
Some credit cards this year have high sign-up bonuses (SUBs), with some offering never-before-seen six-figure points for reaching the minimum spend.
So as tax day nears, some Americans are credit-card-maxing this tax year by opening a fresh credit card to pay their tax bill, pocketing the sign-up bonus, and cashing in points for a free flight.
The IRS allows credit card payments for a fee. On, say, a $5,000 tax bill, that 1.75% fee comes out to $87.50. By opening a credit card with an SUB of 100,000 points for $5,000 in spending, you essentially earned the points for less than $100 extra in fees.
The strategy is gaining traction on social media, but financial experts say it works only for a specific type of taxpayer—and for a growing number of Americans, the timing couldn’t be more fraught.
A new survey from coupon site CouponFollow of 1,000 Americans paints a stark picture of just how much financial pressure households are under heading into this tax season. More than half (52%) of Americans say they rely on their tax refund to catch up on bills, with 15% doing so on a regular basis. Meanwhile, 27% say they couldn’t afford to pay their taxes at all if they owed money this year, and only 12% say a refund has ever been a true financial turning point in their lives.
Against that backdrop, the credit card points strategy is equal parts clever and cautionary.
Read more: https://fortune.com/2026/04/13/credit-card-maxxing-sign-up-bonus-tax-season-refunds/
https://fortune.com/2026/04/13/credit-card-maxxing-sign-up-bonus-tax-season-refunds/
Posted by fortune
1 Comment
Probably a bad sign if you’re using a credit card to pay taxes.