At a glance
- Best for: Premium Bilt rewards
- Annual Fee: $495
- APR: 10% intro APR on new eligible purchases for 12 billing cycles after account opening. After the intro period, a variable APR of 26.74% – 34.74% will apply.
- Reward Rate: 2X
- Recommended Credit: 670-850
Bilt Palladium Card
50,000 Bilt Points, Gold Status, and $300 of Bilt Cash
Offer Details:
Earn 50,000 Bilt Points as a sign-up bonus and Gold Status sfter you spend $4,000 on purchases (excluding rent or mortgage) in your first 3 months
Why we like it
This card delivers premium value from everyday spending to elevated travel perks. Cardholders can make housing payments with no transaction fees, unlocking rewards on one of their largest monthly expenses. Plus, the ability to stack rewards with Neighborhood Benefits™ helps maximize everyday earning.
Reward details
2x points on everyday spend
4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday spend
up to 1.25X points on rent and mortgage
Pros & Cons
Pros
Strongest earning structure in the Bilt lineup
Elevated bonus categories that better compete with premium cards
Full access to Bilt Rewards and expanded Bilt Cash value
Designed to function as a primary lifestyle and travel card
No foreign transaction fees
Premium benefits that materially offset the annual fee if used well
Cons
High annual fee with little margin for underuse
Value is highly dependent on active engagement and optimization
Bonus categories still won’t beat the very best single-category cards
Perks favor certain lifestyles, limiting broad appeal
Overkill if you only care about rent or light every day spend
Terms Apply
Overview
Bilt’s looking a little different these days. While its points system remains the most valuable of any on the market, the simplistic credit card product we knew and loved has been replaced by three-tiered options catering to different customers. From the outside (and honestly from the inside, too), things look a little more complicated. But does complex mean it’s less valuable?
The company has gone all-in with its top-tier offering in an attempt to compete with the big names, throwing high-end perks like lounge access and generous statement credits on top of a solid intro bonus. But is all that glitters gold in this case? Or do the complexities of its earning scheme counter the good?
After all, the main draw of Bilt in the first place was the hassle-free ability to earn on your rent or mortgage. Let’s take a look and see how the Palladium stacks up.
Who is this card best for:
The Bilt Palladium Card is very much a premium card, meaning applicants need a decent degree of intent to realize the product’s potential. Moderate to high spenders interested in amassing a lot of Bilt points won’t be served better anywhere, and as the first Bilt card with a real introductory bonus, it represents a chance to get a serious injection of the hyper-valuable points.
Those with less spending, however, may struggle to see the value. Being forced to use the card for everyday spending, just to unlock earnings on housing costs may not be the right choice for many, and will require a bit of math to work out.
The Bottom Line:
The Bilt Palladium is the top-end expression of the Bilt ecosystem, built for users who are all-in on maximizing value rather than minimizing cost. This is a side of Bilt that many people have longed for, but it comes at the cost of a big annual fee and some complex decision-making. It’s built for people who want Bilt to function as a primary lifestyle card and not just a rent-paying sidekick.
If you can justify the fee and lean into the benefits, Palladium is where Bilt finally feels competitive with other true premium cards, which is exciting!
Intro Bonus
The Bilt Palladium Card is the first Bilt product to come with a true introductory bonus. It’s currently offering 50,000 Bilt Points plus $300 in Bilt cash and Gold status after spending $4,000 within three months of opening the card. Importantly, the $4,000 of spending excludes any rent or mortgage payments.
It’s a solid bonus, and something we’ve all wanted to see with Bilt. Its points are still the most valuable on the market, so the opportunity to earn 50,000 of them is a big deal. The Bilt Cash offer can go a long way (at least in the first year) by making some of the decisions down the line easier. It’s also helping offset that $495 annual fee, too.
Pros & Cons
As Bilt’s most ambitious card, the Palladium delivers the biggest upgrades in the lineup. But it does so with clear strings attached. The earning rates and perks are meaningfully stronger, and for the right user they can more than justify the fee. At the same time, the high annual cost and lifestyle-specific benefits leave little room for passive or casual use. Palladium rewards commitment, but if you don’t lean into what it offers, the drawbacks become just as noticeable as the upsides.
Pros
- Strongest earning structure in the Bilt lineup
- Elevated bonus categories that better compete with premium cards
- Full access to Bilt Rewards and expanded Bilt Cash value
- Designed to function as a primary lifestyle and travel card
- No foreign transaction fees
- Premium benefits that materially offset the annual fee if used well
Cons
- High annual fee with little margin for underuse
- Value is highly dependent on active engagement and optimization
- Bonus categories still won’t beat the very best single-category cards
- Perks favor certain lifestyles, limiting broad appeal
- Overkill if you only care about rent or light every day spend
Benefits & Perks
The Palladium comes with a range of perks and benefits that can help offset the $495 annual fee. While they’re not all the easiest to use, some intention can help you take advantage. Here are all the headline perks available with the card.
$400 Bilt Travel Hotel Credit (applied twice a year in $200 increments)
$200 of Bilt Cash
Priority Pass Access (worth $469 a year)
Cell phone insurance.
