Chase Sapphire Preferred Vs. Reserve: Which Is Better?

Chase Sapphire Preferred Vs. Reserve: Which Is Better?

14

The Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card and Chase Sapphire Reserve® Card are both compelling travel rewards credit cards. In this Chase Sapphire Preferred vs. Reserve showdown, I’d like to compare the two cards — while they have a lot of similarities, they also have a lot of differences.

Let’s start by talking about what the two cards have in common, then we’ll talk about the differences, and then we’ll talk about how to decide which card is a better fit for you.

What both Chase Sapphire cards have in common

The Chase Sapphire Preferred and Chase Sapphire Reserve have quite a bit in common. Among other things:

Link: Learn more about the Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card or Chase Sapphire Reserve® Card

Chase Sapphire Preferred vs. Reserve at a glance

Feature
Chase Sapphire Preferred
Chase Sapphire Reserve
Annual fee
$95
$795
Welcome bonus
75,000 points after $5,000 in 3 months
150,000 points after $6,000 in 3 months
Authorized user fee
$0
$195 per person
Chase Travel bookings
5x points
8x points
Direct airfare & hotel bookings
2x points (all travel)
4x points
Dining
3x points
3x points
Streaming & online grocery
3x points
1x points
Lyft purchases
5x points (through 9/30/2027)
5x points (through 9/30/2027)
Anniversary points bonus
10% on base earnings
None
Annual travel credit
None
Up to $300
Annual hotel credit
$50 (Chase Travel)
Up to $500 (The Edit by Chase Travel)
Annual dining credit
None
Up to $300
Annual entertainment credit
None
Up to $300 (Stubhub & viagogo)
Apple TV+ & Apple Music
None
Complimentary (through 6/22/2027)
Lyft credit
None
$10 monthly (through 9/30/2027)
DoorDash DashPass
Complimentary (through 12/31/2027)
Complimentary (through 12/31/2027)
DoorDash credits
None
Up to $300 annually
Priority Pass™ Select
No
Yes (unlimited visits, 2 guests)
Chase Sapphire Lounges
No
Yes (unlimited)
Air Canada Lounges
No
Yes (at select locations)
Global Entry/TSA PreCheck credit
No
Up to $120 every 4 years
Primary rental car coverage
Yes
Yes
Foreign transaction fees
None
None
Points Boost (elevated redemptions)
Limited
Up to 2.5 cents per point
Both cards offer 3x points on dining globally

Advantages of the Chase Sapphire Preferred

There’s a lot to love about the Chase Sapphire Preferred. The card has a $95 annual fee, and offers:

  • 5x points on Chase Travel℠ bookings, 3x points on dining, streaming services, and online grocery store purchases (excluding Target, Walmart, and wholesale clubs), and 2x points on travel
  • A $50 hotel credit every cardmember year, usable through Chase Travel
  • The ability to add authorized users at no extra cost, so their spending counts toward your points accrual
  • The card has a welcome offer of 75,000 bonus points after spending $5,000 within the first three months

So, what makes the Sapphire Preferred better than the Sapphire Reserve? The significantly lower annual fee, the ability to add authorized users at no extra cost, the 3x points on streaming services and online grocery store purchases, the 2x points on all travel purchases (as opposed to just a bonus on airfare and hotel bookings), and the $50 annual hotel credit.

Read a full review of the Chase Sapphire Preferred.

Get a $50 hotel credit annually with the card

Advantages of the Chase Sapphire Reserve

There’s a lot to love about the Chase Sapphire Reserve. The card has a $795 annual fee, and offers:

What makes the Sapphire Reserve better than the Sapphire Preferred? I’d consider the $300 travel credit to basically be good as cash, reducing the annual fee by that much. That’s before considering all the other credits and perks.

For that, the major advantages are the valuable airport lounge access, 4x points on direct airfare and hotel bookings (rather than 2x points on all travel purchases with the Sapphire Preferred), and the ability to potentially redeem points at a higher rate with Points Boost.

