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How to Donate Credit Card Points, Miles or Cash Back to Charity
Claire Tsosie is a managing editor for the Travel Rewards team at NerdWallet. She started her career on the credit cards team as a writer, then worked as an editor on New Markets. Her work has been featured by Forbes, USA Today and The Associated Press.
Sam Kemmis is a former NerdWallet travel rewards expert specializing in airline and hotel loyalty programs. In a previous professional life, he wrote comedy until a nomadic lifestyle and a lifelong obsession with saving money turned his attention to travel rewards. He is no longer funny. His work has been featured by The Associated Press, The Points Guy and Fast Company. He has spoken about travel rewards at CardCon, the Altitude conference and AwardWallet's "Award Travel 101" podcast. He is based in Ojai, California, and teaches mindfulness meditation because that's what you do in Ojai.
Mary Flory leads NerdWallet's growing team of assigning editors at large. Before joining NerdWallet's content team, she had spent more than 12 years developing content strategies, managing newsrooms and mentoring writers and editors. Her previous experience includes being an executive editor at the American Marketing Association and an editor at news and feature syndicate Content That Works.
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Forgotten loyalty accounts, unused sign-up bonuses, cobweb-covered miles. The ghosts of credit cards past might be a downer for you, but donating unused rewards to charity could help those in need — and might even keep the rest of your points and miles from expiring.
Charities and nonprofits leverage donated points and miles in support of their missions. Make-A-Wish Foundation grants wishes for children with life-threatening medical conditions, oftentimes needing to secure airline travel for the children and their families. Miles4Migrants uses donated miles to help refugees and asylum seekers reach a new home.
You can donate credit card points and frequent flyer miles to many organizations through the reward programs themselves. The points are usually converted to cash for organizations that can’t use the points directly.
How it works
Most airline, hotel and issuer loyalty programs let you donate miles, points and cash back to charity with just a few clicks. Programs that allow donations are listed in the next section. Here’s how you can contribute:
Go to your loyalty program’s charity page and log in to your account.
Select a charity. Most programs let you donate to big-name nonprofits, such as the Red Cross, the Make-A-Wish Foundation and UNICEF. Others are more specialized.
Indicate how many points or miles or how much cash back you want to donate. Generally, rewards will be deducted from your balance right away, and you’ll get a confirmation email from your loyalty program or the charity.
Loyalty programs usually count donations as “account activity.” That means that if your points or miles are due to expire because of inactivity, a small donation could restart the clock. If you’ve been sitting on a motherlode of miles because you’re waiting for a sweet flight deal, making a mileage donation could keep those miles active.
To donate rewards, go to the website where you’d normally redeem them. If you have a co-branded airline card, for example, go to the airline’s website to donate, not the card issuer’s website. Here’s where you can give, based on the types of rewards you’ve earned.
You might think that if you donate 5,000 points, the charity will get 5,000 points — right? Well, not necessarily. It depends on your loyalty program and the charity.
Charities usually receive rewards donations in one of two ways:
Travel credit: Your charity might use your points or miles to cover a plane trip or hotel stay for one of its beneficiaries. For example, Fisher House, a nonprofit that supports military families, uses donated airline miles and hotel points to cover travel for wounded, injured or ill service members and their families.
Cash value: In some cases, your issuer might convert your points or miles into cash before sending it to the charity. The amount donated depends on the redemption value. With American Express, for example, the charity you choose would get 1 cent per 1 point for the first 500,000 points you donate in a calendar year. After that, it would get 0.5 cents per 1 point.
Most nonprofit websites clearly explain how they use point and mile donations. If you have any questions, you can always give them a call and get more information.
Be your own fundraiser
If you're diligent about using your points and miles, or don’t have any to donate, consider proactively earning them for the purpose of donation. Think of it as a mini-fundraiser.
Not sure where to start? Check our best travel credit cards and look for ones with valuable sign-up bonuses you can donate to your charity of choice. Watch out for annual fees — you don’t want to turn your goodwill gesture into a financial burden down the road.
Hypothetically, donating your rewards is simple: You find a good charity, unload your points, miles or cash back, and go about your business with a smile on your face. But there are a few other important things to know beforehand:
Donations aren’t tax-deductible. The IRS generally views credit card rewards as discounts, not income. So even if you earned thousands of dollars’ worth of credit card sign-up bonuses this year, Uncle Sam wouldn’t ask for a cut. The downside: You typically can’t claim a deduction for donating those rewards. However, you could get a tax deduction if you redeemed your rewards for cash back and used that money to make a separate donation.
Contributions are irreversible. For the most part, points and miles donations are final. So before you fork over your entire rewards balance, make sure you’ve thought things through.
Rewards can have low redemption values. If your issuer converts your rewards to dollars for donations, your gift might become less valuable. A low redemption value doesn’t have to be a deal breaker. A small donation is better than no donation, right? But if you want to make a bigger difference, consider making an additional cash donation or signing up to volunteer with the organization. The charity will appreciate the extra support.
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