Pam
One of the benefits of several credit cards is an airline incidental credit. These are usually offered on the cards with higher annual fees, so you want to use these benefits to make the annual fee seem lower. Using credit card airline incidental credits can be tricky because most things you can use don’t cost a lot. The following cards have an annual incidental credit:
You need to pick one airline to use this credit with each card. This airline can be changed yearly, usually during the month of January, to use that year. You can access the airline selection screen by scrolling to your online account’s “Benefits” section.

These are the airlines you can pick from:
The credit is intended for baggage fees, booking fees, in-flight food, and lounge admissions. You can also use the Ritz-Carlton card for seat upgrades. Let’s talk about some less obvious and better ways to use them. Warning: these are unauthorized uses, so proceed at your own risk, but they have worked for me!
Another option, if you select Southwest® as your airline, is to book flights for less than $100. This should trigger the credit. The key is to make sure the flight is under $100. Don’t have a flight you want to take that’s under $100? No problem. Book any flight under $100, and then you can cancel it to get a future flight credit to use later on.

5 days after purchasing the flight, the credit showed up in her account
Every flight has some sort of taxes/fees, from $5.60 for one-way domestic flights to hundreds of dollars on international flights. These fees may vary by airline, but typically, your AMEX flight credit will work to cover these fees. I have mainly seen success with Southwest. Remember, this will only work for your designated airline.
I always use the credit card airline incidentals benefit, so my annual fees seem lower. How do you use your airline incidental credits?

Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities. American Express is a Travel Mom Squad advertiser, but we always show the best public offer even when we don’t earn a commission. Terms Apply.
Responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser’s responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.
Advertiser Disclosure: Points Talk Squad has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Points Talk Squad and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers when a customer clicks on a link, when an application is approved, or when an account is opened. This compensation may impact how or where products appear on this site. Points Talk Squad has not reviewed all available credit card offers on this site.
Editorial Note: Opinions expressed here are author's alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, hotel, airline, or other entity. This content has not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of the entities included within the post.
Have you used UA Travel Bank for Ritz Card incidentals?
Personally, I haven’t. I watched a YouTube video that said it would work but I have no data points to support it. I’ll try next year because I’ve already used mine for a first-class domestic upgrade.
I had no idea I could fund my United TravelBank with my Amex platinum $200 incidental airline credits! So easy to do and now I don’t have to worry about trying to use them anymore. Thanks Pam!
Glad to help!
That is a hard airline to use those incidental credits. If you don’t plan to travel with them, there isn’t much you can do. Definitely, change to United.
For booking a Southwest flight under $100 and then canceling it to get a future flight credit to use later on… can it be Wanna Get Away rate or does it have to be something else specific?
It can be any fare but I would try and get one about $49 – those have always worked for me.