Travel With Grant has spotted a new feature on both the Chase website and in the Chase app which lets you generate referral links for your eligible cards all in one place.
Chase has always had a catch-all landing page from which you could generate a referral link for any of your cards. However, you could only generate one link at a time, then you’d have refresh the page and enter your last name, zip code and last four digits of a different card number to generate the next link. Even that doesn’t always work because sometimes Chase’s website displays a message stating you already have the referral page open elsewhere.
Chase has now provided a much easier tool for creating the links. Simply visit this page and log in to your account. You’ll then see a referral link for one of your accounts.
In my case it defaults to my Marriott Boundless card. However, at the top of the page is a dropdown box where I can select any of my cards that let me generate a referral. You might not necessarily see all your Chase cards listed there though. For example, I have a World of Hyatt card and that’s not listed in the dropdown as you can’t currently refer from personal Hyatt cards – only business ones.
n.b. the parentheses in the screenshot below normally display the last four digits of your card numbers so that you know which one is which. I’ve deleted those from the screenshot for security.
This feature is also available in the Chase app. To access it, log in to your account and tap the ‘More’ button in the bottom menu. Scroll down and you’ll see a section with an option to ‘Refer a Friend’.
Tap on that icon and you’ll access the ability to generate referral links in the same way as on the Chase website.
It’s always nice when there are incremental improvements to the user experience such as this. Now all we need is the ability to refer to Hyatt credit cards 😉

Actually, you missed the biggest thing about this! It seems that referral links are now available immediately upon approval! I happened to be approved for a chase card a few hours ago (after calling into reconsideration and moving around credit) – I can now generate a referral ON THAT CARD for P2. (I just checked through the normal links: nothing there)
Stephen Pepper is a very good writer and frequent miler readers benefit from following him. However, Stephen does a disservice to his high-tax bracket readers by neglecting to inform them that Chase sends a 1099 for the value of the points they receive which precipitously reduces the benefit of receiving those points for high-income earners.
Unemployed and low income earners don’t experience the deleterious effect of receiving those 1099s.
Hi Stephen, thanks for linking to my post. Come on World of Hyatt, get your head in the credit card referral game!