Editorial take: JetBlue Plus Card
Strong East Coast card. The 5,000 anniversary points alone are worth ~$65 (more than half the fee), and the 10% redemption rebate keeps the rest of your TrueBlue stash compounding.
Both are well-respected travel cards. The JetBlue Plus Card comes from Barclays at $99/yr; the United Club Business Card from Chase at $695/yr. Below: side-by-side specs, an opinionated verdict, and the FAQs people actually ask before applying.
These cards are close on the fundamentals (similar bonus value, similar fee). The right pick depends on which category you spend the most in and which transfer partners best fit your travel goals.
| Feature | JetBlue Plus Card | United Club Business Card |
|---|---|---|
| Annual fee | $99 | $695 |
| Sign-up bonus | 60,000 points | 75,000 miles |
| Bonus value (est.) | $780 | $1,050 |
| Min spend to unlock bonus | $1,000 in 3 mo | $5,000 in 3 mo |
| Issuer | Barclays | Chase |
| Card category | airline | business |
| Best earning category (Jetblue) | 6x | 1x |
| Transfer partners | trueblue | mileageplus |
| Headline benefits |
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Strong East Coast card. The 5,000 anniversary points alone are worth ~$65 (more than half the fee), and the 10% redemption rebate keeps the rest of your TrueBlue stash compounding.
Pure United Club access card. Cash equivalent of the lounge membership is $750+/year, so the $695 fee makes sense if you're at United hubs frequently. The 1.5x base earning is the highest catch-all rate among premium business cards.
Card details on this page reflect the most recent data we've verified against the issuer's own site. Sign-up bonuses and fees can change at any time — confirm the current offer on the issuer's page before applying.