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The Reward Reality: The “Use It or Lose It” Trap

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Vanessa Olmos

Researcher & Finance Writer

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Many seniors believe that once they earn a point or a mile, it belongs to them like cash in a drawer. In 2026, this is a dangerous assumption. Legally, credit card rewards are categorized as “loyalty incentives,” not currency. This distinction gives banks the power to change the rules—or seize your points entirely—with almost no warning.

Points Amnesia is the silent drain on senior wealth. Whether it’s a “Zombie” travel card you haven’t touched since your last trip in 2024 or a cashback card that requires a $25 minimum to redeem, the bank is betting that you will forget to claim what you’ve earned.

As your SageWISE Financial Bodyguard, I have audited the 2026 landscape to ensure your hard-earned rewards don’t vanish into a corporate balance sheet.

The Technical Audit: The 2026 Expiration Matrix

In 2026, we categorize rewards into three “Safety Zones.” Knowing where your card falls is the first step of your audit.

1. The "Forever" Zone (Safest)

  1. Major bank points (like Chase Ultimate Rewards or Amex Membership Rewards) generally do not expire as long as your account is open.

    • The Risk: If you close the card before transferring or spending the points, they vanish instantly.
    • The 2026 Shift: Banks are now closing “dormant” accounts (zero activity for 12 months) more aggressively. If your card is closed for inactivity, your points are forfeited.

2. The "Inactivity" Zone (Caution)

Most airline and hotel cards (like Marriott Bonvoy or Hilton Honors) use a 24-month clock. However, in 2026, several programs have shortened this to 12 to 18 months. If you don’t earn or spend at least one point in that window, your entire balance is wiped.

3. The "Hard Expiration" Zone (Danger)

Specific retail and legacy cards have a hard expiration date (e.g., 36 months) from the day points were earned, regardless of your activity. This is common with “Store Rewards” programs.

The SageWISE Audit: Top 5 Senior-Shielded Cards for 2026

If your current card fails the “Amnesia Audit,” it may be time to move to an issuer that rewards the “Senior Pillars”: healthcare, groceries, and simplicity.

Card Name
Best For
Why It Passes the SageWISE Audit
Healthcare & Pharmacy
Earns 2% back on medical expenses and 3% on drugstores. No annual fee.
Groceries & Streaming
A massive 6% cash back at U.S. supermarkets. High protection against grocery inflation.
Simple Cash Back
Flat 2% back on every purchase (1% at buy, 1% at pay). No categories to track.
Travel & Dining
Points are worth 25% more for travel. Best-in-class cancellation insurance.
Versatility
3x points on Gas, Transit, and Dining. Great for active retirees.

The Inheritance Trap: Do Points Die With You?

This is a critical audit for seniors. In 2026, most major card issuers explicitly state that points are the property of the bank, not the cardholder. If an account is closed due to a death, the “Death Clock” hits zero instantly.

The 2026 Issuer Audit: Who Allows What?

Issuer
Official Policy
The SageWISE "Mercy Clause"
Technically forfeited upon death.
Executor Redemption: Allows a "Personal Representative" to redeem points within 90 days with a death certificate.
Permanently forfeited upon death.
Statement Credit: In practice, Chase often converts points to a statement credit to pay off the final balance.
Forfeited upon account closure.
The May 2026 Cutoff: Citi ended "Point Sharing" on May 17, 2026. You must redeem or transfer points before notifying the bank.


SageWISE Tip: Don’t let your legacy vanish. Ensure your spouse or heir is an
Authorized User on your primary accounts today. Authorized Users can often continue to access the rewards portal to “drain” points for travel or cash back before the account is officially frozen.

The SageWISE Tip: The "Smallest Action" Reset

If you have a “Zombie” card with a large balance nearing its expiration date, you don’t need to book a $2,000 flight to save it. You only need to trigger a “qualifying event” to reset the clock for another 12–24 months.

  • The $1 Purchase: Buy a digital item or single song. This counts as “earning” activity.
  • The Point Transfer: Move 1,000 points from your bank to a partner (like Marriott).
  • The Donation: Most portals allow you to donate as few as 500 points to charity, which resets the clock.

The Devaluation Audit: Are Your Points "Losing Weight"?

Even if your points don’t expire, they can suffer from “Value Shaving.” In 2026, many airlines moved to “Dynamic Pricing,” increasing the points required for a “saver” seat. Treat your points as a “Hot Potato”—it is better to Earn and Burn than to hold them for a “rainy day” that might never come.

The Audit Formula:

Cents Per Point (CPP) = Cash Price of Item\Total Points Required times 100

  • Bad Value: Under 1.0 CPP (e.g., using points for a toaster).
  • Good Value: 1.5 CPP or higher (e.g., using points for an international flight).

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Yes. In 2026, most agreements state that if your account is not in “Good Standing,” you forfeit the ability to redeem points. If the account is closed for delinquency, all points are lost.

Generally, no. The IRS views rewards earned through spending as a rebate, not income. However, “referral bonuses” (getting points for signing up a friend) may be taxed as income if they exceed the new 2026 reporting threshold of $2,000.

Statement Credits are almost always safer. They deliver a guaranteed 1.0 CPP. Gift cards often offer lower value, and if you lose the digital code, that money is gone.

Usually not directly. You can move points to partners (like moving Chase points to United Airlines), but you cannot move “Capital One Miles” into a “Chase Ultimate Rewards” account.

Do not look at your monthly paper statement alone. Log into the bank’s mobile app and look for the “Rewards Activity” tab. It will list any points set to expire in the next 90 days.

On cards like the Citi Double Cash, it doesn’t “expire,” but it can be forfeited if the card is closed due to 18 months of non-use. Use the card for a $5 purchase once a year to keep the account alive.

Financial Bodyguard Resources

Stop the Points Leakage Today

Your rewards are an extension of your wealth. Don’t let “Points Amnesia” give the bank a free pass. Audit your statements, set your reminders, and claim what you’ve earned.

Find the Best High-Reward Credit Cards for 2026

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