The Chase Sapphire Reserve costs $795 a year now. That number lands hard the first time you see it on a renewal notice, and most of the people asking me about this card in April 2026 are asking the same question: do I keep it, downgrade, or move my points somewhere else? My answer depends on who's asking, but the math has gotten more interesting than the sticker price suggests, partly because of what Chase added in 2026, and partly because of a quiet Marriott change in March that bumped the value of free night certificates for anyone keeping a Marriott card alongside the Reserve.

Here's the take, and then the work behind it. The Reserve makes sense for a specific kind of traveler in 2026. Someone who books at least two paid hotel nights a year at properties Chase has set up credits for, hits a Sapphire Lounge or Priority Pass lounge a few times, and runs a meaningful share of their travel spend through Chase Ultimate Rewards. For everyone else, the Chase Sapphire Preferred is the smarter card, and the right move is a product change. There's no third option called "keep it because it has the cool metal."

The $795 fee, what you actually get back

Chase didn't just hike the fee in June 2025. They restructured the card. The new credit stack is designed to push you into specific behaviors (book luxury hotels through their portal, eat at specific restaurants, fly through select airlines), and if your travel happens to align, the math is generous. If it doesn't, you're paying $795 for a metal card and lounge access.

Here's the breakdown of what's now on the card in 2026:

  • $300 annual travel credit. Posts automatically against any travel charge: flights, hotels, Ubers, parking, tolls. This is the closest thing to cash on the card.
  • $500 in Edit hotel collection credits. Two $250 chunks, redeemable across the calendar year on bookings through Chase's luxury hotel platform. Comes with extras like daily breakfast, $100 property credit, and room upgrades when available.
  • $300 in dining credits at Sapphire Exclusive Tables. Two $150 semi-annual buckets at participating high-end restaurants booked through OpenTable.
  • $250 in prepaid hotel credit (2026 only) for stays at IHG, Omni, Montage, Pendry, Virgin Hotels, Minor Hotels, and Pan Pacific. This one expires December 31, 2026, so it's a use-it-or-lose-it perk for the year.
  • DoorDash + DashPass benefits, monthly grocery and restaurant credits, plus the membership.
  • Apple TV+ and Apple Music complimentary through June 2027. Call it $288/year of value if you'd otherwise pay for both.
  • Priority Pass Select with unlimited guest access, plus access to the Chase Sapphire Lounge network.
  • 8x points on Chase Travel purchases, 4x on direct flights and hotels (up from 3x), 3x on dining, 1x on everything else. Points Boost can stretch portal redemptions to up to 16x effective on select bookings.
  • 1.5cpp floor value on Chase Travel redemptions. This is the quiet headliner. Transfer points from a Chase Freedom Unlimited or Chase Freedom Flex into the Reserve and that 1.5cpp floor turns 1x cashback earnings into 1.5cpp travel value.
  • Travel protections. Primary rental car coverage, trip delay reimbursement, lost luggage, trip cancellation. Among the most generous in the market and worth real money the one time you actually need them.

Add the easy-to-use credits ($300 travel + $500 Edit + $300 dining + $250 IHG-and-friends in 2026 only) and you're at $1,350 in credits before you've thought about lounges, points multipliers, or trip protection. That's $555 over the annual fee in raw credit value, if you actually use everything. That "if" is doing all the work in this analysis.

The credits aren't cash

This is where I push back on the marketing math. The Reserve's credit pile only counts as savings if you'd have spent that money anyway, on the specific thing the credit covers. The $300 annual travel credit gets close to cash because almost any travel charge triggers it. The Edit credit only counts if you were going to book a luxury hotel anyway and the property happens to be in The Edit collection. The Sapphire Exclusive Tables dining credit only counts if you were going to drop $150 at a participating restaurant in each half of the year.

For a Manhattan-based reader who eats at high-end restaurants monthly and books a couple of Edit-eligible weekends a year, all of this is real value. For a reader in suburban Ohio whose travel pattern is two domestic trips a year and dinner at the local Italian place, half the credit stack might as well not exist.

Be honest with yourself before you renew. If you didn't use $1,000 in credits across the past 12 months, you won't use them in the next 12 either. That's not the card's fault. It's just not the right card for that lifestyle.

What changed at Marriott in March, and why it matters here

On March 12, 2026, Marriott Bonvoy raised the cap on how many points you can stack on top of a free night certificate. The old limit was 15,000 points. The new limit is 25,000 points. That's a 67% increase in top-off room.

