Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Was star economist Ha-Joon Chang right to ditch his Amex Platinum?

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Each week in the ‘Money’ section of The Sunday Times is a Q&A with a high profile figure about their personal finances.

Last Sunday it was with economist Ha-Joon Chang, who has sold 1.3m books to date and teaches at Cambridge.

Here is an extract from the Q&A:

“What credit cards do you use?

I collect air miles with the American Express British Airways card. I also have a Barclaycard, as not all shops accept American Express.

I used to have the American Express Platinum card which came with things such as travel insurance, but over time the value of the extras reduced, so I felt the annual fee [now £450] was no longer justified.”

Is he right or not?  For most people, even the idea of paying £450 a year for a card is crazy.

I am intrigued by his position as an economist as he should be able to weigh up the pros and cons effectively.  He seems to have kept up to date with the changes to the Amex travel insurance which is a plus point.  On the other hand, I would like to know which Barclaycard he carries around and what rewards he gets from it – he may have made a duff choice with that ….

My full review of American Express Platinum from last month can be found hereThe Amex Platinum home page is here.

Given that we share a similar economics background (I got a ‘B’ in A-level Economics back in 1989, Ha-Joon completed a PhD at Cambridge in 1992), it is worth seeing if I come to the same conclusion ….

Special hotel offers

I am starting here as I spent the Bank Holiday weekend at Four Seasons Hampshire, booked via American Express Fine Hotels & Resorts.  I did this because we got a GUARANTEED 4pm check-out, along with free breakfast.  Over a short Bank Holiday break, the 4pm check-out was a valuable benefit.

The FHR benefits on this stay were probably worth £150 (free breakfast plus the value of the late check-out).

Travel insurance

This used to be gold-plated. Since July 2012, it is far from it.  An age limit of 70 meant that I have just cancelled my Mum’s supplementary card  – she used to get free travel insurance as part of my account.

You are now also obliged to  pay for your flights and hotel on an American Express card to benefit from some of the second-tier insurance features, such as flight delay cover. If you would otherwise use a card with no foreign exchange fee like the Post Office or Halifax Clarity, you are effectively paying an extra 3% depending on the billing currency.

You are covered for ‘big things’ like medical cover however you pay.  The insurance saves £100+ annually for us and we do not purchase any additional cover.

(Ironically, the downgrading of the insurance came with a 50% hike in the Platinum annual fee from £300 to £450!)

It is also worth mentioning the ‘no questions asked, you’re covered’ car hire cover.  Platinum provides additional car hire insurance however you pay for the car, so you can decline any attempts to upsell.  This is worth at least £100 a year to us.  The 3-day Hertz rental I had last weekend for £87 was £100 cheaper than the original quote.

You also get a ‘four hour bonus’ if you use the Amex Platinum rate code at Hertz.  Used cleverly, this can save you a full days rental fee.  Picking up at noon and returning the next day at 4pm is only charged as one day instead of two.

Starwood Gold / Club Carlson Gold / Accor Platinum / Hertz and Avis status

These are not hugely valuable to me because I do not do much business with any of these chains.  My wife, as my Platinum supplementary cardholder, does get some benefit from them.

She will be at the Pullman in Sochi for five nights this month and the Le Club Accorhotels Platinum status will get her lounge access.   Accor Platinum will also give her a 8% rebate on the cost of her stay (as a base member she would only get 2%) in Accor vouchers.  There will be £50 of additional value here at least.

The Avis benefit now appears to have ZERO value as Avis Preferred is now free for anyone to join.  Hertz is better as Amex Platinum lets you enrol at ‘Five Stars’ level which comes with additional benefits.

Amex Platinum also comes with a de facto Sixt car rental gold cardvia this link, any Starwood Preferred Guest Gold member can join the Sixt scheme at Gold level.

