Editorial take: JetBlue Plus Card
Strong East Coast card. The 5,000 anniversary points alone are worth ~$65 (more than half the fee), and the 10% redemption rebate keeps the rest of your TrueBlue stash compounding.
Every feature is free during beta. No credit card, no catch.
Both are well-respected travel cards. The JetBlue Plus Card comes from Barclays at $99/yr; the United Club Business Card from Chase at $695/yr. Below: side-by-side specs, an opinionated verdict, and the FAQs people actually ask before applying.
For most people the United Club Business Card is the stronger pick today, the sign-up bonus is meaningfully larger ($590 more in estimated value) than the JetBlue Plus Card's. Get the United Club Business Card first; revisit the JetBlue Plus Card after you've earned that bonus.
| Feature | JetBlue Plus Card | United Club Business Card |
|---|---|---|
| Annual fee | $99 | $695 |
| Sign-up bonus | 60,000 points | 100,000 miles + 2,000 PQP |
| Bonus value (est.) | $910 | $1,500 |
| Min spend to unlock bonus | $1,000 in 3 mo | $5,000 in 3 mo |
| Issuer | Barclays | Chase |
| Card category | airline | business |
| Best earning category (Jetblue) | 6x | 1x |
| Transfer partners | None | None |
| Headline benefits |
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Strong East Coast card. The 5,000 anniversary points alone are worth ~$65 (more than half the fee), and the 10% redemption rebate keeps the rest of your TrueBlue stash compounding.
Pure United Club access card. Cash equivalent of the lounge membership is $750+/year, so the $695 fee makes sense if you're at United hubs frequently. The 1.5x base earning is the highest catch-all rate among premium business cards.
Card details on this page reflect the most recent data we've verified against the issuer's own site. Sign-up bonuses and fees can change at any time, confirm the current offer on the issuer's page before applying.