What are the benefits of making daily payments?
When you open a Brex Cash account, you have the ability to pay your Brex card balance daily. By switching to daily payments, you can earn extra points and receive a flexible credit limit. Daily payments will be withdrawn from your Brex Cash account.
Flexible credit limit
Up to 100% of your Brex Cash account balance.
Higher rewards
Get an extra 1x points boost in certain spending categories when you have a Brex Cash account and make daily payments.
Please read What rewards does Brex offer? for more information.
Brex Cash rewards
8x on rideshare
5x on travel rewards
4x on restaurants
3x on eligible Apple purchases through the Brex Rewards portal
1.5x on ads
1x everything else
Tech rewards
3x on recurring software
Life science rewards
8x on conference tickets
2x on lab supplies
Bonus points
You'll get 10,000 points when you spend $3,000 on your Brex card within your first three months.
You can view how much longer you have left to meet these qualifications and earn the points in your dashboard under Rewards > Marketplace > View details. Once you meet these qualifications, the points should be attributed to your Brex account in the next seven to ten business days.
Cash back
Admins have the option to redeem points for dollars directly into their account balance.
Please read How do I redeem my Brex points for cash back? for more information.
Disclosure
The Brex Mastercard® Corporate Credit Card is issued by Emigrant Bank, Member FDIC. Terms and conditions apply. See the Brex Platform Agreement for details.
Brex Treasury LLC is an affiliated SEC-registered broker-dealer and member of FINRA and SIPC that provides Brex Cash, a program that allows customers to elect to sweep uninvested cash balances into certain money market mutual funds or FDIC-insured bank accounts at partner banks. Investing in securities products involves risk, including possible loss of principal. Brex Treasury is not a bank and your Brex Cash account is not a bank account. Please see brex.com/cash for important legal disclosures. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.