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Barclaycard closes its IHG credit cards – what should you do?

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Barclaycard sent out letters to holders of the IHG Rewards Club and IHG Rewards Club Premium visa cards yesterday informing them that the cards will be closed on 26th April.  Points will only be earned on transactions made by 20th April.

This is not a totally surprising move, as the contract to operate the IHG credit cards moved to Creation last year.

What IS surprising is the notice given – six weeks.

In particular, I am surprised that no compensation is being offered for anyone part-way through meeting their £10,000 of spending on the Premium card to get the free night voucher.

This is, to be honest, not acceptable.  Barclaycard would almost certainly have known, from the day that Creation took over the contract, that it would stop servicing the existing IHG cards on a specific date in the future.  It is wrong that cardholders should have been duped, for want of a better word, into putting spend onto the Premium card when Barclaycard knew they would never reach the £10,000 in time.

If you have the Premium card and will not be able to trigger your IHG free night voucher by 20th April, I would seriously consider making a formal complaint to Barclaycard.

The maths is simple:

Work out how much you will have spent in your card year by 20th April (eg £6,000)

Assume that you would have redeemed your free night voucher at a top InterContinental worth £250

Make a claim for the % of £250 you have reached – in my example, 6/10th of £250 which is £150

If Barclaycard does not settle, I would escalate your complaint to FOS.  I struggle to believe that they would not find in your favour.

Odd card transfers

Existing Barclaycard IHG cardholders are being moved to either the Platinum or Freedom Rewards cards.  This seems to be based on how keen Barclaycard is to keep you.

You will receive a pro-rata fee refund on your IHG card from 26th April until the end of your current card year.

I would be tempted to cancel at this point and look for a more suitable Visa or Mastercard instead.  The rest of this article looks at the IHG options.  My second article today looks at the non-IHG alternatives.

Should I take out the Creation IHG cards?

Fundamentally, yes.  If you were happy with the Barclaycard IHG cards then you will find that the Creation cards are virtually identical as I outline below.

Except …..

The free night voucher on the Creation Premium card is issued at the end of your membership year.  The free night voucher on the Barclaycard Premium card was issued as soon as you hit £10,000 of spending.

This is a bit of a pain for big spenders.  It also creates issues for anyone who does not want to pay another year of membership fee.  You are forced to wait until your voucher appears and then challenge Creation over whether you are due the bill for the new year or not.  (If you don’t use the card after your renewal date, you have a good case for getting the fee waived.)

One upside is that the free Creation card gives double points for foreign spend.  Under Barclaycard, only the Premium card had this benefit.

You will also get another sign-up bonus for applying, which can’t be bad.

How do the two Creation IHG cards compare?

If you have the existing Barclaycard cards you will find the details below very familiar.  I have written this mainly for the benefit of anyone thinking about getting an IHG credit card for the first time.

There are two different versions of the card.  It isn’t clear if you are allowed to have both as the benefits overlap – one gives Gold status whilst the other gives Platinum.

IHG Rewards Club credit card free

The free version – IHG Rewards Club Mastercard

The headline features of this card are:

No annual fee

10,000 IHG Rewards Club points for joining and spending £200 in the first three months – these are worth about £40 of free hotel room or transferable to 2,000 Avios points or other airline miles

Gold status in IHG Rewards Club for as long as you hold the card.  You won’t get much, frankly, for being Gold – usually a few hundred bonus points or a free drink.  However, if you do a few Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Crowne Plaza or Indigo stays then it is certainly better than nothing.

1 IHG Rewards Club point per £1 spent.  I value IHG points at 0.4p so this is a 0.4% return.

2 IHG Rewards Club points per £1 when you pay at IHG hotels.  This would be roughly a 0.8% return which is good.

2 IHG Rewards Club points per £1 when you use the card abroad.  This is a new benefit – only the premium card got double points abroad under Barclaycard.  However, as the card has a 2.99% FX fee you would be better off using a card without FX fees instead.

Representative APR is 18.9% variable

IHG Rewards Club credit card premium

The paid-for version – IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard

The headline features of this card are:

£99 annual fee

20,000 IHG Rewards Club points for joining and spending £200 in the first three months – these are worth about £80 of free hotel rooms or transferable to 4,000 Avios points or other airline miles

Platinum status in IHG Rewards Club for as long as you hold the card.  This is no longer the top level following the launch of the Spire tier.  However, if you do a few Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Crowne Plaza or Indigo stays then it is worth having.  It is occasionally enough for a Club room upgrade at a Crowne Plaza.

