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Side-by-side

Alaska Airlines Visa Signature vs Capital One Savor

Both are well-respected travel cards. The Alaska Airlines Visa Signature comes from Bank of America at $95/yr; the Capital One Savor from Capital One at $0/yr. Below: side-by-side specs, an opinionated verdict, and the FAQs people actually ask before applying.

Bottom line

For most people the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature is the stronger pick today, the sign-up bonus is meaningfully larger ($800 more in estimated value) than the Capital One Savor's. Get the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature first; revisit the Capital One Savor after you've earned that bonus.

FeatureAlaska Airlines Visa SignatureCapital One Savor
Annual fee$95$0
Sign-up bonus70,000 miles + Companion Fare$250 cash back
Bonus value (est.)$1,050$250
Min spend to unlock bonus$3,000 in 90 mo$500 in 3 mo
IssuerBank of AmericaCapital One
Card categorytravelcashback
Best earning category (Alaska)3x1x
Transfer partnersNoneNone
Headline benefits
  • Companion Fare annually
  • Free checked bag
  • 3x on Alaska
  • No foreign tx fees
  • 3% dining + entertainment
  • 3% grocery + streaming
  • No annual fee
  • No foreign tx fees
Read the full review
Alaska Airlines Visa Signature
$95/yr · 70,000 miles + Companion Fare
Read the full review
Capital One Savor
$0/yr · $250 cash back

Editorial take: Alaska Airlines Visa Signature

The Companion Fare is the hook, $122 + taxes/fees to bring a companion on any Alaska flight, even international business class. If you fly Alaska once a year with a partner, this pays for itself many times over.

Editorial take: Capital One Savor

If you care about dining and groceries, this is one of the best no-fee cards available. 3% on four of your biggest categories with zero annual cost is hard to beat.

Common questions

Which card has the bigger sign-up bonus, Alaska Airlines Visa Signature or Capital One Savor?
The Alaska Airlines Visa Signature has the bigger bonus, 70,000 miles + Companion Fare, worth roughly $1,050, versus $250 cash back (~$250) on the Capital One Savor.
Is the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature's $95 annual fee worth it compared to the Capital One Savor?
At $95/yr, the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature is in the mid-fee tier. Compare its specific perks (lounge access, travel credits, primary rental insurance) to the Capital One Savor's, pick the one whose perks you'll actually use.
Can I have both the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature and Capital One Savor?
Yes, since they're from different issuers (Bank of America and Capital One) the application rules don't conflict. Many points enthusiasts hold both, they pair well when one earns flexible bank points and the other earns a different currency.
Should I get the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature or the Capital One Savor first?
Get the one whose sign-up bonus you can hit comfortably without overspending. Alaska Airlines Visa Signature: $3,000 spend in 90 months. Capital One Savor: $500 in 3 months. Pick the easier minimum spend if you're new to points; pick the larger bonus if you have planned big purchases coming up.

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.