Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Preparing for Summer 5 – earning Avios when ordering foreign currency

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This is the fifth and last of my series of articles about – basically – earning Avios from your Summer holiday. Previous articles focussed on getting a discount on airport car parking, selecting the best credit card to use abroad, discussing whether Cash Passport cards were worth it and earning miles from car rentals.

Even if you do decide to pay for the majority of your holiday costs by credit card, you will still need some foreign currency to tide you over. In general, I avoid getting foreign currency from a Bureau de Change and simply use a cash machine at my destination. The overall cost is unlikely to be worse than using a bureau and it is far easier.

That said, you are taking a gamble when you do this, especially if you need money for a taxi. When I landed in Berlin from New York in February, I wasted around 15 minutes trying to find a cashpoint and heading back to the taxi rank – especially galling when I could have literally got into a taxi outside my arrival gate.

When you need foreign currency, Amex Currency Exchange is the way to go.

Why? Because of a unique loophole in the way that Amex Currency Exchange works. When you pre-order foreign currency with an American Express-issued Amex card (ie BA, SPG, Gold, Platinum, Nectar – but NOT an MBNA or Lloyds Amex) it is treated as a Purchase and NOT as a Cash Advance.

This means that you will receive miles and points for your American Express spending, and the transaction will count towards any sign-up bonus.

Let’s get something clear. Everytime I write about this, at least one person and usually more than one rings up Amex to check if I am right. This is despite the fact that hundreds of people have successfully done this, including myself. The Amex phone reps tell them that I am wrong and that the transaction will be treated as a Cash Advance and they will be charged. The Amex phone reps are wrong. The transaction will be treated as a Purchase.

You can actually triple dip with Amex Currency Exchange. The first ‘dip’ is your credit card points, followed by:

Heathrow Rewards

If you collect your currency at Heathrow, you will also earn Heathrow Rewards points at the rate of 1 per £10 exchanged. These never post automatically for me, so keep your receipt for sending off when you return! (It is not certain if you are meant to get Heathrow Rewards on preorders, but I always have when retroclaiming.)

Avios

If you prebook your Amex Currency Exchange order via this link then you will also receive 1 Avios point for every £1 you exchange.

The snag is that the exchange rate is worth than the ‘standard’ website which is here.

For example, changing £1,000 into Euro last week, the BA link offered €1,127 whilst the ‘standard’ site offered €1,135. This is still a decent deal – you are getting 1,000 Avios for just €8 – but the Avios are not ‘free’ by any means.

Locations

According to this website, Amex Currency Exchange offices can be found at Heathrow, Edinburgh and Birmingham. If none of these are convenient, they will also deliver to your home.

Under no circumstances use Amex Currrency Exchange without pre-ordering!

Meanwhile, a final word on why you shouldn’t buy at the airport with no pre-order. As I wrote last time I checked, Travelex at Terminal 5 was charging £48 more for $1,000 to anyone who did not pre-book. The Amex Currency Exchange difference is presumably similar. If you are spending your own money, avoid buying at the airport (without pre-ordering) at all costs.

Warning – not all Amex cards work with Amex Currency Exchange

There are limits to the amount of foreign currency that you can order from Amex. You may find a ‘Cash Advance’ limit printed on your BA or SPG card statement, which is 20% of your credit limit in most cases. For charge cards, Amex imposes limits without telling you.

For new cardholders, you may be restricted from cash transactions altogether – some people have told me that Amex is making them wait six months!

If your initial order is refused because you asked for more than Amex is happy with, they are also known to block your account for FX purchases until your next statement month.

Ironically, even though Amex treats the transaction as a Purchase, they use your Cash Advance limits to decide whether or not to accept the transactions.

PS. If you were not reading Head for Points in February, you may also be interested in this article on ordering £ travellers cheques for home delivery to hit a spend target on a new Amex.


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – December 2021 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit or charge card, here are our November 2021 recommendations based on the current sign-up bonus

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the top current deals:

British Airways BA Amex American Express card

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up, no annual fee and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending ….. Read our full review

British Airways BA Premium Plus American Express Amex credit card

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the UK’s most valuable credit card perk – the 2-4-1 companion voucher Read our full review

Nectar American Express

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & two airport lounge passes Read our full review

American Express Platinum card Amex

The Platinum Card from American Express

30,000 points and an unbeatable set of travel benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Earning miles and points from small business cards

If you are a sole trader or run a small company, you may also want to check out these offers.

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and free for a year Read our full review

Amex Platinum Business American Express

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and a long list of travel benefits Read our full review

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express card

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

Capital On Tap Business Rewards Visa

The most generous Avios Visa or Mastercard for a limited company Read our full review

For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback on your spending:

Barclaycard Select Cashback Credit Card

1% cashback and no annual fee Read our full review

Comments (41)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Alan says:

    Only a single example I know, but my last preorder from Travelex (I was only going for a weekend and the amount I needed was below the minimum purchase amount for Amex Forex) posted fine to Heathrow Rewards when I showed them my card. Agree cash machine abroad is the way to go, but best done with a card like a Metro Bank one that doesn’t have any foreign transaction fee 🙂

  • KimJoi says:

    Any kind Head for Points readers here do have information which banks or bureau de change that Do Not charge a fee (commission) to cash-in / bank-in Amex’s Sterling Traveller Cheques ??

    Halifax said no (need to try another branch because the staff seems to be “lost.com” when i ask her), Barclays told me no fee to buy-back provided these travellers cheques were ordered from them …

    Much appreciated for any input and advice.

