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BONUS DOUBLED: Get a huge 60,000 points with Amex Platinum

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American Express has launched an exceptionally generous sign-up bonus for The Platinum Card. It may be the biggest ‘open to all’ bonus I have ever seen.

The standard bonus of 30,000 Membership Rewards points, which converts to 30,000 Avios, was already good.

Until 2nd November, however, you will receive 60,000 Membership Rewards points if you spend £6,000 in your first six months. This is worth 60,000 Avios or lots of other interesting things, as we will show below.

You can apply for The Platinum Card here.

Get a huge 60,000 points, and great benefits, with American Express Platinum

The card also comes with some great travel benefits. It also comes with a chunky fee of £575 per year.

One upside is that you can get a pro-rata fee refund if you cancel so the cost of trying it out for a few months is low.  In fact, you’d make a decent profit as long as you managed to spend £6,000 and trigger the bonus.

What are the benefits of American Express Platinum?

Here are the key benefits of The Platinum Card as I see them. However, for clarity, there is no ‘right’ answer about whether The Platinum Card represents good value.

It is SOLELY down to how you travel and which of the card benefits you can use.  This varies from person to person.  Most people value the Priority Pass airport lounge access cards the most, for example, but I don’t because we usually fly Business Class and my wife and I both have British Airways status anyway.

On the other hand, as non car-owning Londoners, we do disproportionately value the car hire insurance and the Fine Hotels & Resorts luxury hotel benefits. The 4pm guaranteed late check-out is a real boon if you are only away for a long weekend.  Who wants to be kicked out of their hotel at 11am on a Sunday?

I run through this in more detail below.  It is why, of all the credit and charge cards we cover on Head for Points, American Express Platinum is the one that people often find the hardest to get their head around.

What is the sign up bonus on The Platinum Card?

Even in normal times, American Express Platinum offers the biggest single sign-up bonus of any UK travel card.

Until 2nd November, The Platinum Card blows every other card out of the water with a doubled sign-up bonus.

You receive 60,000 American Express Membership Rewards points which convert into:

  • 60,000 Avios
  • 60,000 Virgin Points
  • 60,000 Emirates, Etihad, Flying Blue, Alitalia, Asia Miles, Delta, Finnair, Qantas or SAS miles
  • 40,000 Singapore Airlines miles
  • 120,000 Hilton Honors points
  • 90,000 Marriott Bonvoy points
  • 180,000 Radisson Rewards points
  • 4,000 Club Eurostar points

….. and many other non-travel rewards.  I wrote this article on the most valuable Membership Rewards redemptions.

What is the annual fee on The Platinum Card?

The card has an annual fee of £575.

You can, of course, cancel the card at any point for a pro-rata fee refund.  This reduces the risk considerably if you don’t find it is right for you.

Remember that the Platinum card is a charge card, not a credit card.  You MUST clear your balance in full at the end of each month.

I have had one since 1999, so clearly there is real value to be had.

Get a huge 60,000 points, and great benefits, with American Express Platinum

Here are the American Express Platinum core benefits (for me)

Here are the key card benefits to me.  As you read on, you will probably say to yourself that you would value some of these at nothing.  That’s fine.  You may value some of the benefits that I never use.  As I said, there is no right or wrong decision about whether Platinum works for you.

Full travel insurance:

You receive travel insurance for yourself and your family as long as you are under 70.  You can insure five other people and their families by giving them supplementary cards on your account.  Some benefits require you to pay for your trip with an American Express card (any UK personal Amex card, not necessarily Platinum) but the core medical benefit is automatic.  My family relies on this as our core family travel policy and do not pay for any other cover.  Amex has recently increased the number of pre-existing conditions and sporting activities which are covered.

Car hire insurance:

You receive full car hire insurance.  As we live in London and don’t own a car, this is very useful for us as we hire 3-4 times per year.

Airport lounge access via Priority Pass:

You and your main supplementary cardholder will each receive a Priority Pass card.  This gets the cardholder plus a guest into 1,300 airport lounges across the world for free, including the Aspire lounge in Heathrow Terminal 5 reviewed hereNo1 Lounges, present at Gatwick, Birmingham and Heathrow Terminal 3, has just rejoined Priority Pass which makes it even more useful.

As you get two Priority Pass cards, each of which allows a free guest, you can get a family of four into a lounge.

Platinum cardholders can also access the impressive Plaza Premium lounge in Heathrow Terminal 5 by showing their Platinum card – this lounge is not in Priority Pass but Amex has a direct deal with Plaza Premium.

You can also get into Amex’s own network of high quality ‘Centurion’ airport lounges for free.  These are primarily in the US but are rolling out globally – new ones opened in Hong Kong and Melbourne recently.  The first UK Centurion lounge, at Heathrow Terminal 3, is due to open in late 2021.