It sounds like a footnote. It isn't. Free night certificates come in fixed tiers (35K, 50K, 85K), but Marriott prices hotels dynamically, so the property you actually want to book is rarely priced exactly at your certificate's tier. The old 15K top-off let you reach a 50K-point property with a 35K cert. The new 25K top-off pushes that same 35K cert to a 60K-point property. According to Gondola AI's analysis of about 9,270 Marriott hotels, the change adds roughly 733 newly-accessible properties (about 8% of the portfolio) to the standard certificate use case.

The certificates themselves didn't get more valuable on a per-point basis. Marriott didn't lift the base tiers, which they should have. But for anyone holding the Marriott Bonvoy Boundless, the Marriott Bonvoy Business, or the Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant, the certificate that comes with the annual fee just got more useful. The 35K cert reaches more hotels. The 85K cert from the Brilliant now stretches to 110K-point Ritz-Carltons during shoulder season.

Why does this matter for the Reserve question? Because the Reserve isn't a hotel-loyalty card. If you're a Marriott regular, the Reserve is your cash card for stays you book directly, earning 4x Chase points on the spend while your free night certificate from a Marriott card handles the aspirational redemptions. The Reserve and a Bonvoy card aren't competing. They're a stack. The Marriott change made the cheap half of that stack a little better, which marginally improves the case for keeping the Reserve, because you don't need the Reserve to do hotel-loyalty work.

It's the inverse argument from the one that was floating around in March. A few writers framed the Marriott update as "see, premium credit cards are getting outclassed by cheap loyalty cards." That's not what happened. What happened is the cheap loyalty card got better, and the premium card's job description got cleaner.

Reserve vs. Sapphire Preferred: the downgrade math

The honest comparison isn't Reserve versus a competitor. It's Reserve versus the Chase Sapphire Preferred. Same ecosystem, same transfer partners, same Ultimate Rewards points. The Preferred is $95 a year. The fee gap is $700.

What you give up downgrading to the Preferred:

  • 1.5cpp floor on Chase Travel drops to 1.25cpp. On 100,000 redeemed points, that's $250 less value.
  • Lounge access (Priority Pass + Sapphire Lounges). Gone.
  • Edit credits, dining credits, the 2026 IHG/Omni/etc. credit. Gone.
  • Earning rates drop. 8x to 5x on Chase Travel. 4x to 2x on direct travel. 3x dining stays. 1x everything else stays.
  • Apple subscriptions, DoorDash perks, the bigger trip protections. Gone.
  • $50 annual hotel credit on the Preferred is a rounding error against $1,050+ on the Reserve.

For the $700 gap to pencil out in favor of the Reserve, you need to be confidently using more than $700 in genuine credit value plus lounge access. If you fly through major airports with Sapphire Lounges three or four times a year, lounge access alone is worth $200 to $400 to the right traveler. Add real use of the Edit credit and the math gets there. If you're flying twice a year to visit family and lounge access doesn't matter, the Preferred wins by $700.

Reserve vs. Amex Platinum and Capital One Venture X

Two outside comparisons matter for the "should I just switch?" question.

Amex Platinum ($695/year). The Platinum is the closest thing to the Reserve in market position. The credit stack is bigger on paper (airline incidental credits, Uber credits, hotel collection credits, digital subscriptions, Equinox, Saks, the list keeps going), but each individual credit is more constrained. Amex's credits are famously hard to fully use unless your life is already shaped around them. The Centurion Lounge network is the strongest single argument for the Platinum, and it's a strong argument. The downside: Amex Membership Rewards is a strong points currency for international airline transfers but doesn't have the breadth of Hyatt/Southwest/United partnerships that make Chase Ultimate Rewards versatile for domestic travelers.

The Reserve wins for: domestic-leaning travelers, Hyatt-and-Southwest fans, anyone who values the 1.5cpp portal floor, anyone who finds Amex's credit gymnastics exhausting.

The Platinum wins for: international travelers (especially business class redemptions through Amex partners), heavy Centurion Lounge users, anyone whose spending naturally hits Amex's specific credit categories.

Capital One Venture X ($395/year). Half the price, similar lounge access (Capital One Lounges + Priority Pass + Plaza Premium), $300 Capital One Travel credit, 10,000 anniversary miles. Earning is simpler: 2x on everything, 5x on Capital One Travel flights, 10x on hotels through their portal. Transfer partners are a bit weaker than Chase's but include Air Canada Aeroplan and Turkish Miles & Smiles, which are genuinely useful for international award travel.

