Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Get a 40,000 points (= 40,000 Avios) bonus on Amex Platinum via a special link

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For the next FOUR DAYS ONLY, you will receive 40,000 American Express Membership Rewards points if you apply for the American Express Platinum charge card via a special link.

These convert into 40,000 Avios, 40,000 Virgin miles, 80,000 Hilton points, 20,000 Starwood points, 120,000 Carlson points or a variety of other schemes.

If you have been thinking about getting Platinum, this is as good a time as any.  The forthcoming addition of Hilton HHonors Gold status will bring a genuine improvement to the benefits package (although there is no firm date yet for the UK roll-out).  The opening of a Priority Pass lounge in Terminal 5 at Heathrow also makes the card more useful.

This deal is being run in association with Conde Nast Traveller magazine although anyone can apply.  This is the second special offer of this sort that Amex has run in the past six months.

The special application form is here.

The first thing to remember is that, whilst the standard bonus is 30,000 points, you have always been able to increase that to 35,000 points by asking me for a refer-a-friend link.  You CANNOT use refer-a-friend in conjunction with this deal, so you should see it as an extra 5,000 points and not an extra 10,000 points.

You will receive the 40,000 Membership Rewards points when you spend £2,000 within 90 days.   Membership Rewards points can be converted 1 to 1 into Avios, so you would receive 40,000 Avios points.  Click here to see what other reward programmes are Membership Rewards transfer partners.

The Platinum card comes with a £450 membership fee.  This is refunded pro-rata, rounded up to the nearest month, if you decide to cancel.

Who can apply?

You need a household income of £40,000.

The general American Express rule is that you can hold two charge cards and two credit cards at the same time.  Gold is the other widely-held charge card, the credit cards include the BA, Starwood SPG, Nectar, Costco and Harrods Amex cards.

If you have held a Gold, Green or Platinum American Express charge card in the last six months you will NOT receive the bonus.

Any American Express cards you may have which are issued by Lloyds, TSB, Barclays or MBNA will not directly impact on whether you are accepted for this card and do NOT impact whether you receive the bonus.

Note 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.

Any other benefits?

Here is a summary of the substantial benefits that come with the card.

You receive travel insurance for yourself and your family as long as you are aged 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, but the core medical benefit is automatic.

You receive full car hire insurance – with no requirement to pay with your card.

You and your main supplementary cardholder will each receive a Priority Pass card.  Each card admits two people for free so a family of four is fully covered if your partner is your main Platinum supplementary cardholder.  You can access 700 airport lounges across the world for free including the new Aspire lounge in Terminal 5 and the hugely impressive Plaza Premium lounges in Heathrow T2 and T4 and No 1 Traveller lounges in Gatwick North and South and Heathrow T3.

You will also receive status in various hotel schemes:

Gold status in Hilton HHonors will be added at an unspecified future date – it has already been rolled out to US cardholders and Amex has announced that it is a global deal.

Other benefits include Eurostar lounge access in London, Paris, Brussels and Ebsfleet, whatever your class of travel.  You also receive lounge access when flying with Delta (any guests must pay $29).  There is also an exclusive hotel booking scheme called ‘Fine Hotels & Resorts’ which offers valuable additional benefits on your stays including a guaranteed 4pm check-out.

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

You receive 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on the card.  This is equivalent to 1 Avios per £1 if transferred.  This is, frankly, not great and is the reason why my Platinum card – which I have had since 1999 – remains unused in my desk most of the time.

I have written various articles on Head for Points about the value you can get from Membership Rewards points – this was the most recent and most comprehensive.

Conclusion

With a 40,000 points (=40,000 Avios) sign-up bonus, you certainly won’t lose out if you decide to give Amex Platinum a try via this offer.

If it works for your travel pattern – if you and your family use the travel insurance, if you hire cars and benefit from the car cover, if you use Eurostar or stay at Starwood / Hilton / SPG / Carlson hotels, if you usually don’t fly Business and would value the two Priority Pass cards (which admit a total of 4 people for free), if you stay in luxury hotels which you can now book via Fine Hotels & Resorts for the extra benefits – then the card has value.

