Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Curve Card adds 1.5% fee to credit card repayments and NS&I / Premium Bond purchases

Links on Head for Points may pay us an affiliate commission. A list of partners is here.

Curve Card made a slightly confusing announcement on Friday, emailing members to tell them that it was imposing a 1.5% fee on anyone who used their card to pay off a credit card.

The reason it was confusing is that paying credit cards using Curve Card is against its terms and conditions.  It represented financial recycling.  Because Curve Card recharges your payment to whatever Visa or Mastercard you link to it, you were effectively paying off a credit card with another credit card to earn points.  This was not allowed.

Curve Card had already blocked some financial institutions from its system.  American Express seemed to come and go – a lot of people found that they could pay off their American Express bills using Curve and earn points on whatever underlying credit card was linked to it.  Personally I never got this to work, but I have a ‘first generation’ Curve Card which is structured slightly differently.

Curve Card adds 1.5% fee to credit card repayments

Which merchants will Curve Card now charge you 1.5% to pay?

Curve Card has now categorised two types of payments which will incur a 1.5% fee.  These are known as ‘Curve Fronted’ transactions and are explained on the Curve website site.

The fees are triggered by the coding applied by the merchant.  This may lead to anomalies as some merchants are incorrectly coded, or have a code which represents a different part of their business to the part you are transacting with.

The following payments use Merchant Category Code 9399 and are now charged at 1.5%:

  • HMRC (this change was made a few months ago)
  • National Savings & Investments, including Premium Bonds
  • DVLA Vehicle Tax
  • Student Loan Payments

Until yesterday, all of the above – except for HMRC – were payable with Curve Card for free and could be recharged to a credit card which earned points.

The following payments use Merchant Category Code 6012 and are now charged at 1.5%:

  • Paying credit card bills, loans or mortgages, where your Curve Card recharges to a credit card
  • Purchasing financial services or products from banks, Credit Unions, Deposit Takers
  • Purchasing foreign or non-fiat currency such as cryptocurrency, travelers cheques or money orders
  • Purchasing store value cards such as prepaid cards

In reality, most of the above were already blocked by Curve Card on an ad-hoc basis and were against its terms and conditions in any event.

Barclaycard is known to block payments with Curve Card and this policy is unlikely to change.  Other credit card companies may move to block Curve Card payments to discourage financial recycling even if Curve itself is happy to allow it.

Can you get around this fee?

Yes. 

If you have Curve Metal (£15 per month), you are exempt from these charges.

This means you can now, openly, pay off your credit card with another (or even the same!) Visa or Mastercard credit card linked to Curve as long as you pay £15 per month for Curve Metal.

Does this makes sense?

It depends.  For a start, some underlying credit cards will – irrespective of whether Curve imposes its 1.5% fee – treat these payments as a cash advance.  This means that you wouldn’t earn points and, worse, would be hit with a 3% cash advance fee.  Barclaycard is also known to block Curve Card payments and others may follow suit (MBNA is fine, Amex is usually fine).  The only way to be sure if a payment will work is to test.

Secondly, you are limited by your Curve Card limits.  Most people start at £50,000 per year, with daily and monthly limits on top.   If you’re lucky you may get moved up to £100,000 per year.  Even if you are a high spender, you will still bump up against the cap on your total Curve Card spending.

In some scenarios it would work.  If you could recharge £50,000 of credit card repayments to your Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard, which earns 1.5 miles per £1 spent, you’d be picking up 75,000 additional Flying Club miles per year.

In this scenario, the £15 per month cost of Curve Metal would make sense.  However, it would depend on Virgin Money deciding not to treat your Curve Card transactions to financial services businesses as cash withdrawals, or deciding to block Curve Card payments entirely.

Curve Card adds 1.5% fee to credit card repayments

Is it still worth getting a Curve Card?

It has some value, yes.

For a start, you can still recharge any purchase which is ‘debit card only’ to an underlying Visa or Mastercard credit card and so earn points.

As long as the purchase doesn’t fall into the categories listed above, you’re fine.

