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Still got the Amex Gold charge card? Swap to the Gold credit card and save £140

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It is now almost three years since American Express withdrew the American Express Preferred Rewards Gold charge card.

The good news was that it was replaced by the American Express Preferred Rewards Gold credit card.  This was a virtually identical product except that – as a credit card – you now had the option to not fully clear your balance each month. 

(We don’t recommend rolling over your balance due to the representative 22.9% APR variable interest rate but the option is now there.)

Amex American Express gold

Do you still have the old charge card version of Amex Gold?

Existing cardholders were NOT automatically switched to the Gold credit card.

If you still have the Preferred Rewards Gold charge card, you will be paying the £140 annual fee.  In my view, you should seriously think about switching to the Gold credit card.  I explain why below.

Here are two reasons to switch

There are two good reasons why you may want to get the Gold credit card if you already have the Gold charge card.  You can then cancel your Gold charge card.

But – and I want to be clear about this – you will NOT receive a sign-up bonus on the Gold credit card.  This is because you already have a Membership Rewards account via your Gold charge card.  If you want to receive a sign-up bonus, you would need to cancel your existing Gold charge card, close your Membership Rewards account and reapply after 24 months.

Here are the two good reasons to apply for the Gold credit card, given that you are paying £140 per year for Gold charge:

  • You will still receive your first year on the Gold credit card for free.  This is important.  Instead of paying the £140 annual fee on your Gold charge card, you could apply for the Gold credit card and get a year of free membership.  You would save £140 over the next 12 months.  The fee on your existing Gold charge card will be refunded pro-rata when you cancel.
  • You will receive a 2nd Lounge Club card with another two free airport lounge passes

Timing is everything

As an Amex Gold cardholder, you receive a bonus of 10,000 Membership Rewards points for spending £15,000 each card year.

If you swap from Gold charge to Gold credit, your existing ‘year to date’ spend on Gold charge does NOT carry over.  You will be starting from scratch again towards your next 10,000 points bonus.

If you do spend £15,000 on your Gold charge card each year, the best time to apply for Gold credit and later cancel Gold charge is shortly after your 10,000 bonus points for the previous year have posted.

American Express released a PDF document here for current Preferred Rewards Gold charge card holders which explains this in more detail.

What happens to your Membership Rewards points?

Your Membership Rewards account exists separately from any of your credit or charge cards.  If you apply for the Amex Gold credit card, having already got Amex Gold charge, the Membership Rewards points from both cards will flow into the same pot

You do NOT need to empty out your existing Membership Rewards account before you cancel Gold charge.

A quick summary of what Amex Gold offers

All of the other benefits of the Preferred Rewards Gold charge card are retained when you swap to the Preferred Rewards Gold credit card.

This is as good a reason as any to run through them again and remind you why I think Amex Gold is the best miles and points card for the beginner.

Here are the core benefits of the American Express Preferred Rewards Gold credit card:

The card is free for the first year

Amex Gold has an annual fee of £140 BUT this is waived in your first year.  A free first year means that you have some time to see if it suits you or not. You can cancel at any point. If you continue after the first year, you can still cancel at any time and get a pro-rata refund on your fee. Amex is the only UK credit card company to offer partial fee refunds.

As I made clear above, anyone who switches from Gold charge to Gold credit will still get the ‘free first year’.  This saves you the £140 you would otherwise be paying to keep your Gold charge card.

The sign-up bonus is excellent

Assuming you qualify, you get 20,000 American Express Membership Rewards points (worth 20,000 Avios) when you sign up and spend £3,000 within three months. This is a good deal because ….

The rewards scheme is a valuable convertible currency

You can transfer American Express Membership Rewards points into MANY different things. Take a look at their website.

We tend to focus on airline schemes (1:1 into Avios, Virgin Flying Club, Flying Blue, Delta SkyMiles, Etihad Guest, Emirates Skywards etc) or hotel schemes (1:2 into Hilton Honors, 1:3 into Radisson Rewards, 2:3 into Marrriott Bonvoy.)

In reality there are lots of other options, including High Street gift cards. I wrote this article on how to get the best value from American Express Membership Rewards points.

It is possible, if you are smart, to get over £200 of value from your 20,000 Membership Rewards points sign-up bonus.

‘Convertible currencies’ are worth more to you. It is better to have 50,000 Amex points than 50,000 Avios points. Why? Because your 50,000 Amex points would get you 50,000 Avios points if you needed them – but you have a lot of other options too.