You should also be able to ‘status match’ the Amex hotel status cards for similar cards with other hotel chains.  statusmatcher.com is a good website where people report successful status matches from one airline or hotel scheme to another.

Fine Dining, Taste of Platinum, Amex events, Platinum gifts

Amex has been making an effort with its events programme over the last 18 months.  I had a good night at the MontBlanc event in Bond Street in November and there are some other bits and pieces coming up.

The £70 Matches gift voucher last year was used for an Orlebar Brown t-shirt!  I still have my £50 BestSecret voucher to use as well!

There is £100 of annual value in this even after discounting the t-shirt to what I would have been willing to pay for it.

Access to Delta lounges / Priority Pass lounge access / Eurostar lounge access

I never use the Delta Air Lines benefit and it is a while since I last used my Priority Pass.  (It was in Manchester last year when I used it to enter the Aspire lounge, as the BA one is too depressing!). My wife has had the odd Priority Pass usage via her job.

I used the Eurostar lounge on my way to Paris recently.

There is probably £50 of value here over a year, mainly via lounge access for my wife.

Free British Airways Premium Plus Amex

I am grandfathered this deal, which means I don’t pay the £150 fee on my British Airways Premium Plus Amex.  This is a £150 saving since I would definitely pay for the card if I had to.

Free Cathay Pacific Gold card

My wife and I both still have these.  Mine will never get used as I have BA status – I only got it as there may be a status match opportunity from it at some point!  My wife did use hers for a few months after maternity leave whilst she built up her BA status again but has not used it in the past year.

So ….

Overall, Amex Platinum does, for us, cover its cost.  £150 of that, of course, is the free British Airways Premium Plus Amex which is a not an offer that new cardholders can access.  Other people would probably make more use of the Priority Pass and hotel status benefits than we do.

For us, then, American Express Platinum still seems to make sense.  For you – like Ha-Joon Chang – the answer may be different.


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Comments (86)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Roger says:

    Aha, this old chestnut resurfaces. 😀

    Looking at the prospect from the other end of the telescope, it’s a couple of years since I cut up my AmEx plat. What have I missed? Very little, I think.

    It’s interesting to see how others have benefited from their card. In my case, since AmEx effectively excluded us from medical cover and imposed a 3% surcharge on travel purchases if I wanted insurance cover, I would find it difficult to find useful benefits. No £100 ‘free’ breakfasts or upgrades at certain hotels for us, mainly because we don’t use FHR hotels. We did use the Achicha £20 promotion – a joke, surely, as what we got were some very expensive biscuits that we would never have bought otherwise.

    In the couple of years since I cut up the card, I have not needed Priority Pass lounge access at all. (We have other PP access anyway.) This is because I used OW lounges with my BA membership or had access by flying business class.

    We did have a couple of small medical and small motoring claims over the years which were settled promptly.

    My grandfathered BA PP is still fee-free as I currently have the AMEx PRG card. In the first year, it has been interesting, but less so in the second year and beyond. I was thinking of cutting this card until I realised that the £125 annual fee will give me the Gold and the BAPP. 🙂

    At £300 p.a., the platinum card was a no-brainer. I could travel knowing that the insurance would cover me wherever and whatever. At £450 p.a. with reduced (for me) benefits, it’s not worthwhile.

    The MR earning rate (1:1) is pathetic. Other cards are more worthwhile. As for the 3% currency surcharge (how dare you claim it’s only 2.99% :D), US plats don’t pay this, undoubtedly because of the competition situation. Both of these could be enhanced to make the card more worthwhile, but this is probably unlikely to happen.

    Obviously, it’s a horses for courses situation. If it works for you, fine. if it doesn’t, look elsewhere.

