How Credit Card Issuers Define ‘Travel’ - NerdWallet (2024)

MORE LIKE THISCredit CardsTravel Rewards Credit Cards

In the credit card industry, the term “travel purchases” includes a broad range of spending. Problem is, the types of spending that count as a travel purchase on one card might not count on another — and that can make it hard to earn rewards with your travel credit card or redeem your points for travel purchases.

A few categories are considered travel by all issuers — hotels and rental car agencies, for example — but the rest often vary. For example, only some issuers include cruise lines and parking lot fees.

NerdWallet spoke with major issuers that offer travel rewards or travel statement credit. Here’s what we found:

  • All issuers surveyed included purchases from airlines, car rental agencies, hotels, bus lines, cruise lines, passenger railways, taxicabs and limousines, travel agencies and ferries in their definitions for proprietary cards (that is, not including co-branded cards).

  • Bank of America® cards have the broadest definition of travel among the issuers we surveyed.

Note: Citi's definition of "travel purchases" varies by card. For this reason, the issuer isn't included in the chart below. However, in the full list of terms for each credit card issuer beneath the chart, Citi is included.

Bank of America®

On both the Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card and the Bank of America® Premium Rewards® credit card, the following categories are considered travel, according to Bank of America®:

  • Airlines and air carriers.

  • Lodging, including hotels, motels and resorts.

  • Car rental agencies (including truck and utility trailer rentals).

  • Cruise lines.

  • Taxicabs and limousines.

  • Travel agencies and tour operators.

  • Passenger railways.

  • Travel-related arrangement services.

  • Toll and bridge fees.

  • Automobile parking lots and garages.

  • Suburban and local commuter passenger, including ferries.

  • Bus lines.

  • Transportation services, not elsewhere classified.

  • Real estate agents and managers and rentals.

  • Timeshares.

  • Campgrounds and trailer parks.

  • Motorhome and recreational vehicle rental.

  • Tourist attractions and exhibits.

  • Art dealers and galleries.

  • Amusem*nt parks, carnivals, circuses, fortune tellers.

  • Aquariums, dolphinariums, zoos, and seaquariums.

  • Boat leases and boat rentals.

  • Recreation services, not elsewhere classified.

  • Airports, airport terminals and flying fields.

  • Package tour operators (for use in Germany only).

Barclays

Barclays’ definition of eligible travel purchases on the Barclaycard Arrival Plus® World Elite Mastercard® includes purchases in the following categories:

  • Airlines.

  • Hotels.

  • Motels.

  • Timeshares.

  • Campgrounds.

  • Car rental agencies.

  • Cruise lines.

  • Travel agencies.

  • Discount travel sites.

  • Trains.

  • Buses.

  • Taxis and limousines.

  • Ferries.

  • Your account annual fee.

Note: The Barclaycard Arrival Plus® World Elite Mastercard® is no longer available on our website. For more information, read our full story.

Capital One

Capital One generally considers purchases in the following categories to be travel purchases on the Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card and the Capital One VentureOne Rewards Credit Card.

  • Airlines.

  • Hotels.

  • Rail lines.

  • Car rental agencies.

  • Limousine services.

  • Bus lines.

  • Cruise lines.

  • Taxi cabs.

  • Travel agents.

  • Timeshares.

  • Campground fees.

  • Ferries.

  • Motorhome and RV rentals.

Citi

On the Citi Premier® Card, eligible travel purchases include spending in the following categories, according to Citi:

  • Airlines.

  • Hotels.

  • Restaurants (including cafes, bars, lounges and fast food restaurants).

  • Select entertainment, including live entertainment, live theatrical productions, concerts and live sporting events.

  • Movie theaters.

  • Amusem*nt parks (including zoos, aquariums, circuses and carnivals).

  • Tourist attractions (including museums and art galleries).

  • Record stores.

  • Video rental stores.

  • On-demand internet streaming media.

  • Airfare.

  • Hotels.

  • Car rentals.

  • Travel agencies.

  • Cruise lines.

  • Costco Travel.

Chase

According to Chase, eligible travel purchases include spending in the following categories:

  • Airlines.

  • Hotels and motels.

  • Timeshares.

  • Car rental agencies.

  • Cruise lines.

