Capital One Venture X Review

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Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card

The Capital One Venture X is a great premium card that I have, carry, and use. In some sense it competes against Amex Platinum and Sapphire Preferred – but at a much lower annual fee price point of $395 (see rates and fees).

Generous Initial Bonus

The card has an initial bonus to earn 75,000 bonus miles when you spend $4,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening, equal to $750 in travel.

Great Earning And Redemption

Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card is my go-to for spend that doesn’t earn in an accelerator category on other cards. It earns 10 miles per dollar on hotels and car rentals booked via Capital One Travel; 5 miles per dollar on vacation rentals and flights booked via Capital One Travel; and 2 miles per dollar on other purchases.

I like 2x earn as a catch-all for the bulk of my spending. And when it comes time to redeem, I prefer transferring points to airlines over using points at fixed value against travel expenses.

Capital One’s points do let you buy any flight without worrying about restricted award availability. This is most useful for people who use their rewards for domestic economy flights, and can be especially valuable over peak travel dates. This is done at a value of 1 cent apiece against travel purchases in the form of a statement credit.

The travel category also goes beyond flights to “rail lines, car rental agencies, limousine services, bus lines, cruise lines, taxi cabs, travel agents and time shares.” There’s no minimum points required when redeeming for a statement credit against travel spend.

Here are the partners for points transfers.

  • Star Alliance: Air Canada Aeroplan, Avianca LifeMiles, Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer, TAP Miles&Go, Turkish Airlines Miles&Smiles, EVA Air Infinity MileageLands

  • oneworld: Cathay Pacific Asia Miles, British Airways Executive Club, Finnair Plus, Qantas Frequent Flyer

  • SkyTeam: Aeromexico Club Premier, Air France KLM Flying Blue, Virgin Red

  • Non-alliance: Emirates Skywards, Etihad Guest, JetBlue

  • Hotels: Choice Privileges, Wyndham Rewards, Accor Live Limitless

I value Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer for booking Singapore’s own premium cabins (availability is better than with partners – indeed, many partners lack access to premium cabin long haul seats entirely).


Singapore Airlines Airbus A350

I find EVA Air to offer good availability to program members using their own miles. And TAP does a good job of making space available at greater than the lowest award price, making them an option when little else is available.


EVA Air Hello Kitty Business Class

Now that many Avios program make better award space available using a program’s own miles, Finnair and British Airways are quite useful. The same applies to Qantas for travel to and from Australia. And Cathay Pacific’s Asia Miles get access to more premium cabin award seats on that airline than oneworld partner programs do.


Cathay Pacific First Class


Cathay Pacific First Class

I’m on record that Air France KLM’s Flying Blue is the best program in SkyTeam. I’ve used their miles frequently for my own business class travels between the U.S. and Europe.


KLM Business Class


KLM Business Class Departure Gift, Delft Houses

Now that Virgin makes some awards available much cheaper both in points and money, I see them as a fantastic path to premium cabin travel to London. And there are few better deals than using Emirates miles to upgrade from business class to first class.


Emirates Airbus A380 Shower Spa

Airport Lounges

Capital One currently has lounges at Dallas – Fort Worth; Washington Dulles; Denver; and Las Vegas. They also have a restaurant concept, Capital One Landing, at Washington’s National airport and another one announced for New York LaGuardia.

The Venture X card comes with complimentary unlimited access to these lounges. You can also request a Priority Pass for access to their 1,300+ partner lounges.

The Capital One Landing at DCA has some of my absolute favorite lounge food in the U.S. I make reservations (not strictly speaking required) whenever booking tickets out of this airport.

I really like Capital One’s lounges as well. In my experience, even when the lounge is full it still is enjoyable, with plenty of seating and access to the bar. When there are queues, they manage it well – you can add yourself in their mobile app when you wish (for instance, when you make it to the airport before going through security).

And the food is really quite excellent. Plus, they offer a ‘grab and go’ concept with refrigerators near the entrance so you can visit and take something with you to your flight.

Since Capital One lets you add additional cardholders at fee (see rates and fees), you can extend lounge access as well.

Premium Benefits

To me, the card’s cost is an easy decision when I factor that you get $300 in credits annually for bookings made through Capital One Travel. I’m not personally a big fan of booking hotels through travel portals, so I just use the credit to buy an airline ticket.

