Bank of America Launches New Rewards Program Details
Bank of America just rolled out its biggest credit card rewards overhaul in years. The changes affect millions of cardholders, but the devil’s in the details.
What’s changing
Starting immediately, BofA is consolidating its fragmented rewards programs into one unified system called “BankAmeriDeals Rewards.”
The headline features: – Pooled points across all BofA cards – Customizable bonus categories (3% back on your choice) – Quarterly category rotations eliminated – Integration with Preferred Rewards status
Previously, you’d earn separate rewards on different cards with no way to combine them. That friction cost cardholders real value.
The new earning structure
Base earning rates stay the same across BofA’s card lineup. What’s new: you now pick one 3% category from a list including gas, dining, travel, streaming, or online shopping.
That choice locks in for six months before you can switch.
Preferred Rewards members still get their bonus multipliers (25%-75% depending on tier). A Platinum Honors member now earns effectively 5.25% in their chosen category—competitive with specialized cards.
Who wins here
This benefits existing BofA customers with multiple cards most. If you’re sitting on orphaned cashback from an old card, you can finally pool it.
The customizable category also helps if you’ve been gaming quarterly rotations but hate the mental overhead. Set it and forget it for half a year.
Preferred Rewards members already banking with BofA get the best deal. Without that status, these rates aren’t remarkable.
Who loses
If you valued flexibility in quarterly categories, you just lost it. The previous Cash Rewards card let you activate new categories every quarter. Now you’re locked for six months.
BofA also quietly reduced the annual bonus from $100 to $75 for customers spending $3,000+ in their chosen category. That’s a 25% haircut buried in the announcement.
New applicants without existing BofA relationships don’t have compelling reasons to choose these over competitor cards with better welcome bonuses.
The bottom line
The pooling feature solves a real pain point. But the mandatory six-month category lock feels restrictive compared to competitors offering either static high-earn rates or true flexibility.
This move seems designed to deepen existing customer relationships rather than attract new cardholders. BofA is betting loyalty beats acquisition.
For Preferred Rewards members, these cards just got better. Everyone else should do the math.
Our Take
Why it matters: BofA is playing defense against Chase and Amex by making it stickier to leave their ecosystem once you’re in.
The catch: The reduced annual bonus and category inflexibility suggest BofA is optimizing for profit margins, not cardholder generosity.
What to do: If you’re already a Preferred Rewards member with multiple BofA cards, this is a meaningful upgrade. Log in and select your category now—the default assignment probably isn’t optimal. If you’re not in the BofA ecosystem, this announcement doesn’t change the competitive landscape enough to warrant jumping in.
Watch for: Whether other regional banks follow this playbook of integrated rewards across products. It could reshape how we think about card portfolios.