If none of the above apply to you, you are paying £450 a year for a bit of Silver plastic which has an earning rate lower than many free credit cards.

The application form for the Conde Nast / Amex Platinum deal can be found here.  You have only four days to apply as the offer closes on Wednesday 18th November.


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2024 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit card, here are our top recommendations based on the current sign-up bonuses.

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

15,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend 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:

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

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 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 Business Credit Card

1% cashback uncapped* on all your business spending (T&C apply) Read our full review

Comments (87)

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

  • Brian says:

    ‘an earning rate lower than many free cards’ – which free cards have a higher earning rate? I know that it’s easy to find the same rate, but which free cards offer more than 1 Avios etc per pound? Even the Gold card, free for the first year, no longer offers double points on anything other than travel.

    • Rob says:

      I wasn’t thinking of Avios but some MBNA cards offer over 1 airline mile per £1.

    • harry says:

      Here’s your Sunday morning quizlet, Brian 🙂

      Collect double Avios for 6 months

      Use your Avios Rewards American Express® card and you’ll also get double Avios for 6 months after opening your account, up to a maximum of £2,500 of eligible spend each month.

      • Jason says:

        He was talking about free cards 🙂

        • harry says:

          it’s a fair retort 🙂 but it’s peanuts compared to (say) 15,000 extra Avios if you can max out the spend

          • Jason says:

            the fx benefit is worth the fee alone, although I won’t get to use the voucher as I’m struggling to use 241’s these days with the Qatar business fares ex eu! 🙂

          • harry says:

            Can you get it again if you go back after 5 years? (Lloyds)

          • Rob says:

            Perhaps after 5 years but they definitely have a long memory. Even recently, people with the pre 2011 Air Miles card were being refused.

  • Globetrotter7 says:

    I wish I could justify paying £450 for a charge card to my other half….

    • harry says:

      You justify it by equating 40K Avios to £400, and (say) 12 lounge passes to £160

      • TimS says:

        But as you can get 22k avios for free with the gold card, you should only justify the marginal amount (18k avios) in the £450 fee. By your own pricing that only covers £340 of the fee.

        • harry says:

          I don’t see it that way, it’s not an either/ or situation. I was very happy to buy 130K Avios @ 1p via Iberia & this is no different. Plus £50 for unlimited lounge passes for a year must be a decent deal. The other benefits on top.

          • TimS says:

            It IS an either/or though as you can’t get two MR signup bonuses at the same time (for the same person).

            Also, you’ve already factored in the lounge pass value once so why add in a further £50 on top and double count?

            Plus the remaining fee to justify was £110, not £50.

            I’m not saying it can’t be justified as it can, especially if you get value out of the insurance and hotel status. Just that your justification methodology was flawed.

          • harry says:

            You’ve lost me but we can agree to differ. Straightforward valuation for me ie 40K points = £400; and £50 remaining to justify = lounge passes on the cheap.

          • harry says:

            I still don’t get it, Tim S. You can have Gold and Platinum at the same time, so what was your point here? You wouldn’t be applying for both sign-up bonuses at the same time, so your objection was invalid?

            Eg I have Gold. There’s nothing to stop me applying for & getting Platinum on this deal, which is easy to justify on the benefits. So pls explain again what I have missed.

          • Matt says:

            If you have Gold, you wont get the 40k bonus for Platinum. You need to close Gold and wait 6 months in order to get the bonus.

          • harry says:

            Oh right, I see it now. I think my wife is the main Goldie currently, I’m the supp, so won’t affect me applying, I guess.

            Doesn’t affect my valuation/ justification.

            40K points = £400; and £50 remaining to justify = lounge passes on the cheap.

          • TimS says:

            If you can get either the Gold or the Plat sign up bonus then it should affect your valuation.

            ie would you rather have 40k MR for £450 or £22k MR for free?
            The difference between the two is 22k MR and £450. Therefore valuing an MR point at 1p only covers £220 of the fee.

            Or, to put it another way, using your methodology:
            Would you rather have 22K MRs for free OR the same 22K MRs at 1p each, plus another 28K MRs at 1p each?