The Venture X wins flat-out on dollars. If you don't care about the specific Reserve credit categories, this is the smarter premium card for many readers, and I'd rather see them in a Venture X than paying $400 more for credits they won't use. Look at our Capital One Venture X review for a fuller breakdown. It's the best premium card under $500 right now.

The Reserve wins over the Venture X for: anyone already deep in the Chase ecosystem with multiple Ultimate Rewards earners, anyone who genuinely uses the Edit credit and dining credits, anyone whose travel runs through Sapphire Lounges or major Chase-served airports.

How I'd think about it, by reader profile

Three patterns cover most people asking this question.

Profile 1: The lifestyle Reserve user. You eat at nice restaurants regularly. You book a couple of paid luxury hotel weekends a year. You fly through airports with Sapphire Lounges. You have a Freedom Unlimited or Freedom Flex feeding points into your Reserve, and the 1.5cpp floor matters because you redeem through the portal. Verdict: keep the Reserve. The math works. The credits aren't theoretical.

Profile 2: The occasional traveler with a Reserve from 2017. You signed up when the bonus was 100K points and the fee was $450. You travel a few times a year. You don't eat out much. You haven't been to a Sapphire Lounge. Verdict: product-change to the Sapphire Preferred. Save $700 a year. Your points keep earning, your transfer partners are unchanged, the welcome bonus you got nine years ago is locked in. The Reserve isn't doing $700 of work for you.

Profile 3: The points-curious reader picking their first travel card. You're trying to decide if a premium card is worth it from the jump. Verdict: start with the Sapphire Preferred. Earn the welcome bonus. Run the card for a year. Then upgrade to the Reserve only if your actual usage pattern justifies it. Don't get the premium card for benefits you might use someday. Get it for the benefits you definitely used last year.

The exception across all three profiles is the Marriott loyalist who books direct. If a meaningful chunk of your hotel spend is paid Marriott bookings (not just certificate redemptions), the Reserve's 4x on direct hotel bookings stacks well with Marriott Bonvoy points and elite night credits. That's a real argument for the Reserve over the Preferred even at modest travel frequency, because you're earning premium-card-rate points on the same dollars you were going to spend at Marriott anyway. The March 2026 cert change just made the certificate from your Marriott card more useful, freeing the Reserve to do its job (cash earning + portal value).

The transfer partner argument, briefly

A point a lot of guides skip: the value of the Reserve isn't only in the credits. It's in what a Chase Ultimate Rewards point becomes once you transfer it. World of Hyatt at 1:1 is the single most valuable transfer in domestic points. United, Southwest, Air Canada Aeroplan, Air France/KLM Flying Blue, Virgin Atlantic, British Airways Avios. The partner list is broad and most of them are 1:1.

But here's the honest part: those transfer partners are available from the Sapphire Preferred too. The Reserve doesn't get exclusive transfer access. What the Reserve buys you on top of transfers is the 1.5cpp portal floor for the times you can't make a transfer work. If you're a transfer-or-nothing redeemer, you don't need the Reserve for that reason.

Two things to do before renewal

If you're reading this with a Reserve renewal coming up:

  1. Pull your credit usage from the past 12 months. Log into chase.com, look at the credits dashboard. Add up what actually posted. Did you hit $1,000? If not, you're losing money keeping the card.
  2. Test a product change downgrade with the Chase rep. Call the number on the back of the card. Ask: "Can I product-change to the Sapphire Preferred without losing my points?" The answer is yes. You keep your account history, your points, your credit line. You just stop paying $700/year extra.

Don't cancel the Reserve outright unless you're consolidating. Product changes preserve your account age, which matters for credit score and Chase 5/24 strategy. There's no penalty for downgrading and no penalty for upgrading back later if your travel pattern changes.

The bottom line in 2026

The Reserve at $795 isn't a worse card than the Reserve at $550. It's a more aggressively segmented card. Chase has decided to charge premium pricing for premium-aligned use, and they're making the math work hard for travelers whose patterns don't match. If yours match, this is still one of the best premium cards in the market. If they don't, the Sapphire Preferred is right there, $700 cheaper, with most of what made you love Chase in the first place.

The Marriott certificate change in March doesn't tip this decision. It just slightly improves the supporting cast if you're running a Reserve + Bonvoy stack. The Reserve question is, and always has been, about whether you'll use what you're paying for.

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