Fidelity Visa Card: Get $150 Bonus & 0% APR!

Key takeaway

Curious about a $150 bonus? Now you need just $1,000 to unlock it—plus 0% APR for 12 months!

Highlights

  • Updated spend requirement for bonus reduced to $1,000.
  • Sign-up bonus of $150 for spending within the first 90 days.
  • No annual fee and earns 2% cash back on all purchases.
  • Available only to new Fidelity Rewards account holders.
  • 0% foreign transaction fee accompanies the card.

Update 5/18/26: Deal is back, spend requirement reduced to $1,000 (from $1,500). Hat tip to reader B

Originally posted 4/2/19. Reposting 4/11/22 as this $150 offer is still around, and now they added 0% APR for the first 12 months as well. Direct Link (ht Azure)

The Offer

Direct link to offer | New Link

  • Receive a sign up bonus of $150 when you spend $1,500 or more within the first 90 days on the Fidelity Visa card.

Card Details

  • No annual fee
  • Card earns 2% cash back on all purchases
  • 1% 0% foreign transaction fee
  • This Bonus Cash offer is available only to new Fidelity Rewards Accounts booked through this special offer. Existing and previous Fidelity Rewards card members are not eligible for this offer
  • Card issued by Elan services (subsidiary of U.S. bank)

Our Verdict

The card often doesn’t have any bonus, or has a bonus of $50 or $100; I don’t think we’ve ever seen a publicly available $150 bonus before (even when it was issued by FIA card services). There is a targeted offer of $300 out there currently, and there’s also a public $100 offer with a lower $1,000 spend requirement.

This is a pretty good deal if you need a card that has a high base spend, if you already have one of those (or don’t need one because you’re spend just goes to minimum spend requirements) then there are better cash sign up bonuses out there. You can read our full review of this card here. We’ll add this to our list of Best Credit Card Signup Bonuses.

Keep in mind you also need to open an eligible Fidelity account as well (cash management is best option if you don’t want to invest with Fidelity).

Big thanks to reader YL for sharing this

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