Bag-Fee Credit Cards Worth Keeping: When a Free Checked Bag Is the Entire Point

Bag-Fee Credit Cards Worth Keeping: When a Free Checked Bag Is the Entire Point

There is a certain kind of airline credit card that does not need to win on earning rates, lounge access, or flashy premium perks. It only needs to solve one problem often enough to justify its annual fee. The free checked bag card is the classic example. These are not necessarily cards to spend on every day. They are often cards to keep because the math works at the airport, not at the grocery store.

That framing matters because bag-fee cards are easy to underestimate. In a wallet full of 5x categories, transferable points, and premium travel cards, a co-branded airline card can look underwhelming on paper. Yet a single family trip, a couple of domestic roundtrips, or regular work travel with checked luggage can make a “boring” airline card one of the most practical cards in the portfolio.

The keeper logic for bag-fee cards

A checked-bag benefit is one of the easiest airline perks to value because it replaces a direct out-of-pocket cost. When the perk is reliable, the cardholder does not need a speculative redemption or a perfect award chart sweet spot in order to come out ahead. The card either avoids baggage charges or it does not.

That is why bag-fee cards fit neatly into a “keeper card” framework. These cards do not have to be the best earners in the wallet. They simply need to pay for themselves often enough. In practice, that often means they stay open even when other cards get downgraded or canceled for annual-fee reasons.

Southwest: downgrade, don’t necessarily dump

Southwest is the easiest place to start because it illustrates how quickly the value proposition of a card can change. Southwest’s co-branded consumer cards currently advertise first checked bag free for the cardmember and up to eight additional passengers on the same reservation, provided the Rapid Rewards number is attached appropriately. All of the consumer Southwest cards participate in that benefit, not just the premium Priority version.

That is important because it means a downgrade from Southwest Priority to a lower-fee Southwest credit card can preserve the checked-bag benefit while reducing the annual fee burden. For someone who already has A-List status, that matters even more. A-List now already covers preferred or standard seat selection at booking and allows extra legroom seat selection within 48 hours when available, reducing the distinct value of the higher-end card’s travel-day perks.

In other words, Southwest is a case where the right move may be to keep the airline relationship but simplify the card. The checked-bag feature survives the downgrade, while elite status picks up much of the slack on the travel experience side.

Alaska: a classic bag-fee keeper

Alaska’s co-branded credit card remains one of the clearest examples of a bag-fee keeper card. Bank of America’s Alaska/Atmos consumer card offers a free checked bag and preferred boarding for the cardholder and up to six guests on the same reservation when the eligible Alaska or Hawaiian flight is purchased with the card. That can add up quickly for anyone traveling with companions or checking luggage even a few times per year.

This is the kind of benefit that can quietly justify the annual fee without any help from bonus categories. It does not need to compete with transferable points cards on everyday spend because its value shows up exactly when Alaska is the airline being flown. That is often the hallmark of a successful keeper card: it is not trying to be universal, only useful in the right moments.

American Airlines: not flashy, still useful

The Citi AAdvantage cards fit the same mold. Citi notes that eligible AAdvantage cardmembers receive a free first checked bag on domestic American Airlines itineraries for themselves and up to four companions traveling on the same reservation. On the Platinum Select side, Citi explicitly states that the first checked bag is free on domestic itineraries for the primary cardmember and up to four companions.

That is enough to make the AAdvantage card easy to justify for someone who flies American often enough to encounter checked-bag fees. This is not necessarily a card to use for general spending if stronger transferable-points cards are already in the wallet. But as a bag-fee tool, it is straightforward and practical.

Delta: useful benefit, awkward timing

No bag fee right!

Delta’s co-branded American Express cards offer one of the stronger versions of the first checked bag free benefit. Delta states that eligible Delta SkyMiles American Express cardmembers can check the first bag free on eligible Delta flights, with the waiver extending to up to eight travel companions on the same reservation, for a total of nine passengers. Delta specifically lists Gold, Platinum, and Reserve personal and business SkyMiles cards as eligible for the first-bag-free benefit.

On pure utility, that is appealing. On timing, it may not be. The issue is not the bag benefit itself. The issue is American Express’s bonus policy. Amex is widely known for a “once per lifetime” welcome-offer rule, under which a card’s bonus is generally available only once per person per product. That means applying for a Delta SkyMiles card just to lock in a checked-bag perk can be a poor trade if there is any chance that same product might be more valuable later when a strong welcome bonus or a different travel need comes along.

That makes Delta the odd one out in this strategy. The checked-bag benefit is real and useful, but it is not compelling enough right now to justify consuming a valuable Amex slot and potentially burning long-term bonus eligibility just for baggage savings.

How these cards fit in a sophisticated wallet

A mature points-and-miles wallet does not need every card to serve the same role. Some cards exist to earn 5x. Some exist to unlock transfers. Some exist to provide travel protections. And some exist because a checked bag costs real money and the card reliably waives that cost.

That is why bag-fee cards often survive even after more glamorous cards get downgraded. They are purpose-built. Southwest may be worth keeping in a cheaper version because A-List already covers so much of the premium card overlap while the checked-bag feature remains in the card family. Alaska remains compelling because the bag perk can extend to multiple travelers on the same reservation. Citi AAdvantage remains a useful American Airlines companion even if it is not the first choice for daily spend.

The common thread is simple: these are not cards being kept for theoretical value. They are being kept because they make travel cheaper in a direct, repeatable way. In a hobby that can sometimes overcomplicate value, that kind of simplicity is a feature, not a bug.

Ski Free with Alaska Airlines Boarding Pass

Ski Free with Alaska Airlines Boarding Pass

Alaska Airlines has partnered with 12 ski resorts for the 2018-2019 season where you can get a free lift ticket just by showing your boarding pass. Just make sure to keep your Alaska Airlines boarding pass, or print out extra copies, and show your pass at the mountains sale office to redeem your complimentary lift ticket. Skiing isn’t normally cheap so this is a great offer to take advantage of it.

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