Read a full review of the Chase Sapphire Reserve.

Earn 4x points on direct airfare bookings with the card

Which Chase Sapphire personal card is better?

As you can see above, there are pros and cons to both the Chase Sapphire Preferred and Chase Sapphire Reserve. On an ongoing basis, how should you decide which of these two cards makes the most sense for you?

In terms of the long term value, I think for most people, the Sapphire Preferred will be the default option, since it has generous benefits and a lower annual fee. After all, people don’t want to pay more in annual fees than they have to. However, there are a few general circumstances under which I think the Sapphire Reserve is better than the Sapphire Preferred in the long run.

Let me note that for mental accounting purposes, I consider the real “cost” difference between the two cards to be around $400 per year. The Sapphire Preferred has a $95 annual fee, while the Sapphire Reserve has a $795 annual fee, but I subtract $300 from that, due to the value of the travel credit, which everyone should be able to maximize.

With that in mind, let me share the areas where you can get significantly more value with the Sapphire Reserve than the Sapphire Preferred (this doesn’t consider the welcome offer, which should also be factored in).

Do you value a Priority Pass™ Select membership?

One of the major benefits of the Chase Sapphire Reserve is that it offers a Priority Pass™ Select membership. This offers unlimited lounge visits, and you can take two guests into lounges with you at no extra cost.

Nowadays several premium credit cards come with a Priority Pass™ Select membership — for those without a membership, this could easily be worth a significant amount, while for those with a membership, it might not be worth anything.

A Priority Pass membership can be valuable

Do you value Chase Sapphire Lounge access?

In addition to a Priority Pass™ Select membership, it’s worth calling out that the Chase Sapphire Reserve specifically offers unlimited access to Chase Sapphire Lounges. This lounge network is growing at a fast pace, and some of the lounges are really stellar, like the locations in Boston (BOS)New York (LGA), and Philadelphia (PHL).

These lounges are amazing, and feature a la carte dining, a great buffet and drink selection, beautiful decor, and some unique amenities. While all Priority Pass members can access these lounges at least once per year, those with a Priority Pass™ Select membership through the Chase Sapphire Reserve get unlimited annual visits, and can also bring guests, so that’s a major advantage of the card.

Chase Sapphire Lounges are pretty awesome

Do you value Air Canada Lounge access?

The Chase Sapphire Reserve offers access to select Air Canada Lounges at participating locations. To enter, you simply need to present your eligible credit card, plus a same-day boarding pass for a flight operated by Air Canada or a Star Alliance member airline.

Access Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounges

Do you plan to add authorized users?

The decision of whether or not you plan to add authorized users to the card could sway the decision one way or another. The Chase Sapphire Preferred charges no fee for authorized users, while the Chase Sapphire Reserve charges $195 per authorized user.

If you strictly want to add authorized users in order to be rewarded for their spending, then being able to add authorized users at no cost on the Sapphire Preferred is probably a major advantage. However, others may value being able to add authorized users on the Sapphire Reserve at the cost of $195 per person.

That’s because authorized users receive great perks, including all the lounge access benefits, from the Priority Pass™ Select membership, to Chase Sapphire Lounge access, to Air Canada Lounge access. Everyone has to decide for themselves.

Authorized user perks differ significantly between cards

What does your travel spending profile look like?

Both cards offer bonus points on travel purchases, though the exact types of purchases that are rewarded differ:

  • The Chase Sapphire Preferred earns 5x points on Chase Travel bookings, and 2x points on all other travel purchases, before the 10% anniversary bonus points (calculated from base earnings)
  • The Chase Sapphire Reserve earns 8x points on Chase Travel bookings, and 4x points on direct airfare and hotel bookings

I value Ultimate Rewards points at 1.7 cents each, so to me, we’re talking about a return of anywhere from 3.4% to 13.6%, depending on the type of purchase.

