Best for: People who want a simple everyday card with no annual fee, especially Chase Sapphire cardholders who want to earn more on non-bonus spending
Not ideal for: International travelers (3% foreign transaction fee), or people who want the highest flat cash back rate standalone (Citi Double Cash at 2% is higher)
The Quick Verdict
The Chase Freedom Unlimited earns 1.5% on everything, 3% on dining, and 5% on Chase Travel with no annual fee. As a standalone it is excellent. Paired with a Chase Sapphire card, the cash back converts to Ultimate Rewards points transferable to airlines and hotels at up to 2 cents each. That 1.5% effectively becomes 3% travel rewards. The Chase Trifecta is one of the most powerful setups in credit cards at any price point.
Key Numbers at a Glance
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Annual fee | $0 |
| Base rewards | 1.5% cash back |
| Dining | 3% cash back |
| Drug stores | 3% cash back |
| Chase Travel portal | 5% cash back |
| Welcome offer | $200 after $500 spend in first 3 months |
| 0% intro APR | 15 months on purchases and balance transfers |
| Foreign transaction fee | 3% |
The Chase Trifecta Strategy
Pair the Freedom Unlimited with a Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95/year) and points earned pool together. With the Sapphire, those points transfer to United, Southwest, British Airways, Hyatt, and Marriott at 1:1. At 2 cents per point, your 1.5% becomes 3% travel rewards. Your 3% dining becomes 6% for travel redemptions.
Freedom Unlimited vs Citi Double Cash
| Feature | Freedom Unlimited | Citi Double Cash |
|---|---|---|
| Base earn rate | 1.5% | 2% |
| Dining rate | 3% | 2% |
| Welcome offer | $200 (easy to hit) | Varies, smaller |
| Chase upgrade path | Yes (Ultimate Rewards) | No |
Double Cash wins on pure cash back for non-dining spending. Freedom Unlimited wins on dining, welcome offer, and the Chase upgrade path. If you are in the Chase ecosystem, Freedom Unlimited is better.