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Best card for paying Cloudflare

Best card for paying for Cloudflare

Cloudflare bills $50/mo at the entry tier. Indian residents on a default retail card lose ~3.5% to forex on every charge — that adds up. We rank the cards that recover those rupees.

Annual savings vs default retail card

Modelled forex-only savings on Cloudflare as your spend grows. Default card = 3.5% forex; Amex Hilton Honors = 0% forex. Rewards/cashback are additional.

Spend tierMonthlyAnnualSaved with Amex Hilton Honors
Indie · 1× entry$50≈ ₹51,000≈ ₹1,785/yr
Growth · 3× entry$150≈ ₹1,53,000≈ ₹5,355/yr
Scale · 10× entry$500≈ ₹5,10,000≈ ₹17,850/yr

Forex assumed at ₹85/USD. Cashback/rewards earned on the spend stack on top of these savings.

FAQ

Which credit card is best for paying for Cloudflare?

Amex Hilton Honors is our top pick — No-fx US card — pay USD with USD, zero markup; 3% rewards on engineering spend At your typical $50/mo spend, that nets roughly ₹1,530/year vs a default retail card.

Does Cloudflare bill in USD or INR?

Cloudflare bills in USD. Indian residents using a default retail card pay ~3.5% forex markup on every charge — that's ~₹1,785/year on a typical $50/mo spend. A low-forex card cuts that to 2% or 0%.

Should I use a personal or business card for Cloudflare?

Most SaaS subscriptions including Cloudflare count as business spend on cards that distinguish business from personal categories. If you have a registered business entity (Pvt Ltd, LLP) and the volume justifies it (>₹2L/year on the tool), a business card pays a higher reward rate. Otherwise, personal premium cards work fine.

What if I have a US LLC and US bank?

Then pay USD with USD — get a US business card (Chase Ink Business Preferred, Amex Business Gold). No forex friction, plus the card's "software" reward category usually pays 3-4% on subscriptions like Cloudflare.