The Ink Business Unlimited® Credit Card is a small business credit card has a limited-offer of a $750 cash bonus (75,000 Ultimate Rewards points) for new cardholders and the simplicity of a flat, unlimited 1.5% cash back on all purchases and all with zero annual fee. Here are the details:
- $750 bonus cash back after you spend $6,000 on purchases in the first 3 months from account opening.
- Unlimited, flat 1.5% cash back (or flat 1.5X Ultimate Rewards points per dollar spent) on all purchases with no limit.
- Free additional cards for employees.
- No annual fee.
Ultimate Rewards points. The cash sign-up bonus actually comes in the form of Ultimate Rewards points at 1 point = 1 cent in cash. 50,000 points = $500 cash. If you have one of the other annual fee cards that offer a boost in value like the Ink Business Preferred, Sapphire Preferred, or Sapphire Reserve, you can transfer your points between Ultimate Rewards accounts and redeem using that other card’s 25% travel bonus. This can increase the value of your points.
You could think of this card as the small business version of the Chase Freedom Unlimited card.
Prefer airline and/or hotel points? You can’t transfer points to miles directly with this card, but if you transfer over your Ultimate Rewards points to the Chase Sapphire Preferred Card (or Ink Business Preferred card), then you can use that card to transfer into hotel and/or airline miles. If you value those miles/points at more than 1 cent per point, then your 1.5X rewards from this card can be significantly higher. Examples:
– You could earn 1.5 United miles per dollar spent.
– You could earn 1.5 Hyatt points per dollar spent.
– You could earn 1.5 British Airways Avios per dollar spent.
– You could earn 1.5 Southwest Rapid Rewards points per dollar spent.
For example, if you placed a perceived value of 1.5 cents on each United mile or Southwest Rapid Rewards point, then you’d receive 2.25 cents of perceived value per dollar spent with this card. Your actual numbers will depend on your own specific redemption choices.
Many people aren’t aware of the fact that they can apply for business credit cards, even if they are not a corporation or LLC. The business type is called a sole proprietorship, and these days many people are full-time or part-time consultants, freelancers, eBay/Amazon/Etsy sellers, or other one-person business owners. This is the simplest business entity, but it is fully legit and recognized by the IRS. On a business credit card application, you should use your own legal name as the business name, and your Social Security Number as the Tax ID.
Note that Chase has an unofficial rule that they will automatically deny approval on new credit cards if you have 5 or more new credit cards from any issuer on your credit report within the past 2 years (aka the 5/24 rule). This rule is designed to discourage folks that apply for high numbers of sign-up bonuses. This rule applies on a per-person basis, so in our household one applies to Chase while the other applies at other card issuers.
Bottom line. The Ink Business Unlimited® Credit Card has a large sign-up bonus and flat 1.5% cash back with no annual fee. This card is best for people who want simple and straightforward rewards. If you have certain other Chase credit cards, you can transfer Ultimate Rewards points over to those cards and increase your value. Be sure to compare with other Chase small business cards – Ink Business Preferred and Ink Business Cash.
Also see: Top 10 Best Small Business Card Bonus Offers.
Is this a new Ink card ? or would it be the same that were going around last year
Yes, this is a new Ink card.
Have anyone applied for 2 of the Ink cards in the same year and got bonus for both? Would it be best to apply to the second one before closing the first one?
Thanks.
What should I put if I don’t have llc? In question about my company?
What if I already have an Ink Unlimited Card with Chase? Can I open a second one and still receive the bonus?
How does the 524 rule apply if I’m applying under my tax ID number for the corporation? CC company sometimes also asks for my SS number ( and I’ve definitely broken the 5/24 rule already).
They’ll usually require your SSN in addition to corporation tax ID and for you to personally guarantee the debt on the card (not just backed by business credit score). They will also pull your personal credit report.
Hi Jonathan,
What if we are just an employee but would like to have this card?