Obviously if you’d book a lot of travel with Chase Travel or directly with airlines and hotels, there’s a huge advantage to the Sapphire Reserve. Meanwhile if you spend a lot on non-airfare and hotel bookings, then the Sapphire Preferred has the obvious advantage.

If you spend a lot on travel, the cards are quite different

How much value can you get from credits?

Nowadays the Chase Sapphire Reserve has a way higher annual fee than the Chase Sapphire Preferred, so in order to decide whether the fee is worth it, you have to figure out how much value you can get from the premium card’s credits and benefits.

As is the case with many premium cards, you have a high annual fee, but then a bunch of perks that take effort to use, but can ultimately offset the annual fee. There’s a $700 difference in the annual fee between the two cards. Then you have the $300 travel credit, which I consider to be good as cash, meaning the real cost difference between the products is $400.

So you should decide how much value you can get from all of the card’s credits, since there’s often a bit of a barrier to maximizing them. I covered these above, but we’re talking about everything from a $300 dining credit, to a $500 hotel credit, to a subscription to Apple TV+ and Apple Music.

In my own situation, I can easily maximize the $300 dining credit, since some restaurants that I frequent are on the list. Furthermore, I value an Apple TV+ and Apple Music subscription, since I currently pay for (part of) that.

For me, that essentially justifies the difference in fee between the two cards, and makes the more premium card worth it. However, everyone has to crunch the numbers for themselves.

How much value can you get from the card credits?

Do you plan on using the Points Boost feature?

If you want to transfer your Ultimate Rewards points to airline and hotel partners, like World of Hyatt, then there’s no difference in redemption values between the points earned on these two cards.

With Chase’s Points Boost feature, you can get up to 2.5 cents per point toward select airfare and hotel redemptions depending on the card. Now, personally I consider these redemption values to be quite limiting, so it’s not how I’d choose to redeem my points, at least not broadly.

That being said, when these are available, the Chase Sapphire Reserve sometimes offers a higher redemption value than the Chase Sapphire Preferred, so everyone has to decide for themselves on the value of that.

Some redemptions offer different values between cards

Chase Sapphire card FAQs

Is the Chase Sapphire Reserve worth the higher annual fee compared to the Preferred?
It depends on how much value you can get from the card’s credits and benefits. The Sapphire Reserve has a $795 annual fee, while the Sapphire Preferred has a $95 annual fee. However, the $300 annual travel credit on the Reserve is good as cash, which effectively reduces the difference between the two cards to around $400 per year. From there, the Reserve offers a $300 dining credit, up to $500 in hotel credits, up to $300 in entertainment credits, a complimentary Apple TV+ and Apple Music subscription, and more. If you can maximize these credits and value lounge access, the Reserve is likely worth it. Otherwise, the Preferred may be the better long term option.
Do the Chase Sapphire Preferred and Reserve earn the same Ultimate Rewards points?
Yes, both cards earn Chase Ultimate Rewards points, and both allow you to transfer points at the same rates to the Ultimate Rewards airline and hotel partners. The difference is in the earning structure. The Sapphire Preferred earns 5x points on Chase Travel bookings, 3x points on dining, streaming services, and online grocery store purchases (excluding Target, Walmart, and wholesale clubs), and 2x points on all other travel. The Sapphire Reserve earns 8x points on Chase Travel bookings, 4x points on direct airfare and hotel bookings, and 3x points on dining.
Can authorized users on the Chase Sapphire Reserve access airport lounges?
Yes. The Chase Sapphire Reserve charges $195 per authorized user, but authorized users receive great perks, including all the lounge access benefits. That means authorized users get a Priority Pass™ Select membership, Chase Sapphire Lounge access, and Air Canada Lounge access. The Chase Sapphire Preferred charges no fee for authorized users, but it also doesn’t include any of these lounge access benefits.
Which Chase Sapphire card is better for travel spending?
It depends on what kind of travel you book. The Sapphire Reserve earns 8x points on Chase Travel bookings and 4x points on direct airfare and hotel bookings. The Sapphire Preferred earns 5x points on Chase Travel bookings and 2x points on all other travel purchases, before the 10% anniversary bonus points (calculated from base earnings). If you book a lot of travel directly with airlines and hotels or through Chase Travel, the Reserve has the advantage. If you spend on travel categories beyond just airfare and hotels, the Preferred’s 2x on all travel may be more useful.
What annual credits come with the Chase Sapphire Preferred vs. Reserve?
The Chase Sapphire Preferred offers a $50 hotel credit every cardmember year, usable through Chase Travel. The Chase Sapphire Reserve offers significantly more credits, including an up to $300 annual travel credit, an up to $300 annual dining credit, an up to $500 annual hotel credit through The Edit by Chase Travel, an up to $300 annual live entertainment credit, and a complimentary subscription to Apple TV+ and Apple Music through June 22, 2027. The Reserve also offers a $10 monthly Lyft credit through September 30, 2027, and up to $300 in annual DoorDash credits.

