getbonusrewards.com
What getbonusrewards.com is (and why you’re seeing it)
getbonusrewards.com is a redemption portal used for certain retail “bundle” and “bonus value” promotions. The basic idea is simple: you buy a qualifying product (often sold at Costco), then you go to this site, enter an email address and a PIN from your purchase, and the site emails you the digital codes or eGift items tied to that promotion. On the site’s own redemption pages, the footer and privacy notice state it’s owned and operated by InComm Payments, a large payments and prepaid/gift-card services company.
If you landed on the homepage and it looks minimal, that’s normal. It’s not trying to be a general “rewards program.” It’s more like a set of one-off claim forms for specific promotions (AMC, Regal, Nordstrom/Ulta bundles, etc.).
What the site actually asks you to do
Most of the flows are the same:
- Pick the offer you bought (for example, “AMC Movie Pack”).
- Enter the email address where the code(s) will be sent.
- Enter the PIN from your product or your eGift purchase details.
- Confirm you agree to terms/privacy/usage policies posted on the site.
- Submit, then wait for delivery by email.
You can see this clearly on the AMC redemption page: it’s basically just an email field, a PIN field, and the terms checkbox.
The AMC FAQ page also spells out that AMC Movie Packs purchased at Costco are eligible, and it routes many support issues back to Costco Customer Service (lost PIN, resend, invalid, already claimed).
The “orders.getbonusrewards.com” part that confuses people
There’s also a related subdomain, orders.getbonusrewards.com, which shows up in some retailer instructions as the sender domain for delivery emails. For example, Costco product pages for certain digital items note that you may receive an email from Delivery@orders.getbonusrewards.com containing a Visa eGift Card after you follow the retailer’s redemption steps.
So if your question is “why am I getting an email from getbonusrewards,” the most common answer is: you (or someone using your email) bought a qualifying promo bundle through a major retailer, and part of the digital fulfillment is handled through this InComm-operated portal.
Is getbonusrewards.com legitimate?
From what the public pages show, it has several legitimacy signals:
- The redemption pages and privacy notice explicitly identify InComm Payments as the operator.
- The FAQs for at least some offers tie eligibility and support back to Costco (not to random third-party contacts).
- Major retailer product pages reference the same delivery domain for certain promotions, which is a strong indicator this is part of a real fulfillment chain, not a random lookalike.
That said, you should separate “this domain is used for real promotions” from “every message claiming to be about rewards is real.” Reward-themed phishing is extremely common, and scammers often copy the look and language of legit promotions.
How to tell the difference between a real redemption and a scam
Here’s a practical checklist that works well in real life.
What usually looks real
- You bought something that included a bonus (movie pack, retail bundle, “plus Visa eGift Card,” etc.), and the timing lines up.
- The site only asks for a PIN tied to the product plus an email address for delivery.
- Support instructions point you to the retailer you purchased from (like Costco), not to a sketchy “verification” phone number.
What usually looks wrong
- You didn’t buy anything, but you’re being pressured to “claim now” anyway.
- The message wants extra data that doesn’t fit the redemption model: bank login, full card number, government ID, “confirm your password,” or installing an app to “receive” the reward.
- The link text looks normal, but the real URL (hover or long-press) is different.
The Better Business Bureau guidance shared by ABC7 Chicago is basically this: don’t click reward links from unsolicited messages, go to the retailer site directly, and check the real URL before you interact.
What to do if you got an email/text about getbonusrewards.com
If you did make a qualifying purchase
- Start from your retailer receipt or account order history first (Costco, for example). Many digital items have a “how to redeem” section and official delivery timeline.
- Use the PIN from the purchase details and enter it on the matching offer page (AMC/Regal/etc.).
- If something fails (PIN invalid, already claimed, resend), follow the FAQ steps and contact the retailer’s customer service if required.
If you did not make a purchase
- Don’t enter anything into the form.
- Treat the message as suspicious until you can prove otherwise by checking your retailer accounts directly (type the retailer’s site into your browser, don’t use the message link).
- If the message includes order details, compare them to your actual order history. If there’s no match, assume it’s either a wrong-number situation or phishing.
Privacy and data handling: what to expect
The getbonusrewards privacy notice itself is short, but it points to InComm’s Privacy Center for details on how data is handled.
InComm’s Privacy Center describes the categories of personal information they may collect, how they share it with service providers, and that they may act as a “data processor” on behalf of other companies depending on the specific site and program.
What this means in plain terms: even if the portal looks like “InComm,” the promotion may still be run in partnership with the retailer and the brand you’re redeeming (AMC, etc.), and the privacy responsibilities can be split. If you’re privacy-sensitive, it’s worth reading the specific policy page they link and limiting what you enter to what’s necessary for redemption.
Key takeaways
- getbonusrewards.com is a promotion redemption portal, not a generic points program, and it’s presented as owned/operated by InComm Payments.
- Some offers explicitly reference Costco eligibility and Costco support, which is a strong legitimacy signal for those specific promotions.
- Costco product listings for certain digital items reference emails from Delivery@orders.getbonusrewards.com for Visa eGift Card delivery.
- Reward-themed phishing is common, so verify by going to the retailer directly and checking URLs before entering info.
FAQ
Is getbonusrewards.com the same as Costco?
No. The portal pages identify InComm Payments as the site operator, and the FAQs for some promotions direct you to Costco for customer service because the promotion is tied to Costco purchases.
Why does it ask for my email and a PIN?
That’s the delivery mechanism. The email is where codes/eGift items are sent, and the PIN is the proof you bought a qualifying product.
I lost my PIN. Can I still redeem?
For at least the AMC Movie Pack offer, the FAQ says warehouse-purchased cards typically can’t be replaced, while online purchases may allow resending eGift PINs, often via Costco customer service.
I got a “claim your reward” message but I didn’t buy anything. What should I do?
Don’t click the link or enter data. Check your retailer accounts directly by typing the retailer website into your browser, and verify if any real order exists. This matches standard BBB guidance on avoiding rewards scams.
Does Costco really use “orders.getbonusrewards.com” for some promotions?
Costco product pages for certain digital items state you may receive an email from Delivery@orders.getbonusrewards.com with a Visa eGift Card after completing the retailer’s redemption steps.
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