Is the Chase Sapphire Reserve® worth the $795 annual fee?
Anyone telling you the Chase Sapphire Reserve® is automatically worth that — without knowing how you travel, what you eat, where you live, or how you actually redeem points — is selling you something.
So let me try a different approach. The card is currently running its all-time high welcome offer: 150,000 bonus points after qualifying activities. That’s a real reason to look at the card right now. But “the offer is good” and “the card is worth $795 every year” are two very different questions, and most of the internet treats them as the same one.
This post is about the second question. And the most useful thing I can give you isn’t my opinion — it’s a calculator that forces you to answer it honestly for yourself.
The honest case for the card
The 150K welcome offer is the highest I’ve ever seen on this card. At the absolute floor — cashing the points out at 1 cent each — that’s $1,500. If you book travel through Chase TravelSM and get the Reserve’s points boost at 2x (2 cents per point), that same 150K is worth roughly $3,000. And if you transfer to partners like Hyatt, Air Canada Aeroplan, or Virgin Atlantic and book the right redemption, you can stretch it much more.
I want to be careful here. That top number isn’t a promise. It assumes you have the time and knowledge to hunt down a 2-cent-per-point redemption and a flexible travel date to match it. Most cardholders don’t, and that’s fine. The $1,500–$2,250 range is what most people will realistically get.
Beyond the welcome offer, the card now stacks credits across travel, dining, entertainment, DoorDash, Apple subscriptions, Lyft, and Peloton. On paper, those credits add up to more than the $795 fee. On paper.
The honest case against the card
The CSR has turned into a coupon book. Some of those credits route you through specific platforms — Chase Travel, DashPass, The Edit, Exclusive Tables — that can cost more than booking direct. Others require you to already pay for a subscription (looking at you, Peloton). Others, like the Edit credit, only trigger on a 2-night minimum prepaid stay at a select property, which means you might spend $500–$600 out of pocket to “unlock” $250.
A credit is only worth its face value if you’d have spent the money anyway. A $250 credit that requires $600 of incremental spending you didn’t need to do isn’t a $250 benefit. It’s a $250 discount on $600 of spending you wouldn’t have chosen.
That’s the math most “is it worth it?” posts skip.
The calculator
So I built one that doesn’t skip it.
Each credit has a face value and a slider where you tell it how much of that credit is actually worth to you. The $300 flexible travel credit is close to cash — most people will mark it at 100%. The $250 Edit credit, with its 2-night minimum and prepaid requirement, might be 30%. The Peloton credit might be 0% if you don’t already subscribe.
You add your annual spend by category to capture earning rates. You value the perks (Priority Pass, Sapphire Lounges, complimentary DashPass, primary rental car insurance) at what they’re actually worth to you — not what Chase says they’re worth.
The calculator does the rest.
Four presets to anchor your starting point
If you’re not sure where to start, I built four personas that pre-fill realistic percentages:
- Leisure traveler — modest travel, average dining, light entertainment
- Luxury hotel booker — high Edit credit value, regular Exclusive Tables use
- Urban foodie — heavy dining, StubHub, Lyft, DoorDash usage
- Skeptic — what the math looks like for someone who won’t go out of their way to use every credit
Click any preset, then adjust from there. The Skeptic preset is the most useful one, honestly. It shows you the floor — if you can break even there, the card almost certainly works for you.
One thing the calculator deliberately does NOT include
The welcome offer.
I left it out on purpose, because the welcome offer is a one-time event in year 1 and the calculator answers an ongoing annual question: should I keep paying $795 every year? If I added 150K points to the math, every reader would see “worth it” in year 1 and miss the question they actually need to answer — will this card still be worth $795 in year 2, year 3, year 5?
So treat the welcome offer as a separate, year-one bonus on top of whatever number the calculator gives you. At $1,500–$2,250 in realistic value, it absolutely makes the first year a no-brainer. The calculator tells you whether the years after that hold up.
Use the calculator below to find out how much value you’d actually extract from the Chase Sapphire Reserve® each year, based on how you actually spend and travel.
The idea is simple: each credit has a face value, and you adjust a slider to reflect what it’s truly worth to you. If there are no Sapphire Reserve Exclusive Tables restaurants near you, that $150 credit isn’t actually worth $150 to you — drag it down. If you’re an Android user who doesn’t care about Apple Music, set Apple to 0%. If you live in a city and take Lyft constantly, leave that one high.
Be honest. The point of this isn’t to convince yourself the card pays for itself — it’s to find out whether it actually does. That’s a $795 question worth answering carefully.
Is the $795 fee worth it for you?
Adjust each credit honestly, add your annual spend, value the perks you’ll actually use. Tap (i) for context, tap a category to expand.
Priority Pass, Sapphire Lounges, complimentary DashPass membership, IHG Platinum, primary rental car insurance, trip delay coverage. Be honest — if you fly twice a year, this is closer to $0 than $500.
The Chase Sapphire Reserve® has the highest offer we’ve seen: 150,000 bonus points after qualifying activities.
Learn more →Who this card actually makes sense for
If you travel premium, eat at restaurants that show up on Exclusive Tables lists, book hotels at the kind of properties on the Edit, and use Sapphire Lounges or Priority Pass more than twice a year — the card pays for itself before you even count points earning.
If you book one flight a year, eat at home, and don’t subscribe to Apple TV+, Apple Music, or Peloton — you should probably get the Chase Sapphire Preferred® ($95 annual fee) instead, or a no-AF travel card. The Reserve is not designed for you and trying to make it work will feel like a part-time job.
Most people are somewhere in between. That’s exactly why I built the calculator — to give you a number instead of a vibe.
The bottom line
The Chase Sapphire Reserve® at $795 is not automatically worth it. But with the highest welcome offer this card has ever offered — 150,000 bonus points — there’s never been a better moment to evaluate it.
Run the calculator. Be honest with the sliders. If your number comes out positive, the card works for you. If it comes out negative, save your $795 and look elsewhere.
That’s the deal.
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