Business & Real Estate

How does cash back work for a credit card?

Some companies may not pay much attention to credit card cash back, but for businesses that spend a lot, that can mean missing thousands of dollars a year. A company running $1 million in annual card spend at 1.5% cash back may be leaving $15,000 on the table every year if it doesn't have a strategy for capturing it. This is a gap that often pushes high-volume companies to evaluate high-limit business credit cards that pair stronger rewards with the spending power they actually need. The math is simple, but you need a basic plan to actually earn and collect the rewards.

This article from Brex covers how cash back works from the ground up. You'll learn how rewards are earned and when they post, how the math works across different program structures, how redemption options compare, and what changes when you move from a credit card to a corporate card program with distributed cardholders and a finance team managing the close.

What is cash back on a credit card?

Cash back is a reward that gives back a percentage of each qualifying purchase to the cardholder. For example, a card earning 2% cash back on $100,000 in annual spend can receive a reward of $2,000, reducing the effective cost of that spend to $98,000. It's not free money. You have to spend to earn it, and the reward is always smaller than the purchase that generated it. Think of it as a discount applied after the fact rather than at the register.

The reason card issuers can offer cash back comes down to interchange fees. Every time a card is used, the merchant pays a merchant discount to their acquiring bank to process the transaction; the acquirer then passes a portion of that to the card issuer as interchange. Cash back programs pass part of the issuer's interchange revenue to the cardholder as an incentive to route more spend through the card. The issuer still profits from the arrangement through the remainder of that interchange, interest on carried balances, and annual fees where applicable.

One thing worth clarifying early is that cash back carries a fixed, predictable value. A dollar earned in cash back is worth a dollar when you redeem it. Points and miles work differently because their value fluctuates depending on how and where you redeem them, which can mean higher upside but significantly more complexity.

How cash back works for credit cards

The basic mechanic is straightforward. You use the card, the transaction is recognized as an eligible purchase, rewards accrue in your account, the billing cycle closes, and the cash back becomes available to redeem. That cycle repeats every month.

Timing matters more than most people realize. Rewards typically post after a transaction fully clears, not when it shows as pending. Most issuers credit rewards at the end of the billing cycle rather than immediately after each purchase, so there's usually a short lag between spending and seeing the reward reflected in your account balance. If your team tracks reward accruals during close, confirm your program's posting cadence so the numbers reconcile on the right cycle.

What expenses earn cash back and what don't

Most standard operating expenses qualify. Office supplies, technology, telecom, travel, dining, fuel, and professional services are all fair game on most programs. What doesn't qualify typically includes cash advances, balance transfers, fees and interest charges, some gift card purchases, and cash-like transactions such as money orders, foreign currency, and crypto.

The category classification issue is one that catches finance teams off guard. Earning levels on programs with multiple reward categories depend on how a merchant is classified for card processing purposes, not how your team would classify them internally. A vendor you think of as a software company might be coded as a general business services merchant, which could mean you earn the base level rather than the elevated software level you modeled. Before committing to a program with multiple reward categories, validate how your highest-volume vendors are actually categorized. One conversation with your card issuer before signing up can save a significant amount over the course of a year.

How cash back rewards on credit cards are calculated

The base formula is simple. Eligible spend multiplied by your cash back rate equals the reward earned. A company spending $10,000 per month at 1.5% earns $150 in cash back that month, or $1,800 over a full year. At $500,000 in annual spend, that same 1.5% rate earns $7,500.

Programs with multiple reward categories add a layer of math. Different levels apply to different spending categories, so your total reward is the sum of each category's spend multiplied by its respective level. A card offering 3% on software and 1% on everything else means a company spending $8,000 per month on software and $12,000 on other expenses earns $240 from software and $120 from the rest, for a combined $360 rather than the $300 a flat 1.5% card would earn on the same volume. The advantage is real, but only if your actual spend distribution matches the card's bonus categories.

Caps are where the calculation gets important for high-spending companies. Many programs with multiple reward categories and rotating programs apply earning limits per category per quarter or per year. A 5% reward earning on the first $1,500 in quarterly spend that drops to 1% after means that even if you spend $10,000 in that category, your effective blended level for the quarter is much closer to 1.6% than 5%. Finance teams' modeling program value should always calculate the blended level across their actual spending volume rather than citing the headline figure. That blended number is what your program actually delivers.

Types of cash back for credit cards

Different cards offer different cash back structures, and the card you choose determines how much your company earns. The structure your card uses determines how much you earn, how much tracking is required, and whether the program actually fits how your company spends. There are four structures worth understanding before choosing a program.

Flat-rate cash back

Flat-rate programs apply the same percentage to every eligible purchase regardless of category. A 2% flat-rate card earns 2% on software, 2% on travel, 2% on office supplies, and 2% on everything in between. There's no activation, no category tracking, and no quarterly calendar to manage.

The appeal for finance teams is predictability. You can model expected rewards against projected spend without factoring in category mix or cap schedules. If your company spends across a wide range of vendors and categories, flat-rate programs can often deliver the most consistent rewards.