You can also make free ATM withdrawals and have them recharged to your credit card, treated as a miles-earning purchase.  There is a monthly cap which varies depending on which Curve Card you have.

Curve Card will pay you £10 to try it …..

….. so there is no risk.

To sign up to Curve, simply go to this page of their websiteThe easiest thing to do is order the free Blue card and then upgrade to Black or Metal once you have got familiar with it, although you can start immediately on Black or Metal if you want.

Curve will pay you £10 for trying it out if you use our link.

Our introductory guide to Curve Card is here if you are a new HfP reader.


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 (257)

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

  • Freddy says:

    Yep

  • shd says:

    Re: Virgin credit card, each month you can only earn miles for spend up to your credit limit (ie if you reach the credit limit mid-month, then pay down the balance before the statement date, then spend some more, you won’t earn miles on the additional spend). Encountered this myself for the first time last month.

    Question – how exactly does Virgin count the statement cycle for the maximum miles you can earn? Statement date to statement date?

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Yes

      • Andrew M says:

        Are they actually enforcing this now? I seem to remember that soon after they implemented the new policy, some people commented that they could still spend more than their credit limit and earn points on all of it.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          From what I’ve seen in the comments over the past couple months yes they are enforcing

  • Freddy says:

    I’ve only been using curve with the virgin card. With virgin going down the drain I can’t see much point continuing with either card. The fee is the last straw.

    The IHG prem card and Hilton card are no longer open to new applicants so not really any great options really going forward

    • guesswho2000 says:

      This is my view too. I still have IHG Black and Hilton BC, but there’s nothing new of interest, and those two are on life support (although BC’s been hanging on for two years now) as far as I’m concerned.

      Very sad times, but there may be other oppo’s in the future.

  • LockdownLilly says:

    We still talking about this dead horse?!

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Strange dead horse I’ve been riding it pretty successfully ever since it launched

  • Crafty says:

    Except at weekends.

  • Lumma says:

    I think officially the fee free monthly cap for ATM withdrawals in the UK is £200 a month no matter which membership level you’re on with Curve. Over £200 you can be charged a 2% fee by Curve, although I’ve never been charged – I’ve never really pushed it beyond this

    The different amounts are for overseas ATM withdrawals (£200 free, £400 black, £600 metal)

    • Andrew L says:

      Since Creation started charging interest for topping up Revolut, has anyone been successfully topping up their Revolut account with Curve billing their IHG Rewards card interest-free?

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Not to sound like a broken record but Curve pass on the MCC so it won’t mask the type of Merchant and you’ll be charged whatever the card would charge as if it was direct.

        Unless it being “fronted” has changed anything but we won’t know that for a few days

  • Olly says:

    “It was nice while it lasted!” I have been paying my Amex Platinum Charge card monthly amount with my Barclaycard Hilton card off from my Black card successfully for years up until last today without any charges. I went to pay it this morning and found the payment would not go through and an error message displayed on the the app had updated. A quick search of the Help questions revealed the Curve Frontline feature is now on the new app, or at least I had noticed it if it was on the previous version. The current doubling of points by Amex will offset it but it is the only reason I keep Curve TBH.
    AFAIK I have not paid any fees for the card since I got it when Rob recommended it upon its inauguration but the website shows a fee of £9.99 a month, so I am wondering if I have been lucky with that or has that changed as well since I first got it?

    • Secret Squirrel says:

      Anyone been doing up to £500 curve ATM withdrawals and not hit with percentage fees?

      • Andrew L says:

        Yes I have. I do £250 a time at ATM a couple of times a month and never been charged a fee.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      There’s still a free card.

      The “legacy” black card is also still free for those that originally paid £50 for it, I was actually upgraded gratis a few years back.

    • Vinz says:

      You must be on black legacy like me. I was an early adopter of the Curve beta years ago when Rob recommended it. 🙂

  • The Streets says:

    Another key benefit of the card is the Curve Cash function. This gives you 1% back at most supermarkets on top of the rewards from your underlying credit card. In these times where some choose not to pursue AMEX cards incurring fees or are waiting two years to restart their bonuses then this provides a good alternative and a way to reclaim some of the Curve Metal fee

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