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Curve Card comes to Android – get paid £10 for trying it out

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(EDIT:  Curve has changed a lot since this article was published.  Please do not rely on the information here.  Instead, please click here to read our detailed 2020 Curve review, which includes a link for a free £10 credit when you sign up.)

Six months after its launch as a purely Apple app, the Curve Card has finally launched for Android.

The £35 application fee is still being waived for new applicants. Even better, your free card will be credited with £10 after you’ve made your first purchase . You will find my link further down this article.

The Curve Card got a lot of coverage on Head for Points this year, for better and worse. It launched as an intermediary payment card which, among other things, allowed you to recharge Visa and MasterCard payments to an American Express card.

This was clearly very attractive to those of us in the miles and points community. Unfortunately, after a couple of months, American Express pulled the plug. This means that Curve has had to double-down on offering added value to Visa and MasterCard cardholders.

What can you do with a Curve Card?

Carry all of your Visa and MasterCard products on one card

Curve is ploughing on and has been adding extra features, moving it closer to its original goal as a payment aggregator. The idea is that you can link all of your Visa and MasterCard products (and, long term, hopefully Amex again) cards to Curve, allowing you to just carry one card with you. Using the Curve app, you can switch the card which is recharged with your purchase. For businesses, there are additional features such as the ability to scan a receipt with your phone and have it stored alongside the transaction data.

Save money when spending abroad

Curve can also be used abroad. It charges the MasterCard rate + 1%, compared with the 3% charged by most credit and debit cards, so you will save 2% AND still receive miles or points from the Visa or MasterCard linked to your Curve Card.

Curve lets you reduce your fees on foreign spend without having to apply for a specialist ‘no FX fees’ credit card. This will put less strain on your credit record if you are thinking of applying for other credit cards.

Earn free miles and points every month

There is another benefit. You can withdraw £200 of cash from an ATM each month and charge it to a Visa or MasterCard credit card as a purchase. If you have the IHG Rewards Club Premium MasterCard, for example, you would earn 400 IHG Rewards Club points per month by doing this, totally free. Additional ATM withdrawals recharged to a credit card will incur a fee. Withdrawals recharged to a debit card are free.

Add contactless functionality to any non-contactless card

One other potential benefit – which I find handy – is that Curve is contactless. If your main Visa or MasterCard product is not contactless, linking it to a Curve card is an easy way to gain contactless functionality.

Curve prepaid MasterCard

Earn £5 when you refer a friend for their own free card

Curve Rewards is now partially live. An additional card is added to your Curve wallet which shows your Curve Rewards balance. This comprises your £5 sign-up bonus (if you were referred by an existing member) and any £5 credits you earned for referring other cardholders.

You will earn £5 for any friends you refer to Curve, even though the card is currently free for a limited period. Your friends will also get £5 credit for signing up. If you have a large social media following you could do quite nicely by promoting Curve at the moment. The £5 reward is triggered with your first purchase using Curve.

Spending your Curve Rewards points is easy. You select the Curve Rewards in the app before you make a purchase and, as long as the purchase is for less than your rewards balance, it will be deducted from your credit. You cannot make ATM withdrawals of your Curve Rewards balance.

Section 75

I should mention Section 75 coverage at this point. Because you are not paying directly with your credit card, you are not not covered under Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act if the retailer goes bust before you have received your goods.

The same situation applies if you use PayPal, Supercard, Revolut or any other payment intermediary. For large transactions, such as a flight or holiday, it makes more sense to pay directly.

Get £10 free if you apply for a free Curve card

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

Conclusion

With £2m of new funding just raised Curve is looking to accelerate its roll-out. You have absolutely nothing to lose by giving them a try under this offer.

You will get your £10 sign-up bonus, you can withdraw £200 per month from an ATM and recharge it to a miles or reward points earning credit card and, if it turns out that you spend a lot at the retailers included in Curve Rewards then you will start getting decent amounts of cash rewards back.

Comments (96)

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

  • vol says:

    Since Amex/Curve fell out, my use of the card has been limited. My local authority charges it like a credit card and so at the moment it is not so beneficial to me. I have kept it because it’s just a hassle apply for it all again if Amex/Curve do kiss and make up and I did get my £35.00 worth when they were buddies.

  • Carl says:

    I just got my card (used the referral code). I was wondering whether the £200 per month is based on calendar months or on a rolling month basis from the point of receiving the card.

    • Rob says:

      They are not actually imposing it as far as I can tell ….

      • Neil says:

        So you can withdraw more than £200 per calendar month? Have you been charged?

        • Alan says:

          Some reports seemed to imply it depended on the ratio between normal spending and ATM withdrawals rather than absolute limits??

  • Dave says:

    I’m confused about the “changing the currency of your card” option. If I link my Curve to my Lloyds Avios Mastercard (no FX fees), and then set my Lloyds currency as EUR in the Curve app, will Curve not charge me an FX fee if I use an ATM for cash withdrawals in Europe? Or do they charge you anyway for anything outside your home location?

    • Dave says:

      The T&Cs are ambiguous:

      Fee for ATM withdrawal in the currency of the Funding Source: Free (subject to Curve Fair Use Policy)

      Fee for ATM withdrawal in a currency other than the currency selected for the Curve Card or the Payment Instrument: £2

      So if the currency of my withdrawal (EUR) is the same as my Lloyds card (EUR), it’s free. But what’s the “currency selected for the Curve Card”? Is that always GBP because I’m based in the UK?

  • martyusha says:

    Has anyone else been emailed by Curve recently regarding ‘non-business’ spend? I was asked a little over a week ago to provide evidence of a registered business, and -not having got around to it over the holiday period- my card was blocked today. Anybody else had a similar experience?

  • Tony says:

    Correct me if you Im wrong…
    Link it to your Tesco credit card and withdraw cash as multiples of £8 (£40, 80, £120, £160, £200 etc) and you will never miss out on the Tesco Club card points. If you spend £7.99 with Tesco card (outside Tesco) you get nothing, you spend £15.99 you get only one clubcard point. Using cash from ATM will guarantee maximum benefit.

    • Genghis says:

      Correct. But withdraw £200 linked to normal Tesco credit card and you get 25 clubcard points = 60 avios = 60p. Linked to the premium version you get 50 clubcard points = 120 avios = £1.20.
      But withdraw £200 linked to something like IHG premium and you get 400 IHGs = £2.

    • Rob says:

      Correct

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

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