    Kim

    • Jamjaw says:

      HSBC let you put them in to your account without fees!

    • Matt says:

      I pay sterling ones into Lloyds and they got through as cleared funds immediately without charge, I thought all banks did this. The post office always cash them for free apparently. There is an amex website where you can find out where you can cash your cheques for free.

      • KimJoi says:

        Thanks Matt … noted with the info on Lloyds. Post Office is not free, 1.5% fee (i did use the Amex website before going to the PO).

      • Adey says:

        I pay my Sterling ones into Natwest free of charge. I, too, assumed all banks did this (subject to normal banking charges i.e. if you are normally charged to pay in a cheque to your account then this charge would stand).

        Now if only Amex would drop the commission on purchasing Sterling TCs…..

        Adet

    • Rob says:

      Have a look in the comments to the HFP post that I orginally wrote about this (link in the article) plus the Flyertalk thread. HSBC is certainly fine with it, as the other poster said, as I have done it.

  • Mandy says:

    At first glance I thought the rate was pretty uncompetitive, but looking at MoneySavingExpert, a few delivery options are better, but not by much; and only the credit card options beat it comprehensively (Halifax). So looking to do this soon, can someone confirm if the pick up point at Heathrow is airside, as I’m connecting through?

    • Alan says:

      Yes, there’s one at the BA Galleries South T5 for sure (and I think one somewhere at the North end of T5 as well but I’m not certain re. that). If you’re connecting in T1/T3 I’m not certain, however normally these currency sites will specify the terminal and airside/landside when you pick a location.

    • Matt says:

      There are loads of locations on both sides, they even have them in the galleries South lounge.

    • Rob says:

      Which terminal? Numerous airside in Terminal 5.

      • Mandy says:

        T5. Thanks, sounds fine then. I could collect in Edinburgh, but would miss out on some Avios via Heathrow Rewards that way.

  • roman fliski says:

    I have a Santander zero card, which has no charges on overseas transactions, I only use this card when abroad.

    • Sir Stamford says:

      It is worth noting that the Santander Zero card is no longer available for new applicants.

      As you said, no charges on overseas transactions but don’t use it for cash withdrawal as you get hammered with an uncompetitive APR (interest is calculated from your date of cash withdrawal). Use a MetroBank debit card instead for cash withdrawals.

      Sir Stamford

  • Volker says:

    I am a bit surprised that you haven’t mentioned Tesco Travel Money. As I haven’t got an Amex card issued by American Express (just the good old BMI/MBNA), it has been my first choice so far.
    Just did a dummy purchase; you get EUR 1,130 for GBP 1,001.77 including free next-day home delivery (minimum purchase value: GBP 500, otherwise it’s a reasonable GBP 3.95), which is ideal for me as a resident in a remote area.
    Key selling poin to me: There is no cash advance fee and no handling fee if you pay with your Tesco Credit Card, so the above exaple would earn you 250 CC points or 600 (during promotion times 900) avios.
    Not the best available deal (see above), but IMHO an option for non AMEX holders.

    • Colin says:

      i read somewhere before (and now cant find the article) that when using the Tesco credit card for foreign currency that you dont get clubcard points. It comes out of your cash advance limit, but is treated as a transaction.

      Have you tried it out? Can you confirm it does attract clubcard points?

      I was about to ditch this card as it hasnt been the point earner i thought it would be (and have the old BMI Mastercard which is now earning 2 avois per £).

      Thanks,

      • Volker says:

        Yes, I have have used my Tesco credit card for buying Tesco travel money. As they treat the transaction as purchase (and not as cash withdrawal) I have earned Clubcard points, and there were no nasty surprises like cash advance fees etc. The whole service is very straightforward – WYSIWYG during the online order process, and the foreign money was delivered to my doorstep within 24 hours (Royal Mail Special Delivery).

        P.S. Don’t ditch your card. Remember that you can collect double Clubcard points at Tesco’s filling stations just for showing your card (pay with a more rewarding credit card, if you want).

  • Mr Bridge says:

    funny enough Sunday times money has run an article today, covering FX. they have listed a comparison site part of money saving expert, travelmoneymax.com

    Raffles is correct under no circumstances use fx with out preordering
    Birmingham and luton airports are the most expensive for not pre ordering, the times quotes Birmingham as converting £1=€1. and heathrow £1= €1.04

    So as to pre order, the BAPP offering 1.5miles must be a better deal than than amex plat.

  • Rob says:

    Different rules for different people, is how it seems to be. If you already have an Amex then they may be OK with you doing whatever you want on a new card. And give that this rule comes from the error-strewn call centre, I’m not sure how much I trust it anyway.

    • Alan says:

      I’ve found it pretty hit and miss (or perhaps miss and miss!) – used both my card and for my Dad his card – both cardholder for >1 year but no luck pre-purchasing online for airport collection. Ended up just going with Travelex and debit card instead – still get the Heathrow Rewards points and the number of Avios involved wasn’t great (plus the rate was better than using the BA site) – annoying to not get any Amex spend bonus though!

  • FW says:

    If you live in London, best place to for currency exchane is Queensway – there are probably 20 bureau de change offering spreads of 1 per cent or so (e.g. USD 1.52/1.535

    Especially good for Euro or USD. Generally unlikely miles or poitns will ever compensaqte for cash savings versus normal bureau de change rates.

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.