I do not personally use the Priority Pass benefit as I have British Airways status and our long-haul travel is always in Business Class.  That said, we do occasionally find ourselves at airports where BA does not provide lounge access

Obviously if you do not have airline status then this benefit has substantial value. It is also worth remembering that BA has cancelled its lounge contracts at most European airports during coronavirus and it may take some time for access to be restored. Most of these lounges can still be accessed via Priority Pass.

Hotel status:

You will also receive permanent – for as long as you hold your Platinum card – status in various hotel schemes:

  • Gold in Hilton Honors
  • Gold in Marriott Bonvoy
  • Gold in Radisson Rewards
  • Gold in MeliaRewards

I value these cards highly and usually plan my stays around hotels which will give me additional status benefits.

Eurostar and Delta lounge access:

Other benefits include Eurostar lounge access in London, Brussels and Paris whatever your class of travel.  You also receive lounge access when flying with Delta although any guests must pay $29.

I do value the Eurostar benefit because I tend to travel Standard Premier which gets the business class seat but without lounge access.  No guests are allowed although your partner can come in if they have a supplementary Platinum card on your account.  At quiet times they will unofficially allow children in.

Exclusive events:

American Express offers an exclusive events programme.  This is a mix of free events and special paid events with top restaurants or shows.  Now that I have a couple of kids my ability to nip off to every free party I get invited to is much reduced, but I have attended a few good evenings over the years I have held my Platinum card.

The value here obviously varies massively.  Would you be interested, for example, in joining a private meal hosted personally by a high-profile chef in their flagship restaurant even if the cost was higher than a standard meal in the same venue?  Would you be interested in the best seats in the house for a high profile concert, with a private drinks reception beforehand for Platinum guests, if the cost was higher than a standard top-priced ticket (which sold out months ago)?  Some would be keen, some wouldn’t.

The Platinum events programme is now easier to book as a new app has just been launched.

Exclusive benefits at luxury hotels:

There is an exclusive hotel booking scheme called ‘Fine Hotels & Resorts’ which offers valuable additional benefits on your stays.  If you are a regular visitor at five star hotels then you can recoup your entire membership fee via FHR bookings.

I wrote more about Fine Hotels & Resorts here – for me, the guaranteed 4pm check-out on every stay is invaluable, especially for weekend breaks.  We use this benefit whenever I must have a 4pm check-out, which can make a real difference on a short break.

£10 monthly Addison Lee taxi credit:

You receive a £10 Addison Lee taxi credit each calendar month.  These do not roll over if unused.  The money is applied via a cashback credit to your American Express statement.

If you live in London this is basically free money – or free taxi rides, if you don’t usually use taxis. If you live outside London it is worthless.

$200 cashback per onefinestay home or apartment rental:

I don’t see my family using this one.  We have never been villa people.  onefinestay is high end and you won’t find much in Europe or the US under £300 per night, with a 3-night minimum stay in most cases, so the deal is not as good as it first appears.

If you are a villa or home rental person, however, you will do exceptionally well here as you can earn the cashback as many times as you want.

Membership Rewards Platinum Amex

What do you earn per £1 spent on the card?

You receive 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on the card.  1 Membership Rewards point is equivalent to 1 Avios or other airline mile per £1 if you choose to transfer them.  Spending with American Express Travel, booked and paid for online, earns 2 points per £1.

To be honest, many people who have the card focus their spending elsewhere – in order, for example, to trigger the 2-4-1 voucher on the British Airways American Express card.

Can I get the sign-up bonus if I have a British Airways American Express card?

Yes.  The rule is that you will not receive a sign-up bonus if you have held a Platinum, Gold or Green American Express charge card, or the Amex Rewards credit card, in the 24 months before you apply.

You WILL receive the sign-up bonus if you have a Corporate or Business American Express Green, Gold or Platinum card via your job and you receive Membership Rewards points from it.  This is a recent change to the rules.  Only PERSONAL cards impact on whether you qualify.

For clarity, you will definitely receive the sign-up bonus on The Platinum Card if you already have a BA Amex, Nectar Amex, Marriott Bonvoy Amex or Platinum Cashback Amex.

You will also definitely receive the bonus if you are currently a supplementary cardholder on someone else’s Amex Gold or Platinum card.  As far as Amex is concerned, that card belongs to the primary cardholder and does not make you an ‘existing cardholder’.

What is the target spend to receive the bonus?

In normal times, you need to spend £4,000 within 90 days to receive a bonus of 30,000 points.

During this promotion, you need to spend £6,000 within six months to receive a bonus of 60,000 points. Whilst the total sum is higher, the average monthly spend is reduced which may make it easier to hit.

