Travel Party of 5 | Points & Miles for Family Travel

Raya & Duane

Do you struggle to understand how people travel using points and miles from credit cards? It can be easy to waste a lot of time learning travel hacking on your own, especially if you find it complex and confusing.  Let us pull back the curtain and show you how you can maximize money you're already spending to earn enough credit card points and miles to travel with your family for nearly free. We've used credit card points and miles to take our family of 5 on trips to places like Costa Rica, San Diego, Disneyland, Oceanside, NYC, Washington DC, Hawaii, and next year we have already booked Paris, Spain and Japan! Using credit card points and miles (often called travel hacking) doesn't have to be overwhelming or take a ton of time, and we can show you how. Can you earn a lot of points and miles without opening up multiple credit cards? Only if you have a really high amount of spend each month. For people with larger families, opening new cards is the easiest and fastest way to earn enough points and miles to take a couple of really low cost (but not low budget) family vacations every year! If you want to learn ways to help you and your family travel more affordably using credit card points, this show is for you. 

  1. MAR 2

    Hyatt: The Great Devaluation

    CARD REFERRAL LINKS!  The Hilton offers are all elevated until April 15, 2026. If you're seeing these links after that date, they should still work but will not be elevated offers.  Hilton Honors Amex (No Annual Fee!) - 70K Hilton points + FNC Hilton Surpass card (Amex) - 130K Hilton points + FNC Hilton Aspire Card - 175K Hilton points (no extra FNC but this card does come with one every year automatically!) Hilton Honors Business Card (the one we just got!) - 175K Hilton points + FNC ***** The below are not elevated offers but are still our referral links ***** IHG personal card - 140K IHG points Marriott Bonvoy Business card - three 50K certificates Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant card - 100K Marriott points Thank you in advance for using our links!  Hyatt’s award chart now uses five price bands within each category, pushing top-tier redemptions much higher and making peak family dates more expensive. We explain what changed, where value still exists with certificates and suite upgrades, and how to diversify with Hilton, Marriott, and IHG. • What the new Hyatt pricing tiers are and how far they stretch • Why peak family travel dates are most affected • How free night certificates gain value under the new bands • When suite upgrade awards still make sense • Why diversifying into Hilton, Marriott, and IHG matters • Credit card strategies to earn flexible points and more certs • Practical steps to book key stays before changes take effect • What to watch for with category shifts and rumored cards If you have never had a Hilton card before, we have referral links and we will put them in the show notes Go in the show notes and use our referral links to get the elevated offer, including the free night certificate

    29 min
  2. FEB 16

    Are we Raising Entitled Humans?!?! (How does Biz class & boujie Hotels affect kids?!)

    Travel with Kids Podcast rec! What happens when your kids fly business class before they can spell it? We tackle the uneasy question head-on: are we raising entitled travelers—or can points-powered perks actually teach humility, gratitude, and grit? Drawing from our own path—from rural road trips and solo backpacking to parenting three kids with a points strategy—we share the mindset shifts that turned “is this too much?” into “how do we frame this well?” We start by defining entitlement in practical terms: not nice experiences, but the expectation of them. Then we open the curtain on the hidden work that makes “free” travel possible—earning and redeeming points, offsetting annual fees, stalking award space for five seats, and choosing trade-offs. When kids see the effort, they understand the privilege. From there, we focus on modeling over lecturing. The tone we set—thanking staff, marveling at an economy seat’s movie selection, celebrating a sunset from a budget room—shapes how our kids assign value to comfort, people, and place. Money talk plays a starring role. We walk through real numbers—cash rates, point valuations, taxes—and turn it into simple math for older kids: how many hours at $10 an hour equals a hotel night? That perspective check pairs with a conscious rewrite of scarcity scripts. Instead of “don’t get used to it,” we teach that with planning and responsibility, they can build the life they want—travel or not. We also highlight the quiet wins travel gives kids: resilience through jet lag, flexibility during delays, adventurous palates, and empathy born from noticing what’s different and what’s the same. To root those lessons deeper, we add service. Local volunteering like meal packing, and one-day opportunities with reputable groups on trips, turn comfort into contribution without savior narratives. By the end, our stance is clear: perks don’t create entitlement—stories do. We choose to tell a story of gratitude, effort, and respect, so luxury becomes a lesson rather than a baseline. If this conversation resonates, follow along, share it with a travel-loving parent, and leave a quick rating and review so more families can find the show.

    33 min
  3. JAN 26

    When "Free" Travel Isn't Really Free - Realistic Cash Back Options for Families!

    https://5calls.org/ https://www.standwithminnesota.com/ Chase Ink Premier Referral Link (Also 100K Ink Preferred!!!) Never used Rakuten? Join now and earn $50 cash back! www.rakuten.com/r/RAYAPI6?eeid=28187  Free flights don’t feed your kids on vacation. That’s the real truth because even with points and miles, we still need to fund the real costs of travel - meals, trains, tips, tours, and all the little line items that don't fit inside award charts.  We break the plan into four parts. First, bank account bonuses: what they are, how to hit the requirements, why “push” ACH often matters, and simple tracking to avoid early‑closure fees. We point you to trusted resources like Doctor of Credit and explain how to double up when there’s no household cap. Second, cashback portals: Rakuten, Capital One Shopping, and TopCashback can sometimes stack with bank bonuses on select fintech signups, and quarterly payouts make a solid travel fund if you plan ahead. Third, cashback credit cards: we highlight business options like Chase Ink Business Premier and U.S. Bank Triple Cash Rewards, plus family‑friendly picks like Capital One Savor and Amex Blue Cash Preferred for groceries, dining, and gas. Fourth, purchase erasers: use Capital One miles at a clean one cent per mile to wipe rentals, trains, and boutique stays that don’t play nicely with points. We also share real‑life tactics: split hotel bills to trigger Amex Offers, volunteer for reimbursable school or work expenses to earn rewards without extra out‑of‑pocket costs, and choose when to prioritize cash over points based on your season of life. The outcome is a strategy that pairs your favorite points redemptions with dependable cash streams so your next family trip feels affordable from takeoff to taxi back home. If this helps you rethink “free travel,” tap follow, share with a friend who loves a deal, and leave a quick review telling us your favorite cashback win.

    31 min
4.8
out of 5
72 Ratings

About

Do you struggle to understand how people travel using points and miles from credit cards? It can be easy to waste a lot of time learning travel hacking on your own, especially if you find it complex and confusing.  Let us pull back the curtain and show you how you can maximize money you're already spending to earn enough credit card points and miles to travel with your family for nearly free. We've used credit card points and miles to take our family of 5 on trips to places like Costa Rica, San Diego, Disneyland, Oceanside, NYC, Washington DC, Hawaii, and next year we have already booked Paris, Spain and Japan! Using credit card points and miles (often called travel hacking) doesn't have to be overwhelming or take a ton of time, and we can show you how. Can you earn a lot of points and miles without opening up multiple credit cards? Only if you have a really high amount of spend each month. For people with larger families, opening new cards is the easiest and fastest way to earn enough points and miles to take a couple of really low cost (but not low budget) family vacations every year! If you want to learn ways to help you and your family travel more affordably using credit card points, this show is for you. 

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