On a recent episode of How to Money, a listener named Suzanne asked whether she should track her credit card rewards as part of her monthly budget. The hosts pushed back hard. I’ve been studying personal finance podcasts and household budgeting frameworks for several years now, and this debate captures a recurring trap. Rewards, they argued, are “semi-volatile” and unpredictable from year to year. One host put numbers to it: “some years you might earn $2,000, some years you might earn $3,500 based on your spending, based on a significant bonus from one card.”
Quick Read
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This advice applies to households with lumpy or unpredictable spending, those earning rewards in non-liquid points, or anyone tempted to chase bonus spending to hit reward targets.
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The stakes are simple. If you build $3,500 of rewards into next year’s spending plan and only earn $2,000, you have a $1,500 hole. Worse, the host warned, “I would be afraid that, ‘Oh, we’re not getting as many rewards,’ then does that incentivize you to potentially spend again?” That is the trap: a budgeting habit designed to capture “free money” can quietly push you toward chasing rewards by spending more.
The verdict: the hosts are right, and the math is unforgiving
This advice is sound, and the reason is volatility plus a thin national savings cushion. The U.S. personal savings rate sat at just 4% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 5.2% a year earlier and 6.2% in early 2024. Households have less margin for a budgeting mistake than they did two years ago.
Now stack that against rewards volatility. Imagine a household pencils in $3,500 of rewards as income, splits it across travel and groceries, and books a trip on that basis. The next year a sign-up bonus does not repeat. Rewards drop to $2,000. The $1,500 shortfall has to come from somewhere, usually a credit line that charges interest at a rate well above any cashback percentage. The reward becomes the bait that justifies the debt.
Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset’s free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don’t waste another minute; learn more here.