The spend target does not include the annual fee.

Conclusion

60,000 American Express Membership Rewards points is an outstanding offer, if you qualify.

Even if you don’t qualify, perhaps your partner or another family member would qualify. You could get a supplementary card issued in your name which would allow you to earn the hotel status and Priority Pass benefits, as well as letting you run up the target spend. You could then use the Membership Rewards points in a way which benefitted yourself, although they can only be transferred to accounts in the name of the main cardholder.

Long term, whether or not the fee on The Platinum Card represents value for money long-term depends on how many of the card benefits you will use, although you can cancel for a pro-rata fee refund at any point.

Let’s not look long term, however. Focus on the short term and whether you could spend £6,000 in six months to unlock a bonus of 60,000 Membership Rewards points.

Assuming that you can spend £6,000 to earn the bonus, the worse case scenario is that you cancel after a few months for a pro-rata fee refund and walk away with 60,000 Membership Rewards points (60,000 Avios).

The application form for Amex Platinum can be found here.

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 (211)

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

  • Austen Orlando says:

    Am I eligible for the bonus if I have the no fee American Express Rewards Credit Card?

  • Tim says:

    Call me stupid, but if you do not make use of the Priority Pass benefit, I just struggle to quantify how £38 per month (presuming the £10 taxi credit is used per month, which people outside London might not utilise as much) is good value for annual travel insurance for a family of four and car hire insurance if you only hire a car three or four times a year. Hilton Gold gives complimentary breakfast. But you can sneeze and get Hilton Gold these days. I’m not being critical, but am I genuinely missing something in my numbers, if you do not want to, or are unable to give four complimentary cards to parents? Or is it that latter bit the thing makes the £48 per month work?

    • Rob says:

      You need to make it work based on your travel pattern. You can cover the fee with one Fine Hotels and Resorts booking, if you put a value on the guaranteed 4pm checkout (if you go Four Seasond Hampshire for a couple of weekends per year that’s your £575 back). All depends on what works for you.

      You also need to factor in the Gareth Bale theory (Spurs sold Bale and bought 5 players with the £, but all were useless) or the iPhone theory (it is cheaper to buy a separate stopwatch, compass, torch, music player but ….)

      Whether there is long term value is a different discussion as to whether there is short term value, of course!

      • Tim says:

        I’m going to give it a punt. I don’t think I’ll qualify for the 60k bonus but I can ensure 15k, plus the current lack of non-hub lounge access with Oneworld and Star means in the short term I’ll make use of the Priority Pass and my travel insurance is up for renewal next month. It’s been nearly 20 years since I last used Priority Pass!

        • Yorkieflyer says:

          It may well be another 20 years till they let you in a lounge with PP…..

          • xcalx says:

            Totally agree, can’t believe it’s still pimped out as a worthwhile benefit.

          • Rob says:

            As BA has cancelled the bulk of its Euro lounge contracts, you need it more than ever!

      • KP says:

        Not sure I completely agree. FHR is not a huge benefit…you can book these rate through many Virtuoso agents out there without having to pay Amex Plat fees and get the guaranteed check-out.

        • Rob says:

          No guaranteed check-out with Virtuoso. Optional, but not contractual, as I have found the hard way in the past. I always use FHR if its a weekend break and I need 4pm.

          • KBuffett says:

            It is guaranteed at certain properties (Corinthia). Which property were you let down at?

      • Julian says:

        There is a happy medium to these things.

        Separate stopwatch, compass torch, music player etc is a hassle when I still need a smartphone with a decent web browser and Google Maps capability but my 5G One Plus Nord N10 6Gb with 128Gb of RAM Android phone that only cost £160 2 months ago from the Amazon Warehouse (it wasn’t even a scratched on the back unit as they suggested but instead simply one returned completely undamaged within the Amazon returns period policy) seems to do almost everything the £799 Oneplus 9 Pro does other than it doesn’t have a Super Amoled display so not quite as easy to see in bright sunlight……….

        They both suffer the same OnePlus design fault I also had on my OnePlus 5T of the current call muting itself or putting itself on Hold if you put the phone to or from your ear too quickly but it isn’t nearly as annoying having only paid £160 for the privilege rather than £799. Current Sub 6Ghz 5G frequencies (only n78 channel currently in use) achieve roughly 150% more maximum data speed on 4G+ but its questionable whether I ever need a 250Mbps rather than a 100Mbs download speed and 4G+ still available on five to ten times as many transmitters as 5G on O2. 5G more or less useless at present for any form of indoor coverage and no prospect of more than base 4G on my home cell for another year or two.

