US Trends

chase sapphire

Chase Sapphire is currently one of the most prominent travel‑rewards card “families,” centered on Chase Sapphire Preferred and the revamped Chase Sapphire Reserve, which now lean even harder into flexible travel credits, boosted points on Chase Travel bookings, and strong trip protections in 2025–2026. Both cards sit at the core of Chase’s Ultimate Rewards ecosystem, where the real power comes from pairing them with no‑annual‑fee cards and redeeming points for high‑value travel through partners.

What “Chase Sapphire” Refers To

  • The Chase Sapphire name covers a small lineup of premium travel credit cards, most notably Sapphire Preferred (mid‑tier) and Sapphire Reserve (premium).
  • These cards are built around Chase Ultimate Rewards points, which can be redeemed for travel through Chase’s portal or transferred to airline and hotel partners for outsized value.

Key Features Right Now

  • Sapphire Reserve emphasizes high earn rates on travel booked via Chase Travel (up to 8x points), upgraded travel protections, and generous statement credits for travel and lifestyle spending.
  • Sapphire Preferred focuses on strong earning on travel through Chase, dining, and select partners like Lyft and Peloton, with a lower annual fee and simpler benefits than Reserve.

Recent Updates and “Latest News”

  • Chase has recently refreshed Sapphire Reserve with features like Points Boost (higher point value on select trips), larger estimated first‑year value, and expanded travel credits and lounge access in 2025–2026.
  • There are also time‑limited partner perks, including credits and elevated earn on services such as Lyft, StubHub/viagogo, and streaming, many of which currently run through at least late 2026 or 2027.

Forum & Community Discussion

  • On forums like Reddit and travel‑reward communities, people are actively dissecting the 2026 Sapphire Reserve changes, especially how new hotel credits, Points Boost, and enhanced protections compare to competitors like Amex Platinum.
  • Common themes: whether the higher annual fee is offset by easy‑to‑use credits, how flexible the new hotel perks really are, and if Reserve still justifies a spot over Preferred for non‑frequent travelers.

When Chase Sapphire Makes Sense

  • Sapphire Reserve tends to fit frequent travelers who can reliably use travel and lifestyle credits, value lounge access, and maximize points through Chase Travel and transfer partners.
  • Sapphire Preferred often suits users who want strong travel/dining rewards and transfer options but do not need premium perks or a very high annual fee.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.