You get two free airport lounge visits per year

As an Amex Gold cardholder you receive free membership to Lounge Club, a global network of airport lounges. Each year you get two free visits – either two visits for yourself or one visit for yourself and a guest.

The Lounge Club website shows you which lounges you can use including many at Heathrow and Gatwick.  Additional visits after your two free ones are charged at £20 per person per visit. You receive two additional free passes each year if you renew your Amex Gold membership.

As noted above, you will get a fresh Lounge Club card and a further two free lounge visits when you apply for Gold credit, even if you already have Gold charge.

You get 10,000 bonus Membership Rewards points for spending £15,000 per year

The earning rate on Amex Gold is 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent. This is OK but not exceptional – although you should put some value on having a ‘convertible’ currency rather than being forced into taking Avios, Virgin Points etc via a dedicated airline credit card.

However, if you can spend £15,000 per year on your Amex Gold, the maths changes. You would receive 10,000 bonus points at the end of your card year. If you spent exactly £15,000, this means you would have earned 25,000 points – a rate of 1.6 points per £1. This is very good going.

Those are the key perks as I see them. There are various other benefits attached to the card as well, including:

  • double points for foreign spending (but there is a 3% fee for FX charges, so this is only a good deal if you are spending money your employer will reimburse)
  • double points on airline transactions
  • 10% discount and free additional driver on Hertz bookings
  • $75 in-hotel credit and an upgrade (based on availability at check-in) when booking 350 4-5 star hotels worldwide

If you spend a lot of money on flights, the ‘double points for flights’ benefit is very valuable.

If you charge £15,000-worth of flights – and nothing else – to your Gold card each year, you would earn 40,000 Membership Rewards points.

Your 40,000 points comprises:

  • 15,000 base points for spending £15,000
  • 15,000 bonus points as airline spend counts double
  • 10,000 bonus points for spending £15,000 in a card year

That’s a pretty decent return for spending £15,000 on airline tickets, and you can divert the rest of your annual card spend to other cards if you wish.

If you bought your flights in a foreign currency then you may do even better. Whilst you are not meant to double up, Amex may give you double points for foreign spend and double points for airline spend on the same transaction. As you are paying a 3% foreign exchange fee, however, this is not necessarily worth it unless you are spending someone else’s money.

Conclusion

It was slightly surprising when Preferred Rewards Gold transformed from a charge card to a credit card overnight.

If you already have the Amex Gold charge card and are paying the £140 annual fee, you should seriously consider moving to the Gold credit card.  You get another ‘free first year’ and another two Lounge Club passes.

(For confirmation of this, read Amex’s own PDF here.)

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold credit card application page is here.


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 (36)

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

  • Jonathan says:

    If you spent £15k in a single year on just airline tickets in non-Sterling transactions, would this mean you would earn roughly 55k MR points, since you get double points for non-Sterling spending, and double points for spending with an airline

    • Rob says:

      You are not meant to get this, as per the rules, but it often happens. You are paying the 3% FX fee though.

  • Matt says:

    I’m seriously considering swapping the Platinum Amex to Gold this week. Before Covid, the Platinum was justified for its travel insurance for me. How does Gold compare to the Plat for insurance? I already have BA Gold, Hilton Diamond & IHG Spire Elite, so the other travel benefits from Plat aren’t really justifying the annual fee. Is there much difference between Gold and Plat in these times?

  • Cheshire Pete says:

    Can u call and get them to do the swap without filling out a new application?

    • TGLoyalty says:

      No. Why would you either use a referral link to generate some points for a partner, friend or HfP

    • QFFlyer says:

      You can, but it still counts as a new application, for all intents and purposes (they just do it for you over the phone). As TG says, you may as well apply yourself using someone’s referral link.

  • Vit says:

    Our gold cards first year anniversary is mid Feb. Do you know when the fee hit the account roughly? Will just cancel right before that. TIA.

    • Genghis says:

      Statement after anniversary – work it out from your statement dates. Only cancel then if you’ve not spent the £15k.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        It’s virtually fully refundable in any case.

        • Charlieface says:

          Not fully because the start date is the BEGINNING of the statement period, and the charge appears at the end. So once you get charged your refund will be -£15.

      • Vit says:

        Thanks gents. Yes, took out the card to make the most out of travel in 2020 but could not meet the £15k due to travel restriction. Will cancel it just before the statement date next month.

