Is the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® Worth the $250 Annual Fee?

Worth it for the right spender

Likely yes. On a typical budget the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® earns about $763 a year in rewards, which already clears the $250 fee with $513 to spare, before counting any perks. Heavier spenders come out further ahead.

$250
annual fee
$763
rewards a year on a typical budget
$850
welcome bonus value (first year)

Credits and benefits

The Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® does not lean on statement credits to justify its $250 fee, so the case for it rests on rewards, the welcome bonus, and any perks like transfer partners or travel protections. That makes the math simpler: the rewards have to clear the fee.

What you earn on spending

Credits are only half the story; the card also earns rewards every time you swipe. On $29,160 of annual spending, the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® earns about $763 a year at a flat 1 cent per point. The figure below is based on a typical household budget. See the full category breakdown in our Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® review, or run your own numbers in the rewards calculator.

The break-even

Add it up. The Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® costs $250 a year. It leans on rewards, and everyday rewards add about $763. That is a net of $513 in your favor every year you hold it, before any welcome bonus. First-year holders also collect a welcome bonus worth about $850, pushing the first-year total to roughly $1,363.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® worth the annual fee?
Likely yes. On a typical budget the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® earns about $763 a year in rewards, which already clears the $250 fee with $513 to spare, before counting any perks. Heavier spenders come out further ahead.
How do you offset the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful® annual fee?
Through rewards and the welcome bonus. On a typical budget the card earns about $763 a year, clearing the fee on its own.
Is there a no-annual-fee alternative to the Marriott Bonvoy Bountiful®?
Yes. If you cannot clear the $250 fee, a no-fee card keeps every dollar of rewards as profit. See our ranked no-fee picks to compare.
Bryce Casson

Bryce Casson, Founder of Cardocrat. Every card is ranked by what it actually returns, with all points valued at a flat 1 cent and offers verified against issuer sources. About the author.