Most People Leave $500-$2,000/Year on the Table
The average American household spends about $6,000/month across all categories. With the right card setup, you could earn 2-4% effective cash back on that spend — $1,440 to $2,880/year. But most people earn under 1.5% because they use one or two cards without thinking about category optimization.
The Multi-Card Strategy
The key insight is that no single card is best for everything. The Amex Gold earns 4x on dining and groceries but only 1x on gas. The Chase Freedom Unlimited earns 1.5x everywhere but nothing bonus. The optimal strategy uses 3-5 cards, each covering the categories where it earns the highest rate.
Step 1: Know Your Spending
Track your monthly spending by category. The big ones for most people:
- Dining/restaurants — including takeout and delivery
- Groceries — supermarkets (not Walmart/Target, which code as general merchandise)
- Gas — filling stations
- Travel — flights, hotels, car rentals
- Online shopping — Amazon, general e-commerce
- Streaming — Netflix, Spotify, etc.
- Everything else — the base rate category
Step 2: Match Cards to Categories
For each high-spend category, find the card with the best earn rate after accounting for annual fees and spending caps.
Common optimal assignments:
- Dining: Amex Gold (4x), Capital One Savor (3%), or Citi Strata Premier (3x)
- Groceries: Amex Gold (4x up to $25K), Blue Cash Preferred (6% up to $6K), or Capital One SavorOne (3%)
- Gas: Costco Anywhere Visa (4%), BofA Customized Cash (pick gas for 2-5.25%)
- Travel: Chase Sapphire Reserve (3x + portal), Venture X (2x + credits), or Amex Platinum (5x flights)
- Everything else: Chase Freedom Unlimited (1.5x UR), Citi Double Cash (2%), or Wells Fargo Active Cash (2%)
Step 3: Account for Ecosystems
Cards within the same ecosystem (Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One Miles) can pool points. This matters because having a premium card like the CSR or Venture X makes the points from lower-tier cards more valuable through transfer partners.
This is where manual optimization gets hard — should you pay $95 for the CSP to unlock transfers for CFU points? The answer depends on how many CFU points you earn, your transfer confidence, and the marginal cost.
Step 4: Net Out Fees
A card that earns $500/year but costs $550/year is worse than a free card earning $400. Always compare net value (earnings minus effective annual fee). Account for credits you'll actually use — a $300 travel credit is worth $300 only if you'd spend that on travel anyway.
Why You Should Use an Optimizer
Steps 1-4 are manageable for comparing 2-3 cards. But when you have 34+ cards with different earn structures, caps, tiered rates, and fee credits, the interactions become exponentially complex.
OptimalCardSetup handles all of this mathematically. Enter your spending, and the solver evaluates every valid combination to find the provably best setup. It takes 2 minutes instead of hours of spreadsheet work — and it's guaranteed to find the optimal answer.
Try the optimizer now — it's free for up to 3 cards.