  • BS says:

    I would also add you get Section 75 protection with this card, which makes Amex jointly responsible for a good/service purchased on the card >£100. This is significant: you can claim the cost of replacement flights etc, if the airline ceases trading, rather than just getting your money back. I have done many S75 claims over the years, all of which were successful.

  • Alex W says:

    Woah stop right there. The best thing to do with a legacy Gold charge is to upgrade it to a Platinum, assuming that you can still get an upgrade bonus.
    Then and only then, downgrade it to a Green or swap it to Gold credit.

    • Andrew M says:

      I seem to remember reading reports that the bonus for upgrading to Plat wasn’t working any more?

      • Alex W says:

        Ask on live chat if there’s an upgrade offer. No harm in trying.

    • SG says:

      Does the upgrade from Green to Platinum and downgrading back still work ok?

      • DJ says:

        The upgrade seems to be a targeted offer now.

        The upgrade link will ask you to call the new account. The new account can only upgrade you if you have been targeted for the offer.

        I did phone a few weeks back to upgrade my Gold Charge, but they couldn’t do anything.

  • Chris Heyes says:

    Rob Although I agree with the basis of your excellent article it seems to me (correct me if I’m wrong please)
    The two free lounge passes are useless if flying 1st or Business ?
    I have the lounge passes but never use them
    I would think they would be quite valuable “Below” Business
    Unless of course they are better lounges than received with ticket ?
    i could see a very good use if flying economy or premium, but can’t see that many HFP readers flying that (us including)
    Although i can imagine HPP readers squeezed like sardines in Economy when not long haul to save a couple of Avios and around £15 lol

    • Anna says:

      HNY Chris! The lounge passes are useless anyway if your starting point is somewhere like Manchester where in normal times it’s nigh on impossible to get into one of the commercial lounges without pre-booking. We’ve managed to get admitted to the Escape lounge in T3 a grand total of once (before BA put CE on its domestic routes) and it definitely wasn’t worth pre-booking!

      • RussellH says:

        We have used the lounge passes at both MAN and LHR. Busy, but no question of being turned away.
        Also used them at NCE and BUD. NCE was dire (presumably as it was the non-Schengen lounge and the whole non-Schengen section was deserted). BUD was not brilliant, but still a vast improvement on both the rest of the terminal and the KLM 737.

      • AndyGWP says:

        My experience mirrors RussellH’s – never been refused with this (or DragonPass) due to capacity in T3 at MAN (and that’s when schools are off and its generally heaving)

        Think I’ve been refused at a T1 lounge once with it though (but the other one was accepting people still, so it didn’t matter)

      • Chris Heyes says:

        Hi, Anna hope you had a good xmas and new year better than last lol
        To be honest never flown abroad from Manchester although lived in Blackburn, so never had a prob not using lounge.
        Only flown Manchester Gatwick plus occasionally Heathrow never used route for connecting flights as always stayed overnight Sofitel or Hilton.
        Besides always got hot meal on Manchester to Gatwick (years ago and £10 flight) usually breakfast going, lunch coming back
        The good old days lol plus free fights with Airmiles
        Will be trying new Hilton Blackburn later this year plus stopping Family

    • Rob says:

      True but needs must and the occasional low cost carrier flight etc is often needed.

      You can also get the odd airport whether the Lounge Club option beats the BA option.

      • David says:

        And of course the many airports where BA have suspended or discontinued paying for 3rd party lounge access. (Other carries doing the same)

      • Chris Heyes says:

        Rob to be honest never used a low cost carrier flight except TUI (or was it Thompson then) long while ago anyhow, never again
        Couldn’t tell you what easy jet bmi, Virgin are like or any other
        i can tell you TUI was lousy worse than that lol
        Only ever flown BA (or BAOC i think that’s what it was called)
        That’s what i call loyalty, or stupidity depending on viewpoint lol
        I Can’t understand “often needed” ? in over 40 years never needed ?

    • Charlieface says:

      Emirates and Etihad are selling no-lounge Biz now

  • Vicki Harris says:

    My husband got an Amex gold card not having had any of his own personal Amex cards in the previous 24 months (although he is a supplementary card holder on my Amex personal cards). However having spent £3000 in the first period he was refused the bonus points because Amex said he had a personal card already! How can he appeal?

    • Rob says:

      Weird. Has he a corporate card via work? Shouldn’t impact it but ….

      You need to keep plugging away. At some point you tell them to confirm this is their final response at which point you can write to the Ombudsman.

      • Louie says:

        And then expect to wait a year +. I’m still waiting for the Ombudsman’s decision on a disagreement with Amex dating back to September 2019.

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