  • Travel agencies.

  • Discount travel sites.

  • Campgrounds.

  • Operators of passenger trains.

  • Buses.

  • Taxis and limousines.

  • Ferries.

  • Toll bridges and highways.

  • Parking lots and garages.

Discover

According to Discover, eligible travel purchases include those made in the following categories:

  • Commercial airline tickets.

  • Hotel rooms.

  • Car rentals.

  • Cruises.

  • Tour operators.

  • Vacation packages purchased through airlines.

  • Travel agents.

  • Online travel sites.

  • Local and suburban commuter transportation, including ferries.

  • Passenger railways.

  • Taxicabs and limousines.

  • Charter or tour bus lines.

You can redeem rewards for travel statement credit on these purchases up to 180 days after the transactions are posted to your account.

What’s a ‘tourist attraction,’ anyway?

On their own, these terms aren’t especially helpful. “Commuter transportation” sounds like it could be anything that gets you to work. And “tourist attractions” is about as vague as you can get.

These categories actually correspond to merchant category codes. An MCC is a four-digit number that describes a merchant’s type of business. The payment networks, like Visa and Mastercard, use these standardized codes to set the fees that merchants pay to accept cards. When you make a purchase, the payment network communicates the merchant’s MCC to your issuer, and it generally shows up on your credit card statement with the other transaction information. Many issuers use these codes to reward cardholders for spending in certain categories — say, restaurants or gas stations.

A merchant’s bank decides with the merchant how its business should be classified. Codes depend solely on the merchant, not its location or what you’re buying. If you eat at a restaurant in a hotel, for example, your issuer will probably consider your tab restaurant spending — not hotel spending. And if you buy a souvenir T-shirt at that restaurant, it will count as a restaurant purchase just like your meal.

In the early days of credit cards, payment networks categorized purchases using the federal government’s Standard Industrial Classification codes, says Chuck Fillinger, a senior associate at The Strawhecker Group, a banking consulting firm. As more merchants started accepting credit cards, categories expanded beyond the old government-based system and became more specific. There are now hundreds of MCCs, Fillinger says. As new card-accepting merchants emerge, more categories will likely be added.

“Travel is probably the most confusing, with a variety of MCCs, as there are so many different aspects. You have trains, buses, airlines, hotels and Uber and Lyft,” Fillinger says.

Get a card that takes you farther

Sign up with NerdWallet to get a full picture of your spending and personalized recommendations for cards that will help you see the world.

GET STARTED

How Credit Card Issuers Define ‘Travel’ - NerdWallet (1)

Demystifying MCCs

Some spending categories sound confoundingly similar, but are still considered separate by payment networks — “commuter transportation” and “passenger railways,” for instance. Fillinger says that’s partly because each category has its own risk profile based on average transaction size and the likelihood of fraud or that customers will dispute charges. The credit card processing fees merchants pay vary according to that risk.

Here are a few MCCs that cause confusion today:

Travel agencies and tour operators (MCC 4722). Back in the day, “travel agencies” referred to brick-and-mortar businesses where you bought airline tickets and arranged travel itineraries. Nowadays, travel aggregators and discount travel sites, such as Expedia, also use this MCC.

Taxicabs and limousines (MCC 4121). This category can now include services like Uber and Lyft.

Commuter transportation (MCC 4111). Visa uses this MCC for merchants that provide “local and suburban mass passenger transportation over regular routes and on regular schedules,” such as trains and ferries. Trains meant for long-haul trips are generally categorized as “passenger railways.”

Real estate agents (MCC 6513). Mastercard’s rules define this as “fees charged by merchants engaged in the rental and management of residential and commercial properties, such as real estate agents, brokers, and managers, and apartment rental services.” This includes fees to rent rooms through Vacation Rental By Owner and its parent company, HomeAway. Airbnb, however, generally counts as a hotel or motel.

Tourist attractions (MCC 7991). Many expect this category to cover amusem*nt parks, but it doesn’t. Instead, both Visa and Mastercard clarify that this category includes “expositions, botanical gardens, craft shows, museums, and wineries.” Amusem*nt parks have their own separate category.

Know how to earn rewards

Defining travel spending remains an imprecise art — and that means it’s not always easy to know how a purchase will show up on your statement.