2 IHG Rewards Club point per £1 spent.  I value IHG points at 0.4p so this is a 0.8% return.

4 IHG Rewards Club points per £1 when you pay at IHG hotels.  This would be roughly a 1.6% return which is very good.

4 IHG Rewards Club points per £1 when you use the card abroad.  As the card has a 2.99% FX fee you would be better off using a card without FX fees instead.  I only value the points at 1.6%.  The only reason to use the card abroad would be to work towards your free night voucher or earn additional IHG status points.

A free night voucher for any IHG hotel for spending £10,000.  Use it at the InterContinental Paris, London, New York etc and you could be looking at £250 of value.

Representative APR is 41.5% variable including the £99 fee, based on a £1200 credit limit

With either card, there is a minimum income requirement of £10,000.

It is important to note that points from day-to-day spend count towards elite status.  The sign-up bonus does NOT count towards elite status.  A heavy spender could get Spire Elite status simply by putting £37,500 of spending through the Premium card.

According to the terms and conditions:  “If your IHG Rewards Club Credit Card account is closed within the first 6 months of opening, IHG reserves the right to deduct [sign-up] Rewards points from your IHG Rewards Club account.”  As you do NOT get a pro-rata fee refund for cancelling, this is unlikely to be an issue for anyone.

What do I think?

If you are ONLY looking to exploit the sign-up bonus then the £99 card is not the card for you.  You would be mad to pay £99 for a sign-up bonus worth £80 at best, especially as the points do not count towards status.  You should focus on the free card where the smaller 10,000 point sign-up bonus is worth £40.

For long term spending, however, the Premium card is very good.   I had the Barclaycard version of this card for a couple of years and I put a lot of money through it, including tax payments.

Imagine spending £10,000 on the card in a year.  You would get:

20,000 IHG Rewards Club points, worth £80 or so, assuming all spend is in the UK and not at IHG hotels

Those points count towards status, which could be important if you are pushing for Spire Elite

Your free night voucher, worth say £250 if used at an expensive InterContinental

You are getting £330 of benefits for an annual fee of £99.  That is a gain of £231 or 2.31% of a £10,000 spend, which is excellent.

You also need to add in whatever value you ascribe to Platinum status in IHG Rewards Club.

I have renewed my Spire Elite status for 2017 almost entirely down to credit card spending.  Reaching Spire Elite via 75,000 status points triggers a bonus of 25,000 IHG Rewards Club points.  You could argue that this is an additional bonus for anyone who spends £37,500 on the card.

If you are looking for a new Visa or Mastercard and you have the ability to put £10,000 of spending through the card to trigger the free night, I would recommend it.

I would NOT necessarily recommend it if you will not spend £10,000 to earn the free night.  For low spenders, the higher earnings rate does not justify the £99 fee compared to the free IHG Rewards Club Mastercard.  The only exception is if you stay enough at IHG hotels to benefit from Platinum status but you don’t stay enough to actually earn it from your stays.

My second article today looks at non-IHG alternative Visa and Mastercard products.


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Comments (96)

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

  • Nick Burch says:

    Anyone know if the 20th of April date is for transactions to hit your Barclaycard account/statement, or for you to have spent the money?

    (I’m likely to be traveling around the 20th, and overseas spend always seems to take a few extra days to show up)

  • Tony says:

    I can’t even reach Barclaycard’s website at present.

  • Peter says:

    I currently have the IHG Creation Premium card, I chose it as I had a SDLT bill to pay. This payment got the free night voucher plus the double points. I applied online and had to wait 10 days for approval, during this time I upped the credit limit with a phone call. I like their web app though not the payment screen as you have to input all your information everytime. My concern is the renewal date as I’d be loathed not to get the 20k points to offset the £99 fee, so likely to be give me the 20k or I cancel the card moment.

    • Ian says:

      I did a Creation application for my wife yesterday morning and it went through with immediate approval with a £10K credit limit for someone who is retired with low income!! From what I understand in speaking to Creation, they had little or no warning themselves that Barclaycard was about to mail-blast everyone who holds their IHG card, so Creation had really no time to gear up for a flood of applications.