  • flood says:

    No longer worth it for me after CX gold was dropped. Also disheartening to see the US Plat benefits include: No FX fee, higher earnings (1MR/$1), $200 annual airline rebate (every year, not just in the first year), more frequent and larger transfer bonuses (MR -> Airlines) etc

    If they were to more closely align the UK card with it’s US brother I would probably jump back in

  • Speedbird_ABZ says:

    I just ditched my one and went with the BA Premier Amex card. Good sign-up bonus, better earning rate and the 2-4-1 voucher of course.
    I couldn’t justify the £450 again this year. I still have my CX card valid until November, I will buy a PP card for £55 I think and pay as I go. I too tried to use the Hertz status, but it really didn’t save anything or give me any benefits on a recent trip to the US.
    I need extra travel insurance as well, so that is not a benefit to me.
    Maybe one day I will sign up again if they have a good sign-up bonus and other offers to tempt me.
    Their travel service was always excellent, but then I had no control of my booking on BA.COM, I prefer to book direct.

  • sandgrounder says:

    The BA lounge at MAN is depressing????? Much better in my mind than the box room full of stags and hens next door!

    • Jenni says:

      Agree 100%! Admittedly its not quite as nice as the likes of EDI, but beats next door by a mile.

      • AndyGWP says:

        The Escape Lounge? Never come across stags / hens in there but it does get brownie points for doing bacon butties for breakfast 😉

  • Thywillbedone says:

    I have the Plat card and am planning to cancel to get part refund of my annual fee. Anyone know when we can expect a bonus for MR transfers to Avios? Last one ended in Dec ’13 I believe. Surely one due around now? I have about 40k MRs and would roll the card on for another month if I thought there was a 25% transfer bonus imminent.

    Thanks!

  • Simon says:

    I got the email yesterday offering to Upgrade my Gold card to a Platinum one which prompted me to look at the benefits again, I guess everyone will put a different value on the benefits and use that to decide if they come to more than £450..

    For the hotel status it is possible to get some for free either via status match or keeping your eye out for promos, I’ve managed to get Accor Platinum status for the last 2 years signing up via links and I signed up to Club Carlson using a promo code last year which gave me 2 years free Gold Status (code is no longer valid).

    Accor keep some rooms for Platinum members as well, I wanted to stay in Nijmegen whilst there is an event on later this month and my Platinum status meant I could book a room in the Mercure, without the status I wouldn’t have been able to book the room or stay in Nijmegen as every hotel was fully booked.

  • HHibs says:

    Hello,,I think it would be useful if somewhere you did a glossary of the top used acronyms.

    People defeat the purpose of their useful posts when they continually use initials that perhaps are not generally understood,

    Just a thought.

    Thanks anyway ,this is a most useful site and blog

    • Sinizter says:

      There is a site for frequently used TLAs or even other varieties of acronyms – http://www.google.co.uk

      This site will not benefit from additional clutter of maintaining a list.

      Just my thoughts on this.

      • HHibs says:

        Thanks for the heads up.

        Not sure your last sentence was really necessary though.

  • craigs1973 says:

    I realise that this may be a moot point but how does / did the grandfathering of the BA PP card work?

    • Rob says:

      The fee simply never turns up!

    • andy21 says:

      The card was coded as a different product and explained in the T&Cs ie: (1) British Airways Premium Plus card £150 annual fee (2) Bristish Airways Premium Plus card with Platinum Card held £0 annual fee. For a couple of years my card was coded as (1) rather than (2) and I had to call them each year to get the annual fee manually removed, then it was sorted out and correctly coded.

      They stopped this benefit for new applications around the time the SPG card came out as I was hoping to get that fee free too.

    • DV says:

      Your Platinum statement will say “No annual fee/a reduced annual fee as long as you hold an Amex companion card”. The terms and conditions for the old BA Amex cards specified a scale of fees falling to zero depending on the companion card held. Any credit card reduced the fee to £30 ISTR; a charge card reduced it to £0.

      • Gordon says:

        I have had the BA amex card for 9 years but never held the platinum card. Am i likely to qualify for the discount if I apply now for Platinum or does this only apply if you have held both cards long term?

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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