Secondary rental car insurance.
Travel protections.
Stack with Neighborhood benefits
As with any perk set, Priority Pass is subjective value. If you were never going to spend money on the pass in the first place, are you really saving money? The $400 hotel credit is solid. It would be better if it could be used in one go, but this is normal for most cards. Just remember, you need to use it on Bilt Travel, so it’ll need to be an intentional decision to book your trip using the platform. The Neighborhood Benefits program is a bit hit or miss. It’s basically a system to help you earn extra or grab discounts and other perks at some stores and restaurants.
The $200 in Bilt Cash, which is reapplied each year, does help with some of the more awkward aspects of the program, or you can use it for some fun purchases within the Bilt ecosystem. But it’s hard to gauge its actual value for a number of reasons.
Fees
The Bilt Palladium Card comes with a $495 annual fee. That’s not an insignificant number, so it’s vital you’re prepared to make the most of the card’s earning scheme and perks. It’s right in line with many of the other premium cards, many of which offer more coupon-book style benefits to chisel away at their fees. If you’ve looked at the Palladium’s perks and don’t feel like you’ll maximize those, it’s important you read the next section and see what it could earn you in spending.
Earning rewards & redeeming points
Earning rewards
This is where things get hairy. For a full breakdown of how this works, check out this article on Bilt 2.0, where we’ll go into depth on the intricacies of what is a complex system. For now, we’ll keep it surface level, and if you can’t keep up…well, neither did we at first.
Bilt Cash vs Bilt Points
The Bilt rewards system revolves around two forms of earned currencies: Bilt Cash and Bilt Points.
Bilt Points are similar to other credit card currencies, and are the ones we want to get our hands on. It’s these that we call the most valuable points in the market. You can transfer these to Bilt’s airline and enjoy outstanding value.
Bilt Cash, on the other hand, operates more as a kind of in-house cashback system. You can use it to cover rent payments or credit card transactions, or for affiliated dining and entertainment experiences. It’s worth noting that all but $100 of your Bilt Cash expires at the end of the calendar year, so you need to use it.
What does the Bilt Palladium earn?
With the Bilt Palladium, you can earn:
Up to 1.25x points on rent/mortgage payments
2x points on all non-rent/mortgage spending
4% Bilt Cash on everyday purchases (earning scheme dependent)
$50 in Bilt Cash for every 25,000 points earned
Seems fairly simple, right? If you spend $1,000 on the card outside of your rent, you’ll 2,000 Bilt Points and $40 in Bilt Cash.
But you may have noticed the “up to” verbiage in the rent earnings line. That’s there because you have two methods of earning that each have different outcomes and suit different people.
Option 1: Housing Only Rewards (otherwise known as “spend a ton”)
In this scenario, your rent and mortgage earnings are dictated by how much you spend elsewhere. The upside is that you’ll continue to enjoy fee-free payments on your rent or mortgage. The more you spend, the more you’ll earn from your housing costs. But here’s the kicker: the volume of spending is, in turn, dictated by the size of your rent or mortgage payment, as shown below.
Spend the equivalent of 25% of your rent/mortgage and earn 0.5x Bilt points on housing.
Spend the equivalent of 50% of your rent/mortgage and earn 0.75x Bilt points on housing.
Spend the equivalent of 75% of your rent/mortgage and earn 1x Bilt points on housing.
Spend the equivalent of 100% or more of your rent/mortgage and earn 1.25x Bilt points on housing.
So, the more you use the card, the more you get back from your rent or mortgage. For example, if your rent payment is $2,000, to get a 1x point per dollar rate on that payment, you’d need to spend $1,500 a month on the card. If you don’t meet any of the thresholds, you’ll get a measly 250 points. You won’t receive Bilt Cash if you choose this option.
Keeping up?
Option 2: Flexible Bilt Cash (otherwise known as confusing as hell)
The second option requires you to pay a 3% transaction fee for your rent or mortgage, but in turn lets you earn on it at a 1x point per dollar basis. The issue here is the fee. Bilt’s way for you to work around it is to use Bilt Cash to cover the costs.
Of course, similar to option one, this requires you to use the card on a day-to-day basis — and remember, rent and mortgage payments don’t accrue Bilt Cash.
Using the same $2,000 rent in the first option, I’d earn 2,000 points a month on my rent or mortgage. But I’ve opted for the 3% fee option, which means I owe an extra $60. That fee can’t be covered by cash anyway, so I’m forced to use Bilt Cash.
To earn $60 in Bilt Cash and continue to cover the fee, I’d need to spend at least $1,500 on the card per month. In effect, you’re buying Bilt points with your own earnings.
Which is better?
It’s hard to say, as it’s so situational.
Continuing that $2,000 rent scenario, here’s what it’d look like earning the maximum and minimum in each scenario without overspending. I haven’t included specific spending categories in these for the sake of simplicity. You can assume it’ll be more if you spend on dining, groceries, and travel each month.
