Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

If you cancel Amex Platinum, the Amex Rewards Credit Card will keep your points alive

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The second biggest topic in my inbox at the moment, after airlines not refunding payments, is the cancellation of fee-charging American Express cards.

Most of these relate to American Express Platinum.  This comes with a chunky £575 annual fee, but many HfP readers can make the numbers work because of the strong benefits package.  This includes:

travel insurance for you and your family, plus up to five supplementary cardholders and their families

car hire insurance

2 x Priority Pass airport lounge access cards, each of which allows a free guest on each visit (so a family of four is covered)

mid-tier status in Hilton Honors (Gold), Marriott Bonvoy (Gold Elite), Radisson Rewards (Gold) and MeliaRewards (Gold)

£10 per month of Addison Lee taxi credit

Eurostar lounge access

…… and lots of other bits and bobs.  My full review of American Express Platinum is here.  The application form is here and comes with 30,000 Membership Rewards points.

But there’s a snag …..

Paying almost £50 per month for these benefits works out well for many readers.  However, paying £50 per month for The Platinum Card when you’re not travelling is clearly NOT great value.

Many readers have asked me about American Express pausing the annual fee, or offering partial refunds.  To date, no-one has reported getting any financial concessions from them.

However, if you cancel, you receive a pro-rata fee refund.  This could put a few hundred pounds back in your pocket in these tricky times.

(One caveat: if you cancel, you will have no travel insurance if you have no other cover.  If you have non-refundable trips booked for well in the future, ensure you have coverage as you could fall ill at any time.)

There is no annual bonus on The Platinum Card

Many American Express cards offer an annual bonus when you hit a certain spend target:

The British Airways Premium Plus American Express card offers a 2-4-1 companion voucher for Avios redemptions when you spend £10,000 per year (BA Amex Premium Plus review here)

The Marriott Bonvoy American Express card offers Gold Elite status when you spend £15,000 per year and a (very restrictive) free night voucher when you spend £25,000 per year (Marriott Amex review)

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold offers 10,000 Membership Rewards points when you spend £15,000 per year (Amex Gold review)

On these three cards, it may make sense to continue paying the annual fee during these low-spending, no-travelling months in order to ensure you hit your annual spend target.

The Platinum Card does NOT have any annual spend bonus.  If you cancel now and reapply in 3, 4 or 6 months time when your travelling starts to pick up again, you haven’t lost anything.

The only risk is losing your Membership Rewards points

The only short-term downsides of cancelling your American Express Platinum charge card is that you are required to empty out your Membership Rewards points account.

Because Amex points can be transferred to many different airline and hotel partners, they are more valuable than airline or hotel points.  You shouldn’t convert them until you need them.

If you are forced to transfer them because you close your card down, you may regret it later.  American Express isn’t going bankrupt any time soon.  We can’t say that about many Membership Rewards transfer partners at the moment, especially the airlines.  The safest place for your points is with American Express.

Since late 2017, there has been a solution that:

lets you keep your Membership Rewards points account open, and

allows you to stop paying an annual fee for either the Gold credit or Platinum charge card

We very rarely write about it on HfP so I thought I would run through it again today.  This card is the answer:

You can apply for the little-known American Express Rewards Credit CardFull details are here.

This card has NO ANNUAL FEE and lets you collect Membership Rewards points.

For simplicity, I will occasionally refer to this card as ARCC as ‘American Express Rewards Credit Card’ is a  bit of a mouthful.

What is the American Express Rewards Credit Card?

ARCC is a standard Amex-branded credit card.  It has no annual fee and no substantial benefits, except for the ability to collect Membership Rewards points at 1 point per £1 spent.

There used to be three versions of this card, but in Autumn 2019 they were consolidated to jut one.

The version which remains has a 5,000 Membership Rewards points bonus and a representative APR of 22.9% variable (click here).   You need to spend £2,000 within three months to receive the bonus.

It is unlikely that many (any?!) Head for Points readers will qualify for the bonus because you cannot have held any personal American Express card in the previous 24 months.  That’s not why you’re applying though.

Once your American Express Rewards Credit Card is active, you can cancel your Platinum charge card in the knowledge that your Membership Rewards points balance is safe.

You will be saving roughly £50 per month on your Platinum card.  Once your travelling starts to pick up, you can re-apply for The Platinum Card and start getting all the insurance, lounge and status benefits again.

You can apply for the FREE American Express Rewards Credit Card here.

(Want to earn more miles and points from credit cards?  Click here to visit our dedicated airline and hotel travel credit cards page or use the ‘Credit Card Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.)