Bottom line

Both the Chase Sapphire Preferred and Chase Sapphire Reserve are incredibly compelling cards. While the Sapphire Reserve perhaps gets a bit more attention nowadays, the Sapphire Preferred is incredibly compelling as well.

The major advantages of the Sapphire Reserve are the lounge access, the potentially better rewards structure, and the credits helping to offset the annual fee. The major advantage of the Sapphire Preferred is that it has a much lower annual fee, you can add authorized users at no extra cost, and the 2x points on all travel purchases is superior for some.

If you have a Chase Sapphire card, do you think the Preferred or Reserve is more valuable nowadays?

Conversations (14)
The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.
Type your response here.

If you'd like to participate in the discussion, please adhere to our commenting guidelines. Anyone can comment, and your email address will not be published. Register to save your unique username and earn special OMAAT reputation perks!

  1. Big Jon Guest

    Dear Chase, do NOT refresh or even touch sapphire preferred. Instead, create a mid tier sapphire card (3x grocery, restaurant, and travel minimum offering with $395 max fee). And DO add 3x travel back to CSR.

    Make freedom flex like Citi custom cash or the USBANK cash+ card.

    That’s all!!!!

  2. iamhere Guest

    I liked the comparison chart, but if you are one person the CSR may be worth the annual fee. For more than one person, might as well do the Preferred card. It is becoming more difficult with Chase to take advantage of the benefits and $195 for an additional user is steep. The details are not as simple as you suggest in the chart because the $300 dining credit for example can only be used...

    I liked the comparison chart, but if you are one person the CSR may be worth the annual fee. For more than one person, might as well do the Preferred card. It is becoming more difficult with Chase to take advantage of the benefits and $195 for an additional user is steep. The details are not as simple as you suggest in the chart because the $300 dining credit for example can only be used at a limited list of restaurants and some of the benefits cancel because are also offered by other cards if you hold them, so it also depends on the bigger strategy. The comment that said "both suck" - LOL and in some way this is true.

  3. NoVA Rick Guest

    One of the most valuable features of both cards not mentioned here is travel insurance. Medical evacuation coverage (higher with CSR) exceeds many standalone policies. This could be serious during a foreign trip.

  4. Hk Guest

    You have all these cool random pictures - on thumbnail and in the middle of contents - that would be nice if we know where they are. Maybe not for room interior but hotel outside and the view are usually awesome in your pictures.

    1. A.Man Guest

      Right click. Open image in new tab. Read the URL. Ben does a great job of imbedding descriptions, locations, info in the photos.

  5. JustinB Diamond

    Does anyone have both?

    I have and plan to keep the reserve, but 2x on all travel is compelling for rental cars, trains, etc.