            No sensible person would buy the first 22K if the alternative was to have them free. As you could have 22K for free via gold, the extra MRs (via Plat) at 1p each valuation only covers £280 of the fee.

          • Alan says:

            But if you cancel after a month or two you’ll get the vast majority of the £450 back, therefore be paying a much smaller amount for the extra 18k MR (plus one year of hotel status with Accor/IHG/Carlson)…

          • Rob says:

            But if you cancelled after three months, you would have got the extra 18,000 Avios for £112 plus a year of SPG Gold, Carlson Gold and Accor Platinum, plus use of the Priority Pass cards for those three months. Which sounds good to me.

          • TimS says:

            I agree that 18,000 Avios plus hotel status for £112 sounds great. (It sounds less appealing if you plan on holding the card for the full year though!)

            The point was that harry should have factored in the 22,000 Avios that you get “free” with the Gold when valuing the 40,000 you get for £450 with the Plat.

            As I said much higher up on this thread, the Plat can be easily justified if you make use of the hotel status & insturances. If valuing it purely for the Avios & the lounge pass (as harry did), it is much harder to justify, especially compared to the Gold.

          • harry says:

            OK I stand corrected 🙂

  • Mr(s) Entitled says:

    I went a different route for 35,000 MR which saves me money on the fees unless.

    Amex Gold gets 20,000 MR but attracts no fee in the first year (i.e. while you work towards the target spend of £2k).

    Upgrade from Gold to Platinum gets 15,000 MR points with spend of £1k. Attracts fee but lower target means a quicker win.

    Cancel Platinum after spend.

    • Mr(s) Entitled says:

      Ignore “unless”. Left over from a part delete thought.

    • Toppcat says:

      Do we know if this Conde Nast offer will work in conjunction with an upgrade from the Gold charge card? Either by giving an additional 5k points vs the 35k route you have outlined above, or by some other mechanic?

    • Tony says:

      I am liking the cut of your jib sir.

  • Nick says:

    Probably a daft question but when you say household income I interpret that as combined household income ie wife and I. Is that correct or is it the income of the individual applying?

    Between us we both earn combined more than the £40k but individually we don’t don’t know if it’s worth applying. £450 is a big price to pay but for us we could use it to fly in Y instead of usual CE/CW a lot of times because we use the lounges with our toddler etc. Also we usually stop at the Sofitel at LHR usually in a luxury room for the lounge access. Hired a car in Ireland last month and went for the car insurance as i know what a scam the industry is.

    We’re not massive travellers by any means but I reckon flying Y instead of biz, giving lounge access and room upgrade if available at Sofitel, rejecting car hire insurance when we always hire a car, would probably cover the one off £450 fee for a year in one summer holiday trip. All these we would do anyway so not going out of our way. I have to admit I thought the fee was ridiculous at first but when I add the benefits in one or two trips even over a year I reckon we spend way more than that on CE tickets alone over Y.

    Now we have to pay for out toddler who is 2, we have to pay for his own seat so any row of 3 versus CE seating works for us.
    Just a thought…

    • Sandgrounder says:

      It really is household income, so you should be fine. If you travel a lot the card really can be worth the fee. If you have a partner, it is worth remembering that a PRG holder can earn 18k for recommending the Platinum.

  • Tilly71 says:

    40k avios for £450? Why not just sign up for gold for 20k avios with no fees and sign up partner for gold also for another 20k plus referral bonus avios through amex to both of your accounts which is 11k avios so 51k avios for free?

  • JC says:

    Hi Rob

    Are you able to use this offer to upgrade a Gold Amex?

  • Chewbacca says:

    I upgraded from Gold to Platinum a few months ago and got 15k avios after triggering bonus not sure if you’re always supposed to be able to get the bonus, don’t seem to have been charged platinum fee yet so am guessing the free fee on Gold translates into free fee on Platinum within the original 12 months of the Gold?

    • Rob says:

      This does happen sometimes but is not meant to happen, you should assume you do get charged the fee.

  • Chris. says:

    Off topic. But I’ve spent £10k on my free BA Amex in the first few months. Does anyone know if they’ll let me upgrade to the Plus Card and give me the companion voucher as I’ve spent £10k?

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