The tradeoff is that you won't earn elevated levels in your highest-spend categories. If your company puts $300,000 a year into software and travel, a flat-rate card leaves some value on the table compared to a program that rewards those categories at a higher level. The question is whether the higher potential rewards on a fixed-category program justify the additional management overhead.

Fixed-category cash back with varying reward levels

Programs with fixed reward categories apply different reward levels to predefined spending categories, with a lower base level applied to all other purchases. For example, a program may offer higher reward levels on categories such as software or telecommunications up to a quarterly cap, a mid-level on travel and dining, and a base level on remaining spend. These categories are defined by the issuer and are often consistent over time, though issuers may update them.

Compared with flat-rate structures, programs with fixed reward categories can generate higher total rewards when spending is concentrated in categories with higher reward levels. For instance, a company with significant recurring software spend may earn more rewards on that portion of expenses under a fixed-category structure. However, caps can limit total rewards, so it's important to model actual spend distribution against the program's levels and limits before making a comparison.

One planning consideration is that cap reset schedules vary by program and may not align with a company's fiscal year. If a program resets on Jan. 1 and adoption occurs mid-year, the initial cap period may be shorter than 12 months, which can affect first-year rewards calculations.

Rotating-category cash back

Rotating category programs offer elevated earn levels, often up to 5%, in categories that change on a quarterly schedule set by the issuer. Most require you to opt in each period to receive the higher level, and earning is typically capped once you hit a spending threshold in the bonus category.

For individual cardholders who are willing to track the calendar and plan purchases around the rotating categories, the upside can be meaningful. For corporate programs with distributed cardholders, the operational burden usually outweighs the reward advantage. Communicating quarterly category changes across a team, ensuring everyone activates the bonus in time, and standardizing spending behavior around shifting categories adds administrative work that most finance teams would rather avoid. Companies with straightforward spend patterns and limited appetite for that administrative overhead are generally better served by flat-rate or fixed-category structures.

Choose-your-own category cash back

Some programs let you select which category earns the bonus level from a list of options provided by the issuer. It works like a fixed-category card in most respects, but you choose where the elevated level applies rather than accepting the issuer's fixed categories. Some programs allow you to change your selection once per billing cycle, which adds a layer of flexibility.

This structure works well for companies with spending concentrated in one area that doesn't align with the standard bonus categories on most fixed-category cards. If your highest-spend category happens to be on the issuer's list of eligible options, a choose-your-own card lets you capture the elevated level without committing to a program built around different assumptions about how businesses spend.

How to redeem cash back rewards

The most common redemption options are a statement credit, a direct deposit or check, gift cards, travel through the issuer's portal, and merchandise. Statement credits and direct deposits are the most straightforward for businesses because they translate directly into reduced expenses or improved working capital. Gift cards and merchandise sometimes offer a slight premium in face value, but they introduce complexity that rarely makes sense for a corporate program.

Two things often catch people off guard. Some cards require a minimum rewards balance before redemption is available, while others let you redeem any amount at any time. Some rewards also expire if the account sits inactive for an extended period or is closed before redemption. Both conditions vary by issuer and card program, so it's worth checking the terms before assuming your rewards will be there when you want them.

How cash back works on corporate cards

The earn-and-redeem mechanics are the same as a personal card. What changes are the scale, the governance, and a few structural features that don't exist on consumer programs. The pooling question is one of the first things to confirm when evaluating a corporate program. In centralized billing arrangements, rewards typically accrue at the organization level rather than in individual cardholder accounts. That means your finance team controls redemption rather than each employee independently, and cash back flows back to the business rather than sitting in personal accounts. Not every program handles this the same way. Some default to pooling during setup, others require you to request it. Companies that want full separation between business and personal finances may also want to explore business credit cards with EIN only, which evaluate creditworthiness on company financials alone.

Card penetration has a direct effect on reward earnings that doesn't come up in consumer card discussions. For companies still building out their program, starting with the easiest business credit cards to get can help accelerate adoption and get more spend consolidated onto a single program faster. When company spend scatters across personal cards, reimbursements, and multiple payment methods, no single program reaches the volume that makes cash back meaningful. Pre-spend controls that enforce policy at the point of purchase rather than through after-the-fact reimbursement reviews increase the share of spend flowing through the card, which increases what the program accrues. Finance teams running a corporate program should track the rebate ratio as a quarterly KPI. That's total rebates divided by eligible spend, and it tends to improve as card penetration increases.

Business expense cards also reward different spending categories than credit cards. Rather than groceries and gas, corporate programs tend to structure rewards around the categories where company spend concentrates, though the specifics vary widely by card. Some offer flat rates across all spend, some bonus-specific categories like office supplies, telecom, or travel, and others use startup-oriented structures that weight software and rideshare more heavily. Some corporate programs also offer redemption options that credit cards don't, including advertising spend and business-building options that can deliver more value than a straight statement credit, depending on your company's priorities.

This story was produced by Brex and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Copyright 2026 Stacker Media, LLC

This story was originally published April 20, 2026 at 8:30 AM.

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