Credit card terms, welcome offers, APRs, credits, and eligibility rules can change without notice. BillSaver summarizes publicly available card terms for comparison only; verify rates, fees, rewards, and offer language with the issuer before applying. BillSaver may earn compensation from some product links when approved relationships exist; compensation does not replace issuer terms or editorial fit. Read how BillSaver evaluates cards and handles advertising disclosures.
Decision helper
Start with how you will use the card
17 cards shown. Use a decision chip or search box to narrow the table.
BillSaver picks
Top matches for this category
All-around cash back
Chase Freedom Unlimited®
Annual fee
$0
Rewards
5% on travel through Chase Travel, 3% on dining and drugstores, 1.5% on other purchases.
Intro APR
0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers for 15 months.
A strong starter rewards card because the base rate is better than 1%, the bonus categories are useful, and the annual fee is zero.
Source checked from issuer terms on May 18, 2026. Verify current offer language before applying.
Shortlist up to 3 cards before leaving BillSaver.No cards selected.
Use this as a fit check. Exact APRs, welcome offers, fees, credits, and eligibility rules still need issuer verification.
Rows link to issuer terms instead of application pages unless an approved relationship exists. BillSaver does not generate fake card art for real products; card images come from normalized official or approved creative files.
All-around cash backA strong starter rewards card because the base rate is better than 1%, the bonus categories are useful, and the annual fee is zero.
5% on travel through Chase Travel, 3% on dining and drugstores, 1.5% on other purchases.
$200 cash bonus after qualifying spend.
$0
0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers for 15 months.
18.24% to 27.74% variable APR.
Travel booked outside Chase and international purchases are less attractive, and a 2% flat-rate card may be simpler for some households.
Dining, groceries, entertainmentA strong everyday card for households that spend heavily on meals, groceries, streaming, and entertainment.
3% cash back on dining, grocery stores, entertainment, and popular streaming services; 5% on hotels and rental cars booked through Capital One Travel; 1% on other purchases.
$200 cash bonus after qualifying spend.
$0
0% intro APR on purchases and balance transfers for 12 months.
18.49% to 28.49% variable APR.
Superstores and warehouse clubs are excluded from the grocery category.
Groceries and streamingThe grocery and streaming rates can justify the annual fee for the right household.
6% cash back at U.S. supermarkets on up to $6,000 per year, then 1%; 6% on select U.S. streaming subscriptions; 3% at eligible U.S. gas stations and transit.
Offer varies by applicant.
$0 intro annual fee for the first year, then $95.
Intro APR offer on purchases and balance transfers.
19.49% to 28.49% variable APR.
The supermarket cap and annual fee make this a math card, not an automatic pick.
Student dining and grocery rewardsA student card with useful real-life categories and no annual or foreign transaction fee.
3% cash back at grocery stores, dining, entertainment, and popular streaming services; 5% on hotels and rental cars booked through Capital One Travel; 1% on other purchases.
$50 bonus after qualifying spend.
$0
No standard intro APR offer.
18.49% to 28.49% variable APR.
The APR is high, so it should be treated as a credit-building tool, not a borrowing tool.
Start with the reason you want the card. If the goal is rewards, focus on spending categories you already use, annual fee math, redemption rules, and foreign transaction fees. If the goal is debt relief, focus first on the 0% window, transfer fee, issuer restrictions, and a payoff date you can actually hit.
Use the decision chips and search box to narrow the list, then compare no more than three cards at a time. The right shortlist should have a clear "best for" reason, one trade-off you can live with, and an issuer terms page you are willing to read before applying.
Do not treat the richest welcome offer as the whole decision. A card with a lower annual fee, simpler rewards, or a shorter but cheaper balance-transfer period can be the better fit for a household budget.