Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® vs JetBlue Card
Side-by-side comparison
| Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® | JetBlue Card | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual fee | $99 | No annual fee |
| Welcome offer | 80,000 American Airlines AAdvantage® miles after $3,500 in 4 months | 10,000 bonus points after $1,000 in 90 days |
| Dining | 2x | 2x |
| Groceries | 1x | 2x |
| Gas | 2x | 1x |
| Travel | 1x | 1x |
| Streaming | 1x | 1x |
| Everything else | 1x | 1x |
| Est. yearly rewards* | $343 | $382 |
| Points type | Locked to American Airlines AAdvantage | Locked to JetBlue TrueBlue |
| Network | Mastercard | Mastercard |
*Estimated yearly rewards on typical household spending, every point valued at a flat 1 cent. Verified June 2026. See your own numbers in the calculator.
The verdict
On a typical year of household spending, the Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® earns about $343 a year in rewards and the JetBlue Card about $382, valuing every point at a flat 1 cent. The Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® charges $99, which you clear through its rewards and perks. The JetBlue Card has no annual fee, so its rewards are all profit. Counting rewards, fees, and any credits, the JetBlue Card delivers more total value, about $137 a year more for a typical spender, mostly because it earns more where you spend most, on groceries. Neither leans on transferable points, so the deciding factors are the welcome offer, the card network, and which everyday perks you will actually use. On the sign-up bonus, the Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® currently has the larger welcome offer. A welcome bonus is a one-time event, so weigh it apart from the ongoing rewards.
Pick the Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® if your spending leans toward gas. Pick the JetBlue Card if your spending leans toward groceries.

