Cashback vs Credit Card Rewards in Australia: Which Wins in 2026?
By Nima SaberiUpdated 19 April 20266 min read
Cashback portals and credit card rewards are not actually competitors — they stack. Cashback portals (ShopBack, TopCashback) typically return 2–10% per online purchase via cookies, while a points-earning credit card returns roughly 0.5–1.5% in points value via your payment method on every transaction online and in-store.
Cashback Portals
Up to $30 ShopBack + $10 TopCashback
Credit Card Points
Typically 50,000–150,000 bonus points on premium cards
Side-by-side comparison
| Feature | Cashback Portals | Credit Card Points |
|---|---|---|
| Where it works | Online only (must click through portal) | Online + in-store, anywhere card is accepted |
| Typical return | 2–10% of purchase value | 0.5–1.5% in points value (up to 3% on premium cards) |
| Annual fee | Free | $0 to $1,450/year (premium cards) |
| Time to receive | 30–100 days after purchase confirms | Posted to statement within days |
| Best redemption value | Cash to bank account (1c per cent) | Premium cabin flights (1.5–2.5c per point) |
| Stackable with the other? | Yes — earn portal cashback + card points on same purchase | Yes — independent of portal cashback |
| Risk | Tracking failure, expired cookies, ad-blocker conflicts | Interest if not paid in full, annual fee, points devaluation |
| Best for | Everyday online shoppers, low-risk savers | Frequent flyers, big spenders who clear balances monthly |
| Who shouldn't use it | Almost no one — it's free | Anyone who carries a balance — interest wipes out point value |
When to choose Cashback Portals
When you want guaranteed savings with zero risk, no annual fee, and no temptation to overspend. Cashback portals are the no-brainer foundation — every Aussie online shopper should have ShopBack and TopCashback installed.
When to choose Credit Card Points
When you fly internationally at least once a year, can clear your balance in full every month, and want to redeem points for premium cabin Classic Reward seats. A premium American Express card paired with the right strategy can earn 100,000+ points per year on top of your cashback.
Best for
- Foundation: a free cashback portal for every online purchase (everyone)
- Layer two: a no-annual-fee or low-fee points card for in-store + online spend (most people)
- Layer three: a premium points card if you fly internationally and pay in full (frequent flyers)
FAQ
Can I earn cashback and credit card points on the same purchase?
Yes. Cashback portals track via cookies on the retailer's website, while credit card points are earned through your payment method. They are completely independent systems, so you can stack both on every online purchase. This is the single biggest reward win most Australians miss.
Which gives a bigger return: 5% cashback or 5 points per dollar?
5% cashback is worth $5 on a $100 purchase. 5 points per dollar = 500 points, worth roughly $5–$12 depending on redemption. For premium-cabin flight redemptions, points usually win; for cash needs, cashback wins. The right answer is to do both.
Are credit card points worth the annual fee?
Only if you use them. A $450 annual fee card returning 100,000 bonus points + 1 point per dollar on $50,000 annual spend yields 150,000 points. Redeemed for a Sydney–LA business class seat (~140,000 Qantas Points), the value comfortably exceeds the fee. If you redeem for cashback or gift cards, the fee usually isn't worth it.
What is the best stacking strategy in Australia?
1) Click through ShopBack or TopCashback (whichever has the higher rate). 2) Pay with a points-earning credit card (Amex if accepted, Visa/Mastercard otherwise). 3) For supermarkets, link Everyday Rewards or flybuys. 4) Stack a card-linked offer if available. This 4-layer stack is the OzSavers method.
Should I close my credit card if I'm not using the points?
If the annual fee outweighs the points value, yes — but check whether you're approaching a status milestone or signup bonus eligibility window. Many premium cards offer fee waivers or downgrade paths to no-annual-fee versions that keep your account history.
Keep reading
Pick your winner
Most savvy Australians sign up to both and use OzSavers to check which has the higher rate before every purchase.