        • Rob says:

          Have heard good stuff about OnePlus, I agree.

          • BP says:

            Have had a OnePlus 6 for over 3 years and it’s still going strong! Really good phones.

        • Mr(s) Entitled says:

          How do you find the Nord? I have the 6T which I have found to be excellent and due to offers at the time only cost be £72 net. I’m considering upgrading to a refurbished 8 but the Nord has caught my eye. I use the phone as a phone, map, and daily HfP checker so I don’t need anything fancy. I do however like the fact that I don’t feel the need to cry if I, or one of my kids, drops it.

      • KBuffett says:

        Most/all FHR benefits are available through Emyr at zero extra cost.

    • Genghis says:

      I’ve never been able to get the plat to stack up for me.
      Yes, I churn the card, top up hotel statuses, extend me getting into the Eurostar lounges.
      But paying the fee continually for:
      – travel insurance (got through HSBC prem),
      – lounge access (mainly travel BA and have status and have the HSBC WE card)
      – car hire – no alternative for this but I buy single policies for the few times do actually hire
      – FHR – we don’t stay at these hotels, prefer to use points elsewhere
      – one of the lowest earn rates around, just doesn’t work.
      I may have “lost out” during Covid with all of the retention offers and card offers but equally I’ve saved a lot of money not paying.

      • KP says:

        I think I agree with your assessment above

      • BuildBackBetter says:

        I’d like to know how parents manage lounge access for kids without platinum. I guess you cannot get an additional card for kids with hsbc WE or any other card.

        • Rob says:

          HSBC WE is useless, as you say (well, you can pay £20 for the kids).

        • Tim says:

          Two things would make the world a better place. First, peace: not war. Second, if all airport lounges banned children, who more often than not are sticky, snotty, loud, and in the case of babies, constantly crying. And that’s just the parents. 🙂

          • Julian says:

            Parents with children clearly need their own dedicated lounges, which surely ought to be possible at the world’s largest airports if one of or two of the existing lounges were given over to this purpose.

          • cinereus says:

            Hear, hear.

      • Julian says:

        Presumably a lot of people are reaching this conclusion re Platinum due to the impact of COVID on normal levels of travel and smart holiday stays so hence why Amex is having to bribe new applicants with the 60,000/65,000 MR points bonus.

        Still seems amazing the Amex marketing people don’t say that you are committed for all of the first year’s card fees on a card even if you cancel only a few months in. I mean great that they don’t but very much at odds with cancellation policies on home broadband and expensive 24 months shiny smartphone contracts……………

  • Rahul says:

    Apologies if this not appropriate but can anyone provide a referral link for the card to help us both rack up some extra points?

  • John says:

    Can someone please remind me if I would receive the bonus :
    Been over 12 months since had a personal gold/platinum but only 4 months since had a business gold.
    Also currently have a BA and a Marriott card.
    Thanks

    • Dave says:

      I believe it’s 24 months from when you last held a MR earning personal amex. I’m not sure about the BAPP and have asked the same question below.

  • Dave says:

    If I currently hold a BAPP but have not held a MR card for over 24 months, would I be eligible for the platinum sign up bonus?

    Thanks

    • Rob says:

      Yes

      • Nicky says:

        I rang AmEx to check when I cancelled my gold card and it was February this year…. Gutted as I could have done with the 60,000 air miles (have to pay for to big holidays in January) any suggestions as how to get around this?

        • Rob says:

          You can’t get around it – Amex is strict to the day about the 24 months. You’d need to persuade someone in your BA household account to apply so you could still benefit from the Avios (assuming Avios is what you wanted).

          • Nicky says:

            Unfortunately (dad lives with me) he has the gold already, no kids, just dogs – unless I can get a card in my dogs name it looks like I have missed the boat on this one. Bummer…..bring back churning AmEx as air miles are so much harder to earn these days and pot is depleting

  • JSemity says:

    What would happen if I took out this card, made a couple of purchases on it:

    – one large (just under £6k) purchase that I would refund at a later date
    – a smaller purchase to take me over the £6k threshold that wouldn’t be refunded

    cancelled, paid off and closed the card, transferring the MR points to avios. Then refunded that purchase in the future?

    Do they attempt to claw anything back?

  • John says:

    Asking again as I gave incorrect information:
    I currently hold a BA card and a Marriott card.
    I last held a PERSONAL gold/platinum card 30 months ago.
    I held a business gold card in last couple of months.
    Amex chat said I would not be entitled to bonus as hold the Marriott card.
    Is this correct ??

  • Peter says:

    Can you make your mortgage payments with the AMEX Platinum since it’s not a credit card?

    • Rob says:

      No – because your mortgage provider would still be on the hook for a 2% fee to Amex!

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