  6. JD Guest

    Thanks for the detailed comparison, Ben! I was debating between the CSP vs CSR and ultimately decided on the CSP. It's hard for me to justify the lounge access since I try to get to the airport as close to boarding time as possible. I super commute every week and simply want to spend as little time at the airport. And I also simply don't have the patience to try to maximize all these credits and remind myself to use it.

  7. spastores2 New Member

    I've had the CSR for almost ten years. Agree that the card has evolved, and become slightly more difficult to take advantage of all the perks. Losing the 3x category on all travel was painful, and the annual fee jumping up to $795 was a tough pill to swallow.

    That being said, I've extracted about $1,977 (about 2.5x the annual fee) of value from the card this year, and we're not even halfway through 2026....

    I've had the CSR for almost ten years. Agree that the card has evolved, and become slightly more difficult to take advantage of all the perks. Losing the 3x category on all travel was painful, and the annual fee jumping up to $795 was a tough pill to swallow.

    That being said, I've extracted about $1,977 (about 2.5x the annual fee) of value from the card this year, and we're not even halfway through 2026. What's worked for me is setting monthly reminders to maximize each of the benefits. I've already used the $300 credit, Apple Music, Stubhub, and use the Doordash credits every month. I live in LA, so I'm also looking forward to the Sapphire Lounge at LAX opening later this year.

    I think it's still a good card, but you just need to be diligent about maximizing all the perks.

    1. Jack Guest

      Putting the CSR's warts to the side, there absolutely are individuals -- such as yourself -- who live in areas in which the CSR can be exploited. But, as Samar notes below, the time and effort required to extract value is the challenge. You say the card requires diligence and I am a diligent guy. But, I can garner greater value from (yet another) Amex Platinum with far less effort. Then, combine them with a Ritz card for Sapphire Lounge access. Best of luck to you.

  8. George S. Guest

    For many, the free cash back card may be the best choice. For example, the following combination of cards:
    - Freedom Flex and Discover for 5% rotating categories
    - Freedom Unlimited for 3% dining and drug stores
    - Amex Cash Back for 6% on groceries (no gift cards) up to $6k spend and 3% on gas, parking, trains, buses and ride shares. $95 / year cost, but worth it if high grocery bill
    - City Double Cash for 2% back on everything else

    1. Jack Guest

      You identify a key point. (No pun intended.) There are cards a person uses for points earning on spending. And, in so many cases, the CSR really isn't the weapon for choice for spending. What's left are the perks/coupons. And, in so many cases, the CSR really isn't the weapons of choice for the perks/coupons either.

  9. Samar Gold

    I just PCed to the Preferred from the Reserve. The killer for me on the Reserve was the difficulty of using the Edit credits. For the most part, the hotel was significantly more expensive or would simply not show up on Chase Travel. Too much of a PITA to use.

    Thankfully I have the Ritz-Carlton card, so I don’t lose Sapphire Lounge access (important since I like the PHX T4 lounge better than the Centurion).

    1. Jack Guest

      You caught that is was a trick question.

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

NoVA Rick Guest

One of the most valuable features of both cards not mentioned here is travel insurance. Medical evacuation coverage (higher with CSR) exceeds many standalone policies. This could be serious during a foreign trip.

1
Hk Guest

You have all these cool random pictures - on thumbnail and in the middle of contents - that would be nice if we know where they are. Maybe not for room interior but hotel outside and the view are usually awesome in your pictures.

1
Big Jon Guest

Dear Chase, do NOT refresh or even touch sapphire preferred. Instead, create a mid tier sapphire card (3x grocery, restaurant, and travel minimum offering with $395 max fee). And DO add 3x travel back to CSR. Make freedom flex like Citi custom cash or the USBANK cash+ card. That’s all!!!!

0
Meet Ben Schlappig, OMAAT Founder
5,883,136 Miles Traveled

43,914,800 Words Written

47,187 Posts Published

Keep Exploring OMAAT