers to three hotel partners.

Featured photo by Katie Genter/The Points Guy.

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