Getting started with bank bonuses
A practical, low-risk first-year plan for someone new to bank bonuses — with realistic expectations and the common pitfalls flagged up front.
Set realistic expectations
The internet folklore around bank bonuses tends toward two extremes: "earn thousands a month effortlessly" and "it's not worth the trouble." Both are wrong. A disciplined first year, for someone with a regular paycheck and reasonable credit/ChexSystems posture, typically yields somewhere in the low-to-mid hundreds of dollars after tax, with the better part of the time investment falling in the first few months as you build the workflow. The dollar number scales meaningfully if you have larger balances to deploy and the appetite for transfer-bonus pursuits in the later months.
What you're actually trading is time and a small amount of administrative attention for after-tax cash. The trade is favorable for many people; it's unfavorable for anyone whose time is highly compensated elsewhere or whose temperament doesn't suit the small-tracking detail. Both groups exist; the second isn't a failure mode.
Month 1 — read the foundations and set the baseline
Before opening anything, do the prep:
- Read the foundations. Our how bank bonuses work, direct deposit definitions, and tax treatment are the three pieces you need to internalize.
- Pull your ChexSystems disclosure. Free annually at chexsystems.com. Knowing your baseline before you start prevents a surprise denial later. Pull EWS too if you can — some banks use it instead of (or alongside) ChexSystems.
- Confirm your direct-deposit situation. If you're a W-2 employee with payroll-coded direct deposit, you can qualify at nearly any bank. If you're self-employed or paid through unconventional channels, identify which banks accept your funding source as "direct deposit" before applying.
- Set up a tracker. A simple spreadsheet with the columns we cover in the offer tracker template. This will pay for itself the first time you have a question about which bonus posted when.
Month 2 — attempt your first bonus
Pick one straightforward checking-account bonus from a bank with clear terms, a permissive direct-deposit definition (or a strict definition your funding source matches), and a manageable holding period — say 90 to 180 days. Don't optimize for the largest payout. Optimize for the cleanest first experience.
Before applying:
- Screenshot the full offer terms page with the URL and date visible.
- Verify your state is eligible.
- Confirm the promo enrollment path (link or code) and capture the enrollment screen.
- Note the qualifying window, the qualifying-deposit amount, and the must-remain-open period.
- Add it to your tracker with the expected qualifying date and the earliest-close date.
Set up the direct deposit as soon as the account is open. Don't wait. The most common failure mode for first bonuses is missing the qualifying window because the payroll change took longer than expected.
Month 3–4 — let the first bonus play out
Once the first bonus is in motion, leave it alone. Verify each qualifying deposit posts as expected. Verify the bonus posts when promised (or one week after — minor delays are normal). If the bonus doesn't post by the stated deadline, contact the bank politely with your records.
During this period, you can read more (the common mistakes page is worth a careful pass) and observe the cadence. Don't pile on additional applications yet — you're calibrating how much friction a given workflow actually generates for you.
Month 5–6 — second bonus, learn from the first
After the first bonus posts cleanly (or after you've learned why it didn't), attempt a second. This time you can pick a slightly larger payout, a slightly stricter offer, or a different product category (a savings bonus with a different structure, for example). The point isn't to maximize — it's to expand your experience of how different banks operate.
By now you should have a tracker with at least one completed entry, a clearer sense of how your funding source is recognized at different banks, and a baseline for how much your time is actually worth on this kind of work. Update your filter: any future offers below your time-value-per-bonus threshold are skips.
Month 7–12 — scale to your sustainable pace
For most readers, a sustainable pace is two to four new bonuses pursued per year, spaced enough that ChexSystems velocity isn't an issue. Some readers can run faster; some prefer slower. There's no virtue in maximum throughput — the optimization is on after-tax dollars per hour of attention, and that number flattens as you scale.
If you have larger balances to deploy, consider one or two transfer-bonus pursuits in the year — a brokerage transfer at a meaningful tier, or a savings bonus large enough to justify the opportunity cost. These are higher-dollar but slower; one well-chosen transfer bonus can outweigh several small checking bonuses.
Close accounts past their must-remain-open period that you're not going to keep using. Leaving them open consumes ChexSystems "slots" you'll want later. Closing them cleanly preserves your record.
The end-of-year wrap
In Q4 (or whenever your annual planning lands), do the year-end accounting:
- Reconcile expected 1099s against the tracker.
- Plan tax-time treatment, especially for any bonus not generating a form that you'll need to self-report.
- Decide on accounts to close in January after their hold periods end.
- Capture lessons for next year — which bank workflows were clean, which banks gave you trouble, which offers paid the headline reliably.
The annual planning page walks through the cycle in more detail.
When this hobby isn't for you
Three honest signals that bank-bonus pursuit isn't a fit:
- Your hourly value is high and your free time is scarce. A $300 bonus net is rarely worth multiple hours of attention for someone whose marginal hour is worth meaningfully more. Spend the hour on the higher-yield work.
- You're temperamentally averse to small administrative tracking. The whole exercise depends on the tracker, the calendar dates, and the verification habit. If those feel like friction every time, the after-tax dollar doesn't justify the cumulative annoyance.
- You can't keep accounts orderly. Mismanaged accounts produce ChexSystems negatives. A few overdrafts at bonus banks can do more damage to your future banking eligibility than the bonuses recovered.
None of these are failures; they're calibration. There are people who genuinely enjoy the work and grow it into a real recurring income source. There are people for whom it's a once-a-year exercise that produces a few hundred dollars and nothing more. Both are reasonable outcomes.
What you don't need
You don't need a separate "bonus bank" account dedicated to staging deposits — your regular checking can serve. You don't need a dedicated email address (though some readers use one to filter the bank correspondence). You don't need a complicated rotation of direct deposits across multiple banks at once — most people are better off with one bonus in flight at a time during the first year. You don't need to chase every offer you see; the discipline that pays off is selective pursuit of clean offers with clear terms.
Most importantly, you don't need to treat this as anything other than a small, periodic optimization on cash you already hold and behavior you already do. That framing is the one that survives contact with reality.