While many card issuers have cut back on travel and product protections, Venture X offers trip delay reimbursement; cellphone protection (by using the card to pay your monthly wireless bill, your cellphone is protected for the next calendar month); auto rental collision damage waiver (count on built-in auto rental coverage, sve money by saying no at the counter — rent with your covered Visa Infinite card and get built-in Auto Rental Coverage); extended warranty protection (extend your qualifying product warranties automatically when you purchase using your Venture X card); and return protection.

You’ll also receive up to a $120 credit for Global Entry or TSA PreCheck®.

Worth Keeping This Card

The card is worth getting, spurred on by the initial bonus offer. It’s worth using for my ongoing spend. And it’s worth having for the benefits.

Each year I do the math. Between the $300 credit and an anniversary bonus of 10,000 bonus miles every account anniversary, starting on your first anniversary (worth $100 toward travel or transfer miles to partners), I’m covering my cost – and getting access to Capital One’s lounges which I enjoy.

Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Editorial note: any opinions, analyses, reviews or recommendations expressed in this article are those of the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any card issuer. Comments made in response to this post are not provided or commissioned nor have they been reviewed, approved, or otherwise endorsed by any bank. It is not the responsibility of advertisers Citibank, Chase, American Express, Barclays, Capital One or any other advertiser to ensure that questions are answered, either. Terms and limitations apply to all offers.

Comments

  1. I disagree about the value of this card.

    First and most important, CapOne points have less value than AMEX, Chase, and Bilt because CapOne has no partnership with the domestic majors (airlines or hotels). AMEX transfers to Delta; Chase to United, Southwest; Bilt to Alaska, United, Hyatt.

    Second, CapOne has come a long way but it’s still not a good brand. Drop an AMEX on the table when the server brings your bill, and you’ve locked in a third date. Drop a CapOne and you may get quizzical looks especially if you are dating older women (from an era where CapOne was purely low-end). The point is CapOne’s brand has not fully caught up with its new premium strategy (which is not even that premium).

    The lounges look nice but how often are you flying through the airports that have them?

    Everybody who pays rent should have a Bilt card. AMEX and Chase are such a dynamic duo.

  2. One underappreciated element of Cap One Venture X are the shopping offers. 7X Cap one points for booking through their shopping portal for Marriott, IHG, and Hilton – and you then get all your regular status bonuses too, as you’re booking through the hotel’s website.

    I just earned 100k Cap One points using a 30X points / dollar spent offer.

    It’s been consistently much better than rakuten

  3. This card has amazing value. It is a free card if you travel by air once a year and spend over $300 on travel during the year. I have always gotten 2+ cents per point. Delta domestic via Skyteam partners, United domestic via Star Alliance partners. (if you know you know) and Star Alliance partners for International is not hard either. The $300 travel credit plus the 10k anniversary points cover the annual fee easily. Every other perk/credit is free at that point. Mic drop! (free AU’s that also include lounge access makes this card overpowered)

  4. “Drop an AMEX on the table when the server brings your bill, and you’ve locked in a third date. Drop a CapOne and you may get quizzical looks especially if you are dating older women (from an era where CapOne was purely low-end).”

    LOL @Dick. I take it you’ve finally cracked the Hinge algorithm?

    It’s quite easy to get your money back with this card. I understand not everyone is going to fanboy like me and go out of their way to connect through DFW and DEN for the lounges but if and those are your home airports or IAD/DCA, LAS or soon LGA/JFK is your home base, the lounges/landings are such a nice perk.

    For the annual fee being what it is I think the value is fantastic.

  5. Gary, I agree that it’s a keeper card. The $300 credit and 10K points does it for me. That’s breakeven. Looking forward to when they finally open the new lounges at LGA and JFK.

    On eligibility, the reality is that many of us who ‘play the game’ are going to find it hard to get approved, unless we sit things out for at least 6 months (no hard pulls)–it has nothing to do with your credit, income, assets, etc.

    Capital One is too sensitive and their pulling from all three credit bureaus is dumb.

    @Dick — Enough with the unnecessary hierarchies and perceived social ‘status’ nonsense.

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