      In looking through the FAQs on the IHG site related to Barclaycard ending the “association”, I have not actually be able to find a reference to Creation as being the new alternative – maybe I am just looking in the wrong place. I only new about Creation from HFP’s coverage of it a while back.

  • trickster says:

    This is frustrating for me. For some reason, despite not having held the Premium card since it was the old branded one, I’m ‘stuck’ on Platinum status with IHG. This has prevented me doing anything silly with this account. I’ll apply for a Creation card, and most likely the free one, which will probably trigger a downgrade to Gold. All in the same month I’m about to lose my Hilton Diamond status (matched from my IHG Plat!). Oh well, it can’t last forever….

  • Craig Vassie says:

    I have held a Creation IHG card since they started issuing them. Hassle free when compared to Barclaycard. Have just applied for Hilton Visa and been knocked back by Barclaycard because I hold one of the old IHG Visa cards. I don’t want a Platinum Barclaycard so have asked them to cancel the IHG Visa card immediately. The support team are thinking about whether I can now have the Hilton card without a six month gap……. absolutely useless bunch!

    • Simon Fisher says:

      I was allowed, indeed encouraged, to retain my IHG card (they even swapped it to a zero percent rate!) I was then allowed the Hilton card at the same time, so they are not consistent. I then closed the IHG card recently.

      I suspect they have reached a critical mass of churn away from the card so its no longer viable to keep it going.

  • Christian says:

    I did run through with creation the “free night but only after anniversary” point after the last scare story about having to pay two years of card fees to get one year of benefit.
    Absolutely not true they say.
    You WILL NOT have to pay for a second year of the card in order to receive your first year benefit. You still won’t get the free night until the end of your first year, but receiving this is not conditional on paying for a second year.
    This line creeps in each time because of Raffles flapping about the small print. If he’d asked them to clarify it (as I did) then this falsehood wouldn’t keep getting repeated.

    • John says:

      Customer service people aren’t the ones who program the backend systems.

      The only people who currently know whether you will get charged the fee again are the programmers, provided that they did proper testing.

      At this point in time, all you have is evidence that you can use to get the fee refunded should it turn out that you do get it charged again.

    • Alan says:

      Ron has always been clear, there’s not an issue here. If they charge the fee it’ll be refunded, if not a swift FOS complaint would resolve. Given how few options are about I’ll be hanging onto it after the first year anyway!

    • Rob says:

      Thing is … I’ve had lunch with the Creation team and I know what their intention is. I also wouldn’t trust their call centre an inch.

      If it isn’t in the contract then you can’t 100% rely on it.

      • Peter K says:

        I also don’t trust the call centre. They didn’t even know about the free night when I called and claimed it did not exist as a benefit of the card. They said they had the details of it in front of them but from everything else they said it sounded like they were making things up as they went along!

        • Peter K says:

          Details of the benefits of the premium card that it, which apparently did not include a free night.

      • Mr Dee says:

        Would be interested to know more on their intentions?

  • Joe says:

    To break even on the £99 card you’ll need to spend at £2475 by which time you’d have acquired as a minimum 24950 points (provided you’ve not spent at any IHG properties. Meanwhile on the free card following a £2475 spent you’d have acquired 12475 points worth £50. So for anyone wanting to get Platinum vs Gold then the cost would effectively be £50. I don’t know how people much people value the different status levels at IHG but it could be worth it for some, Rob could you shed some light on this?

    • Rob says:

      That’s only a first year calc though. If you can’t hit £10k I think the free card is better.

      • Simmo says:

        Any risk in me being downgraded from Spire by mistake if I take out one of the IHG cards?

        • will says:

          no because the Terms say so 😉

          “2. Platinum Elite Status: As soon as you are accepted for the IHG Rewards Premium Credit Card, you will receive automatic Platinum Elite status, and all the benefits that come with it, unless you are already a Spire Elite member.”

          • Alan says:

            Indeed – similarly the white card if you have the black. My IHG a/c now shows ‘Gold upgrade’ from my successful white card app, but my status is still Plat.

  • John says:

    If you are a keen uber user you might want to keep a barclaycard:

    “Make your rides go further until the end of 2017

    When you pay with your Barclaycard, that’s exactly what will happen.

    Every 11th ride using Barclaycard as your payment option is free up to £15 until the end of 2017*. Just think of it as a loyalty reward you’ll never forget to use. “

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