Disclaimer: Head for Points is a journalistic website. Nothing here should be construed as financial advice, and it is your own responsibility to ensure that any product is right for your circumstances. Recommendations are based primarily on the ability to earn miles and points and do not consider interest rates, service levels or any impact on your credit history.  By recommending credit cards on this site, I am – technically – acting as a credit broker.  Robert Burgess, trading as Head for Points, is regulated and authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as a credit broker.

Comments (108)

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

  • Mel says:

    I can’t believe that as a longtime Amex user, I was rejected from this card! Have to hold on to my Gold now 🙁

    • Bentoni says:

      Rejected? I thought it has more relaxed requirements than the gold card.. since the eligibility checker always showed me 9.5/10 for this card, and then 8/10 for the gold card.

      • Mel says:

        Yeah, I’ve held pretty much almost every Amex card before, and now I only have Gold credit card left. Thought I would switch because I’m not going to hit the £15k this year but not sure why I was rejected.

    • John says:

      Did you enter your gold card number in the application?

      Have there been any issues (possibly in error) with your credit reports recently? Did the amount of your income declared on the application differ to previously?

    • Rhys says:

      Were you rejected or did it just go pending human review? The latter has happened to me despite holding other Amex products. It went through with no issue a week later.

  • Tom says:

    What is the insurance like on Amex Platinum for COVID-19 for existing card holders?

    Does it cover members both currently for existing bookings and going forward for new bookings in the autumn etc?

    • Sam G says:

      This is a KEY caveat

      You MUST NOT cancel if you have any existing bookings before the govt advice was issued that you may want to claim for if travel advice or flight / accommodation cancellation prevents you from travelling. Particularly important as providers start tightening up on refunds as cash runs short.

      Buying alternative insurance now will not offer you COVID-19 cover, in fact major insurers like Aviva aren’t even selling insurance.

      It should also be noted that travel insurance is designed to cover unforeseen events. Hence you should be very wary of making any plans currently unless using miles, they’ve got flexible policies etc in place, you will not be covered.

      • Sam G says:

        Re: cover for new bookings. If you’ve an ongoing annual policy taken out before now (e.g. Amex plat) once the advice is lifted, in theory you should be OK to book and if the advice is put back in place then they’ll pay out.

        However insurers do usually have a “known event” clause which in theory could cover this forever more. But I except they’ll update their FAQs nearer the time or it would be best to seek an answer in writing before you book.

        Anyone without an existing ongoing annual policy or a policy purchased for upcoming travel is in trouble as it’ll be a long time before anyone will sell insurance that’ll cover this IMO

        (I work in insurance but not in the UK)

  • Mike says:

    We have the Platinum and are considering cancelling this for the time being. However we have a fine hotels and resorts booking in December. Do you know if we’d still be eligible for the benefits as it’s already booked under that scheme? If not, do you think we could reapply for the platinum prior to travel to keep the benefits?

    • Sam G says:

      I have one I booked before I cancelled mine and the booking is still intact. The T&C says pay with an Amex, so I don’t see it being a problem personally. Especially if you kept the card to flash at the hotel before you pay using this free Amex 😉

  • JJ says:

    Would becoming a supp on Mrs JJ’s Gold card achieve the same result? i.e cancel Plat and keep MR account live by being a supp on the Gold card. Can’t remember if a supp has their own MR account.

    • Doogie says:

      Everything is cardholder, sup only counts for spend target and extra offers. (think it can be different on business cards)

  • Sandgrounder says:

    Do the MR accounts automatically merge, or do you need to call? They must be pretty quiet in new card production down in Brighton. I applied for this card on Thursday, it arrived the next day.

    • Bentoni says:

      I believe it’s auto merge, since I have both Platinum and the reward card, and the points are showing for both.

      • guesswho2000 says:

        It usually is automatic, but it’s also entirely possible you’ll end up with two MR accounts (I’ve been in both scenarios). If in doubt, call them to make sure.

        • Sandgrounder says:

          I asked on online chat and was told it would be automatic. The cards are on the same online account, with different bslances. But when logged in to MR they are both listed.

        • Doug M says:

          Yes. I had two MR accounts and had to get them merged via phone call. The second account earned points but was effectively unusable until they were merged.

  • Wally1976 says:

    If you have the platinum card, do you get 12k points for referring your partner for this card (I appreciate this won’t keep your own MR points account going)?

  • Tim says:

    I love the hotel benefits and have often enjoyed very nice upgrades and my son has a supplementary card, which is very useful for him, giving comprehensive travel insurance and lounge benefits. However, for me since becoming diabetic I had to take out an insurance policy which covered my condition, so negating the insurance benefits, but car insurance is still useful.

    I guess I should cancel,but find it difficult having had it so long.

    I also enjoyed Amex hospitality at Brighton.

  • Craig says:

    The insurance is the only reason I haven’t cancelled, with 2 pre booked trips for me and one each for my son and daughter I’m stuck between a rock and a hard place.

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