Pros
- A useful comparison point for readers shopping long intro APR windows outside the biggest issuers.
- No traditional rewards program. Annual fee: $0.
- Intro APR value: 0% intro APR offer on purchases and balance transfers.
Cons
- Exact transfer economics depend on the approved limit, fee, and intro period available at application.
- Not ideal for international purchases because the foreign transaction fee is 3%.
- Balance transfers are not free: Balance transfer fee applies.
Best for
- Readers who want intro apr with side benefits and match a good to excellent profile.
- Households comparing Balance transfer, 0% APR options and willing to verify current issuer terms before applying.
- People who want a card that is cheaper to keep open long term.
Skip if
- You will carry a balance after any intro period; interest can erase rewards quickly.
- The main trade-off is a deal-breaker for you: Exact transfer economics depend on the approved limit, fee, and intro period available at application.
- You regularly buy abroad or travel internationally and need no foreign transaction fee.
Terms snapshot
- Rewards
- No traditional rewards program.
- Welcome offer
- No traditional welcome bonus.
- Intro APR
- 0% intro APR offer on purchases and balance transfers.
- Regular APR
- Variable APR; see issuer terms.
- Balance transfer fee
- Balance transfer fee applies.
- Foreign transaction fee
- 3%
Issuer terms and source check
BillSaver summarizes publicly available terms for comparison. Before applying, read the issuer terms page directly and confirm rewards, APRs, fees, welcome offer requirements, transfer rules, credits, and eligibility restrictions.
Open issuer terms for U.S. Bank Shield™ Visa® Card
How BillSaver evaluates this card
We compare the card against the job a reader is likely hiring it to do: rewards, debt breathing room, travel value, student use, business spending, or credit building. The review weighs annual fee, reward simplicity, APR exposure, intro period, transfer cost, foreign transaction fee, credit profile, issuer terms access, and the practical trade-off called out above.