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The Apple Card Is an Average Rewards Card


We have more details on Apple’s forthcoming credit card with Goldman Sachs after today’s Apple event, and if you were hoping for a rewards card that changes the game, well, this isn’t it.

Here are the main features of the Apple Card, some of which were first reported by the Wall Street Journal well before today’s announcement:

  • Users who use Apple Card with Apple Pay will get two percent back on all purchases, and three percent back on all Apple purchases. If you use the physical card, you get one percent back.

  • That cash back is available as“Daily Cash,” a program that makes your cash back available on your Apple Cash card each day—quicker than your standard card, assuming you use Apple Pay.

  • It is built into Apple Wallet, meaning you can manage your card on your iPhone, if you’re into that kind of thing. You can sign up for it via Apple Wallet.

  • There are no fees: No annual fee, foreign transactions fees or late fees are charged, plus no penalty interest rate is applied.

  • It “encourages” customers to pay less interest, which is Apple-speak for “the app shows you how much more money you will owe in interest if you don’t pay off your balance.”

  • The physical card is titanium, and will not display a card number, CVV security code, expiration date or signature.

Other features

The Apple card does differentiate itself in a few ways. Because it’s integrated into your Apple wallet/smart phone, it can give you a holistic look at your spending, almost like it has Mint or another budgeting app built in.

“Apple Card uses machine learning and Apple Maps to clearly label transactions with merchant names and locations,” Apple notes. “Purchases are automatically totaled and organized by color-coded categories such as Food and Drinks, Shopping and Entertainment.” It will also provide spending overviews.

And perhaps most importantly, it bills itself as “fee free.” From Apple’s website:

There are no fees associated with Apple Card: no annual, late, international or over-the-limit fees. Apple Card’s goal is to provide interest rates that are among the lowest in the industry and if a customer misses a payment, they will not be charged a penalty rate.

That said, “the ‘no fees’ pitch isn’t as novel as it may sound, though,” says Ted Rossman, industry analyst at CreditCards.com. “That angle is also touted by cards like the PenFed Promise Visa and the Citi Simplicity.”

The Apple Card’s interest rates will be based on the prime rate and can fluctuate, depending on the user’s credit report.

Drawbacks and other options

Those are some decent perks, but overall the Apple Card is just an ok rewards card. The biggest drawback is that you need to use it with Apple Pay to maximize your rewards.

“For those who routinely shop at local neighborhood bodegas or other establishments that don’t have Apple Pay, you can expect only one percent back on your purchase,” says Sara Rathner, NerdWallet’s credit card expert. And you can easily beat that with other no-fee rewards cards, as I wrote before:

There are other rewards cards that currently offer two percent back on most purchases, including the Citi Double Cash. The

Wells Fargo Cash Wise card

gives cardholders 1.5 percent back on all purchases, while the

Capital One Savor card

* offers four

percent back on dining, two percent back on groceries and one percent back on everything else.

To emphasize the Citi Double Cash card, you’ll get two percent back on all purchases, not just Apple Pay purchases, though you get one percent when you swipe and one percent when you pay, not all at once.

“Frankly, I’m underwhelmed. This card will get a lot of headlines, but its bark is greater than its bite,” says Rossman. “People will sign up for it, but that will be mostly because they love Apple, not because this card is better than anything that already exists.”

As Rossman notes, it’s not actually even the best card for Apple Pay rewards. “If you want to maximize Apple Pay, the U.S. Bank Altitude Reserve Visa Infinite card gives three points per dollar on mobile wallet spending—worth three percent cash back or 4.5 percent off travel,” he says.

Update 3:50 p.m.: This post has been updated with information on the card’s interest rate.

Correction 3/26: This post has been updated to reflect that the Savor card offers four percent back on dining, not three percent.