The Offer
- Citi are offering a 25% transfer bonus when you transfer your Citi ThankYou points to JetBlue’s TrueBlue program. The normal transfer rates depend on what Citi card you hold and are as follows:
- 1,000 Citi ThankYou Points = 800 TrueBlue points for Citi ThankYou® Premier, Citi Prestige® and Citi Chairman®
- 1,000 Citi ThankYou Points = 500 TrueBlue points For Citi ThankYou Preferred or Citi Forward
- After the 25% transfer bonus the rates are as follow:
- 1,000 Citi ThankYou Points = 1,000 TrueBlue points for Citi ThankYou® Premier, Citi Prestige® and Citi Chairman®
- 1,000 Citi ThankYou Points = 625 TrueBlue points For Citi ThankYou Preferred or Citi Forward
The Fine Print
- Offer is valid for Point Transfers to TrueBlue completed by 11:59 PM ET October 25, 2017
Our Verdict
JetBlue were added as a transfer partner in late 2015 and earlier this year they offered a 50% transfer bonus so a 25% on the heels of that is definitely less attractive. You can view a complete history of all other transfer partners for Citi here. You can view how much JetBlue points are worth here. You can also read our reviews of the Barclaycard JetBlue cards here (detailed review of JetBlue Plus here). If you have a short term need of JetBlue points then transferring might make sense, otherwise waiting for the 50% bonus to return might be the better option. Hopefully any readers that needed points did the transfer when it was 50%.
Citi is also offering an extra 0.5 Hilton points per Citi ThankYou point transferred currently.
View Comments (6)
Typo: "After the 50% transfer bonus the rates are as follow" should be 25%? The numbers below it seem correct.
Thanks, you're right.
personally for me, transferring to a fixed price structure would be NO GO for me. TYP worth way more than 1.9 cpp for me.
Way more than 1.9 c/p? Get real! They do not have the transfer partners to make that a reality. Dream on!
How do you consistently get a value of >2cpp from Thank You Points?
By taking flights in fare classes you never would have paid for and valuing the flights at whatever that carrier was pricing them at the time.