Chase Eliminates 48-Month Rule, Introduces Pop-Up Eligibility System
Chase Drops the Predictable 48-Month Clock
In a significant policy shift announced June 23, 2025, Chase eliminated its long-standing 48-month waiting period between welcome bonuses and replaced it with a subjective eligibility system. The change fundamentally alters how rewards enthusiasts approach Chase cards—and not necessarily for the better.
What Changed
The Old System: 48-Month Rule
Previously, Chase’s Sapphire products had a clear, predictable restriction:
- Receive a Sapphire Preferred or Sapphire Reserve welcome bonus
- Wait exactly 48 months
- Apply again and receive another bonus
This mechanical rule created a reliable cycle. You knew precisely when you’d become eligible again, allowing you to plan applications years in advance.
The New System: Subjective Eligibility
Chase now uses internal criteria—similar to American Express’s infamous “pop-up” system—to determine bonus eligibility on a case-by-case basis. When you apply, Chase may:
- Approve you with the full welcome bonus
- Approve you without any welcome bonus (the “pop-up”)
- Deny your application entirely
There’s no public timeline, no clear eligibility criteria, and no way to definitively know beforehand whether you’ll receive the bonus.
How “Pop-Up Jail” Works
The pop-up system appears to evaluate:
Likely Factors
- Card relationship history: How long you’ve held Chase cards
- Spending patterns: Whether you use your existing Chase cards regularly
- Profitability assessment: Whether Chase considers you a valuable customer
- Recent bonus history: Though no longer mechanical, bonus frequency may still matter
- Credit behavior: Overall credit utilization and payment history
The Pop-Up Experience
When triggering a pop-up, you’ll typically see a message during the application process indicating you’re not eligible for the welcome bonus but can still proceed with the application. You can:
- Proceed anyway: Get the card without the bonus
- Abandon the application: Walk away and try again later
Most savvy applicants abandon and wait, hoping to become eligible later.
Cards Affected
The policy change primarily affects:
Definitely Affected
- Chase Sapphire Preferred
- Chase Sapphire Reserve
Likely Affected
- Other Chase co-branded cards may adopt similar systems
- Ink business cards could follow
Unknown
- Freedom cards (typically less restricted anyway)
- Some partner cards with their own rules
The Sapphire Flexibility Change
Alongside eliminating the 48-month rule, Chase relaxed restrictions on holding multiple Sapphire products:
Old Policy: You could not hold both Sapphire Preferred and Sapphire Reserve simultaneously
New Policy: You may hold both cards after approval, though bonus restrictions between products remain complex
This creates an unusual situation where card-holding flexibility increased while bonus predictability decreased.
Impact on Your Strategy
For New Applicants
If you’ve never had a Chase Sapphire card, the change likely doesn’t affect you immediately. Apply as normal; first-time applicants generally receive bonuses without issue.
For Previous Bonus Recipients
If you earned a Sapphire bonus previously, you now face uncertainty:
- The 48-month clock no longer guarantees eligibility
- You may need to wait longer than 48 months
- Or you may become eligible sooner—there’s no way to know
- Applying and getting pop-up’d wastes a hard inquiry
For Active Points Optimizers
This change significantly impacts those who planned multi-year bonus cycles:
- You can no longer reliably schedule Sapphire bonuses every 4 years
- The “upgrade to Reserve, downgrade later, wait 48 months, apply fresh” strategy is now uncertain
- Product changes and application timing require more caution
How to Navigate the New System
Stay Active on Existing Cards
Pop-up systems typically favor customers who use their cards regularly. If you have Chase cards:
- Put some spending on them monthly
- Avoid sock-drawering cards you plan to apply for in the future
- Consider whether your relationship appears “profitable” to Chase
Test Before Committing
Some applicants use “dummy booking” or similar methods to test eligibility before a hard inquiry. The reliability of these tests is debated—proceed with caution and understand they’re not foolproof.
Diversify Your Portfolio
With Chase bonuses becoming unpredictable, consider:
- Citi Strata cards (different issuer, different rules)
- Capital One products (has 48-month rule but no pop-up system yet)
- American Express cards (similar pop-up risk, but different valuable cards)
Document Everything
Keep records of:
- When you received previous bonuses
- Your current cards and opening dates
- Application attempts and outcomes
This data helps you identify patterns over time.
Comparison: Old vs. New
| Factor | Old 48-Month Rule | New Pop-Up System |
|---|---|---|
| Predictability | High—exact date known | Low—subjective |
| Planning | Easy multi-year cycles | Difficult to schedule |
| Eligibility criteria | Time-based only | Multiple unknown factors |
| Recourse | Wait and apply | Unclear; may require behavior changes |
| Transparency | Clear published terms | Opaque internal criteria |
What This Means Long-Term
Chase appears to be moving toward the American Express model of selective bonus distribution. This likely reflects:
- Profitability concerns: Issuers want to limit bonuses to customers who generate revenue
- Industry trends: More issuers adopting similar subjective systems
- Reduced predictability: Banks prefer flexibility over rigid rules
For consumers, this represents a shift away from the transparent, gameable systems that made credit card rewards optimization possible.
Key Takeaways
- 48-month rule eliminated as of June 23, 2025
- Replaced with pop-up eligibility based on undisclosed criteria
- No public timeline for becoming eligible again
- Sapphire card holding rules relaxed (can hold both simultaneously)
- Affects Sapphire Preferred and Reserve primarily; other cards may follow
- Strategy impact: Multi-year bonus cycles are now unpredictable
- Stay active on existing Chase cards to maintain positive relationship
Frequently Asked Questions
Does this mean I can never get another Sapphire bonus?
Not necessarily. You may still receive bonuses—the criteria are simply unknown. Some people may get bonuses more quickly; others may wait longer than 48 months.
How do I know if I’ll get the pop-up?
There’s no reliable method to know in advance. Some applicants report success with test methods, but these aren’t guaranteed.
Should I close my existing Sapphire card?
Closing cards doesn’t appear to help and may hurt. The pop-up system likely considers your full relationship history, not just current cards.
Will Chase tell me why I’m ineligible?
Generally, no. Chase doesn’t publicly explain pop-up eligibility decisions. You’ll simply see a message indicating bonus ineligibility.
Does this affect Ink business cards?
The formal change targeted Sapphire products. Whether Ink cards adopt similar systems remains uncertain—monitor data points from other applicants.
Disclaimer: Credit card issuer policies change without notice. The pop-up system is opaque by design. This article reflects reported data points as of publication—verify current terms and eligibility on Chase’s website before applying.