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Is My Credit Card Annual Fee Worth It?
Enter your annual fee, rewards earned, credits you actually used, and any perks you took advantage of. You'll get a Worth It Score from 0–100 and a clear answer on whether the fee is paying for itself.
Common fees: $95 (mid-tier), $550 (premium), $695 (ultra-premium)
Check your card's annual rewards statement
Travel credit, hotel credit, dining credit, etc.
Airport lounge access, TSA PreCheck, free hotel nights, etc.
Enter 0 if you've already received it
Sources & Methodology
- CFPB Consumer Credit Trends — credit card origination and balance data
- Federal Reserve G.19 Consumer Credit Release — average APR data
- Worth It Score methodology: net benefit ratio (total annual benefits divided by annual fee), weighted for first-year sign-up bonus where applicable. Score ranges: 0–30 Not Worth It, 31–70 Consider It, 71–100 Worth It.
By Sean Baldwin · Last reviewed July 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my credit card annual fee is worth it?
Add up every dollar of value you actually use: cashback earned, travel credits spent, lounge visits, hotel nights, and any other perks. If that total exceeds your annual fee, the card pays for itself. If it falls short, you're paying out of pocket for benefits you don't fully use.
Should I cancel a credit card with an annual fee?
Not automatically. Canceling a card reduces your total available credit, which can raise your credit utilization ratio and lower your credit score. A better option is often to call your issuer and request a product change to a no-fee version of the same card. This keeps the account open and your credit history intact.
Is a $95 annual fee credit card worth it?
A $95 annual fee card is worth it if you earn at least $95 in rewards and benefits per year. Most mid-tier travel and cashback cards return 1.5–2% on all spending, so at $95 fee you'd need to spend roughly $5,000–$6,300 per year on the card to break even on rewards alone. Any statement credits (airline, hotel, dining) you actually use count directly toward the fee.
Are premium credit cards with $500+ fees worth it?
Premium cards like the Chase Sapphire Reserve ($550 fee) or Amex Platinum ($695 fee) can be worth it if you use the full stack of credits. The Amex Platinum, for example, includes up to $1,400+ in credits annually, but most cardholders only capture 50–60% of that value. Run the numbers on what you'll actually use, not the theoretical maximum.
What happens to my credit score if I cancel a credit card?
Canceling a card can lower your score in two ways: it reduces your total available credit (raising utilization) and eventually removes positive payment history from your report. The impact is usually small if you have other cards and low balances. Consider a product change to a no-fee card before outright canceling.
How do I calculate the value of credit card points and miles?
Point values vary by card and redemption method. As a rough guide: cashback is straightforward at face value; airline miles are typically worth $0.01–$0.015 each for economy redemptions; premium travel redemptions and transfer partners can yield $0.02+ per point. Use the value you'd realistically get, not the theoretical maximum.
Example: Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95 Fee)
At $175 in rewards plus $50 in credits used, this card returns $225 against a $95 fee — a net gain of $130 per year. The fee more than pays for itself, making this card worth keeping as long as spending patterns stay roughly the same.
The only number that matters: net annual value
Your credit card annual fee is worth it if what you get back exceeds what you pay. That sounds simple, but most cardholders overestimate their benefits because they count everything the card offers rather than everything they actually use. A $550 card with a $300 travel credit is only worth $300 if you travel enough to spend it. Calculate your real net value: add up rewards you earned last year, credits you spent (not just received), and perks you used at least once, then subtract the fee.
Credits only count if you actually use them
Premium cards pad their value with statement credits that look great in the marketing materials but go unused in practice. The Chase Sapphire Reserve offers a $300 travel credit that most cardholders fully use since it applies automatically to any travel purchase. The Amex Platinum's $200 hotel credit requires booking through Amex Travel, and the $240 digital entertainment credit covers a narrow list of services many people don't subscribe to. Before renewing a high-fee card, audit which credits you actually used in the past 12 months. Credits you didn't use have a value of zero, regardless of what the issuer advertises.
How to escape an annual fee without hurting your credit
If your card isn't worth its fee, canceling outright is usually the worst option. Closing a card reduces your total available credit and can spike your utilization ratio, both of which lower your score. A product change (also called a downgrade) is almost always better: call your issuer, tell them you want to keep the account but switch to a no-fee version of the same card. Most major issuers have no-fee versions of their popular cards. You keep the account history, keep the credit limit, and stop paying a fee you're not justifying. If no downgrade option exists, consider whether the account age and credit limit are worth a retention offer before you cancel.
When a sign-up bonus changes the math
First-year value and ongoing value are two different calculations. A $95 annual fee card with a $750 sign-up bonus has a first-year net value of +$655 even if you never use another benefit. But the bonus doesn't repeat, so in year two you're back to calculating whether rewards and credits alone justify the fee. This is a common trap: people sign up for great bonuses, then auto-renew for years without noticing the card no longer earns its keep. Set a calendar reminder 45 days before your annual fee posts each year to run this calculation again.
Related Calculators
Further Reading
How We Calculate Your Score
The Worth It Score is ratio-based: total card value divided by the annual fee. A ratio of 2.0 or more (getting $2 in value for every $1 in fees) scores 90; a ratio below 0.25 scores 8. First-year scores get a boost if your sign-up bonus is at least twice the fee.
- · Value-to-fee ratio ≥2.0 → 90; ≥1.5 → 82; ≥1.2 → 74; ≥1.0 → 64; ≥0.75 → 50; ≥0.5 → 35; ≥0.25 → 20; below 0.25 → 8
- · First-year bonus boost: if your sign-up bonus is worth at least 2× the annual fee, the score is increased to reflect that extra year-one value
Card value includes rewards earned, travel credits, statement credits, and any other quantifiable benefits you actually use. If you never use a $300 travel credit, don't count it. Score is most accurate when inputs reflect your real spending patterns.
Cite this calculator: Worth It Calculators, "Is Your Credit Card Annual Fee Worth Paying? Run the Numbers (2026)," worthitcalculators.com/credit-card-annual-fee/ (updated July 2026).