You can search merchant category codes in your area using Visa’s supplier locator tool. Or you could find out how your card issuer has categorized past purchases by logging on to your account online and checking your history. But you might end up with some strange results. A parking lot fee might count as “Misc. government services.” An airport shuttle might be listed as “Transportation service, not classified.”

And keep in mind that other countries use different MCCs that might not count as “travel” for U.S. credit cards.

Sometimes a purchase might not be categorized as you think it should be, and for now, there’s not much you can do about this. Your card issuer — the bank that holds your account, as opposed to the payment network like Visa — has no control over how merchants are categorized. Knowing your issuer’s definition of travel doesn’t guarantee your purchases will be classified that way, but it’s a good starting point if you want to get the most out of your credit card.

This article was written by NerdWallet and was originally published by Forbes.

How Credit Card Issuers Define ‘Travel’ - NerdWallet (2024)

FAQs

How do credit cards know you're traveling? ›

A travel notice is an alert to your credit card issuer that you'll be going on a trip to a different location. By giving this notice in advance, you're letting your credit card company know that you may be making charges from a different state or country.

What counts as a travel category? ›

Merchants in the travel category include airlines, hotels, motels, timeshares, car rental agencies, cruise lines, travel agencies, discount travel sites, campgrounds and operators of passenger trains, buses, taxis, limousines, ferries, toll bridges and highways, and parking lots and garages.

What does Citi consider travel? ›

Cardholders earn unlimited 3% cash back at restaurants and eligible travel purchases. This can include airfare, hotel stays, car rentals, travel agencies, cruises and Costco travel.

What does Chase consider travel? ›

Travel purchased through Chase Travel

Eligible travel purchases include airline tickets, hotels, car rentals, and cruises. Any items or charges not paid for on chasetravel.com or by calling the number on the back of your card will not qualify.

How does Amex know you are traveling? ›

Welcome to the Help Center. I'm traveling soon. Do I need to let American Express know? We use industry-leading fraud detection capabilities that help us recognize when our Card Members are traveling, so you don't need to notify us before you travel.

Do you have to let your credit card company know I'm traveling? ›

Your credit card company or bank may not need to be notified before you take a trip. That's because of improvements in fraud detection technology and security. If you choose to set a travel alert, you can usually do it over the phone, online or in your bank's or credit card issuer's mobile app.

What does Amex consider travel? ›

Travel (American Express® Green Card only)

You will earn additional rewards for purchases of: Airfare for a scheduled flight on a passenger carrier, chartered flights and private jet flights. Hotel stays, timeshare rentals, and vacation rentals. You will not earn additional points for purchases of timeshare properties.

What does the US Bank consider travel? ›

What counts as travel for U.S. Bank Altitude Reserve? Purchases directly from merchants that classify themselves as travel fall within this category, including airlines, hotels, car rentals, taxicabs, limousines, passenger trains and cruise line companies as travel.

What is counted as a travel? ›

In the NBA and FIBA, when a player has taken more than two steps without the ball being dribbled, a traveling violation is called. The NCAA and NFHS do not allow two steps. A travel can also be called via carrying or an unestablished pivot foot.

Does Citi follow 5 24 rule? ›

No, Citibank does not have a 5/24 rule, which means Citibank will not automatically reject an application just because you've opened five or more credit card accounts during the past 24 months. The only company rumored to have a 5/24 rule is Chase, but Chase has never openly stated that the rule is real.

What is the 6 month rule for Citi? ›

Citi 6/6 & 3/6 Rule

Also, Citi is known for automatically rejecting applications for anyone who has had more than six hard inquiries on your credit in the past six months.

What does Capital One consider travel? ›

Capital One considers “travel costs” to contain a multitude – not just basic expenses like flights and hotels. From Airbnb stays to Uber rides, to flight and hotel purchases and even cruises – all of these count as “travel.” That's right: Just pay for your flight, hotel, Uber, or parking fee with your Capital One card.

What is considered travel? ›

Airlines, hotels, car rentals, buses/transit, cruise lines, travel agencies, railways/trains, taxis/limos/rideshares, ferries, campgrounds, tolls, parking lots/garages, timeshares, boat rentals, motor homes/RV rentals, amusem*nt parks/carnivals/circuses, aquariums/zoos, real estate agents and tourist attractions/ ...