Option 1 Max: I spend $2,000 on rent and $2,000 on everyday spend, and receive 6,500 points
Option 1 Min: I spend $2,000 on rent and $499 on everyday spending and receive 1,248 Points
Option 2 Max: I spend $2,000 on rent and $1,500 in everyday spend and receive 5,000 points. I would have used all my Bilt Cash for the month.
Option 2 Min: I spend $2,000 on rent, don’t spend day-to-day, and pay an extra $60 in fees. I’ll only get 2,000 points.
You’ll be able to tell based on your own spending habits where you’ll fall on this spectrum and whether it’s worth it for you. The 2x points per dollar flat-rate does make this better, though.
And breathe.
The Other Option Bilt Probably Doesn’t Want You To Take
If it’s not already obvious, Bilt is heavily incentivizing day-to-day spending on the card. This is a huge departure from its previous system, which generously allowed you to earn on rent after using the card just five times in a billing period. That could literally be a few packs of gum and a coffee.
The issue with the new system, and this card in particular, is that to maximize the card, you really need to be matching your rent/mortgage spending with your day-to-day expenses. At its core, the 2x points per dollar is enough to make this card work as a standalone card or part of a broader strategy. It would make a good replacement for the Capital One Venture X Rewards Card, which earns at the same rate but has less valuable points. But if you have multiple cards and want to use them to their fullest, you have some big decisions to make.
Redeeming
Thankfully, aside from the Bilt Cash thing, redeeming Bilt Points is still basically the same. The best way to do it is to transfer points to one of its airline and hotel partners. It remains one of the strongest selections of partners out there, and you can get some serious value from them.
Here are all the airlines and hotels currently affiliated with Bilt:
Airlines:
Atmos Rewards (Alaska Airlines + Hawaiian Airlines)-1:1
Avianca Lifemiles -1:1
United MileagePlus® -1:1
Air France/KLM Flying Blue® -1:1
Virgin Red® -1:1
Virgin Atlantic Flying Club -1:1
Emirates Skywards® -1:1
British Airways Executive Club -1:1
Cathay Pacific -1:1
Turkish Airlines Miles&Smiles -1:1
Aer Lingus AerClub -1:1
Iberia Plus -1:1
Air Canada Aeroplan® -1:1
TAP Miles&Go -1:1
Southwest Airlines -1:1
Japan Airlines -1:1
Qatar Airways Privilege Club Avios -1:1
Etihad Airways -1:1
Spirit -1:1
Hotels:
Hilton Honors -1:1
Marriott Bonvoy™ -1:1
World of Hyatt® -1:1
IHG® One Rewards -1:1
Accor Live Limitless -3:2
You can also use points on the Bilt Travel Portal, where they’re given a fixed value of 1.25 cents each. That’s a pretty good deal as a fallback.
Bilt Cash can be redeemed in different ways. Such as the following:
Statement credits within the Bilt ecosystem (not general cash back)
Credits toward rent or housing-related rewards (used to unlock additional Bilt Points on housing payments)
Dining credits at Bilt Dining partner restaurants
Food delivery credits with select Bilt partners
Hotel bookings through the Bilt travel portal
Transportation credits (rideshare and select mobility partners)
Experiences and events offered through Bilt (dining events, fitness classes, etc.)
Program features or boosts (used to enhance earning, transfers, or benefits inside Bilt)
Is this card right for you?
The Bilt Palladium has serious potential. Its 2x points per dollar flat-rate makes it a strong contender to be your go-to premium card. However, the necessity to “earn the right to earn” on your housing takes away some of the freedom you have to earn with other programs. Used well, it offers tremendous value, but requires decisive action to do so.
- Best for: Premium Bilt rewards
- Annual Fee: $495
- APR: 10% intro APR on new eligible purchases for 12 billing cycles after account opening. After the intro period, a variable APR of 26.74% – 34.74% will apply.
- Reward Rate: 2X
- Recommended Credit: 670-850
Bilt Palladium Card
50,000 Bilt Points, Gold Status, and $300 of Bilt Cash
Offer Details:
Earn 50,000 Bilt Points as a sign-up bonus and Gold Status sfter you spend $4,000 on purchases (excluding rent or mortgage) in your first 3 months
Why we like it
This card delivers premium value from everyday spending to elevated travel perks. Cardholders can make housing payments with no transaction fees, unlocking rewards on one of their largest monthly expenses. Plus, the ability to stack rewards with Neighborhood Benefits™ helps maximize everyday earning.
Reward details
2x points on everyday spend
4% back in Bilt Cash on everyday spend
up to 1.25X points on rent and mortgage
Pros & Cons
Pros
Strongest earning structure in the Bilt lineup
Elevated bonus categories that better compete with premium cards
Full access to Bilt Rewards and expanded Bilt Cash value
Designed to function as a primary lifestyle and travel card
No foreign transaction fees
Premium benefits that materially offset the annual fee if used well
Cons
High annual fee with little margin for underuse
Value is highly dependent on active engagement and optimization
Bonus categories still won’t beat the very best single-category cards
Perks favor certain lifestyles, limiting broad appeal
Overkill if you only care about rent or light every day spend