Does Chase consider Expedia as travel? ›

Here are some additional charges that count as travel, based on experience and crowdsourced data: Southwest Airlines EarlyBird Check-In fees. Uber and Lyft rides (excluding Uber Eats) Online travel agencies like Priceline, Expedia, Orbitz, etc.

Is Airbnb considered travel for credit cards? ›

Airbnb typically codes as "travel" on your credit card statement. This means it will trigger any bonus points or annual credits offered in the travel category.

Do I need to tell my credit card I am travelling? ›

Most credit card issuers no longer require notification before you go on a trip; however, some card companies still ask you to notify them when you're traveling internationally.

Do credit cards have GPS in them? ›

The smart chip is not a locator system, so the physical location of a credit or debit card cannot be tracked. Also known as an EMV chip, this smart chip embedded on your card creates dynamic data for every transaction, which makes it less likely for criminals to steal or clone your information.

How do I hide my credit card when traveling? ›

Try a pair of “stash socks” or security socks, which have a small pocket for a credit card, cash or a single key. Don't try to stuff a whole wallet or passport in your sock, however. Money-hiding shoes. Some flip-flop and sandal brands include a slot where you can keep a card or cash.

How does credit card detection work? ›

When it comes to identifying the cardholder, credit card fraud detection relies on authentication techniques such as MFA (multi-factor authentication), 3DS, biometrics, and OTP (one-time passwords). However, it is also possible to detect credit card fraud by looking at anomalies in the transaction.

Top Articles
Quantum Computing Graduate Certificate
How Much Should You Tip on Cruise Ships?
Frases para un bendecido domingo: llena tu día con palabras de gratitud y esperanza - Blogfrases
Wordscapes Level 6030
Kraziithegreat
The Powers Below Drop Rate
Optimal Perks Rs3
When Is the Best Time To Buy an RV?
Ncaaf Reference
Jscc Jweb
Hca Florida Middleburg Emergency Reviews
Bahsid Mclean Uncensored Photo
Munich residents spend the most online for food
Chastity Brainwash
Velocity. The Revolutionary Way to Measure in Scrum
Golden Abyss - Chapter 5 - Lunar_Angel
Talbots.dayforce.com
Rural King Credit Card Minimum Credit Score
Sullivan County Image Mate
Busted News Bowie County
PCM.daily - Discussion Forum: Classique du Grand Duché
12 Facts About John J. McCloy: The 20th Century’s Most Powerful American?
TeamNet | Agilio Software
Parkeren Emmen | Reserveren vanaf €9,25 per dag | Q-Park
Rugged Gentleman Barber Shop Martinsburg Wv
Ticket To Paradise Showtimes Near Cinemark Mall Del Norte
What Sells at Flea Markets: 20 Profitable Items
Firefly Festival Logan Iowa
Tinyzonehd
Tamil Movies - Ogomovies
Frank Vascellaro
Ezstub Cross Country
Indiana Jones 5 Showtimes Near Jamaica Multiplex Cinemas
Walter King Tut Johnson Sentenced
آدرس جدید بند موویز
Chatropolis Call Me
Koninklijk Theater Tuschinski
Trizzle Aarp
Rs3 Bis Perks
The All-New MyUMobile App - Support | U Mobile
Gfs Ordering Online
Sand Castle Parents Guide
Cabarrus County School Calendar 2024
Oklahoma City Farm & Garden Craigslist
Swsnj Warehousing Inc
Lesly Center Tiraj Rapid
Erespassrider Ual
786 Area Code -Get a Local Phone Number For Miami, Florida
Public Broadcasting Service Clg Wiki
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Eusebia Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 6309

Rating: 5 / 5 (80 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Eusebia Nader

Birthday: 1994-11-11

Address: Apt. 721 977 Ebert Meadows, Jereville, GA 73618-6603

Phone: +2316203969400

Job: International Farming Consultant

Hobby: Reading, Photography, Shooting, Singing, Magic, Kayaking, Mushroom hunting

Introduction: My name is Eusebia Nader, I am a encouraging, brainy, lively, nice, famous, healthy, clever person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.