Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

What should you do now Travelex is closing Supercard?

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Travelex announced yesterday that it is closing Supercard, its 0% foreign exchange fee payment card.  Your card will cease to work on 24th July.

Supercard was an innovative payment product which has, I think, been ruined by poor implementation – primarily the high failure rate of transactions when you tried to use the card.

In theory, it was great.  You link any other Visa or Mastercard to your Supercard.  When abroad, you swipe your Supercard and Travelex automatically converts your purchase into £ without any FX fees.  It then recharges the transaction to your underlying Visa or Mastercard in £.

This meant that you could earn rewards on your underlying Visa or Mastercard without paying the 3% foreign exchange fees which are attached to almost all loyalty Visa and Mastercard products.

No more.

If you have a Travelex Supercard – or if you don’t have one but are looking for ways of not paying a 3% foreign exchange fee on all your holiday spending this Summer – you have three options today:

Switch to a credit or debit card with no foreign exchange fees

Using a credit card with a 3% foreign exchange fee but which earns rewards

Switch to the Curve Card, which comes with £5 for trying it out and has the same (better, actually) functionality as Supercard but with a 1% FX fee

I will look at each of these options in turn.

Option 1:  Switching to a credit or debit card with no foreign exchange fees

Historically, it was almost always a bad idea to use a mileage card for overseas spend. This is because all miles and points cards – and indeed almost all other UK credit and debit cards – charged a foreign exchange fee of 2.99% which is itemised on your statement.  You can clearly see how much money is going out on avoidable FX fees.

In late 2013, Lloyds Bank broke the mould by introducing a credit card – the Lloyds Avios Rewards card – which gave you miles AND no foreign exchange fees.  It was the first UK credit card to do this.

No-one else has yet followed suit and, now that interchange rates are capped, I doubt anyone will.  After all, FX fees are one of the few ways that a card issuer can now make a profit from anyone who pays their bill promptly.

The Lloyds card has a £24 fee, albeit (as my review explains) you can receive 4,500 Avios for signing up if you are referred.

There are also a number of FREE credit cards in the UK which do not charge any fees on overseas purchases.  These include The Post Office Money Platinum Credit and Halifax Clarity.  Clarity also offers totally free overseas ATM transactions.

How does the Lloyd Avios Rewards card compare?

The Lloyds Avios Rewards card comes with a £24 annual fee, which makes it worse than the Post Office and Halifax Clarity cards. There is also a 3% fee on cash withdrawals abroad.

You will, however, receive 1.25 Avios per £1 spent abroad on the Amex card and 0.25 Avios per £1 spent abroad on the Mastercard. The Post Office and Halifax Clarity cards have no rewards programme.

For the first six months you receive double points, so 2.5 Avios per £1 on the Amex.

If you value an Avios at 1p, and assuming your foreign spend is 75% Amex (your hotel will take it) and 25% Mastercard, then the Lloyds Avios Rewards card is a better deal than the Post Office or Halifax cards if you spend over £2,400 abroad each year.

(Why? Because your £24 annual fee will be offset by the 2,400+ Avios earned back)

Option 2:  Using a credit card with a 3% foreign exchange fee but which earns rewards

With the Travelex Supercard closing, you may not want to go to the trouble of applying for another credit card just for overseas transactions.  There are some miles and points cards which are a decent choice for using abroad if you don’t want to go to the trouble of applying for a ‘no FX fees’ card.

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold card (click for review) gives you double points when you use it abroad. This means you get 2 Membership Rewards points per £1, which converts to 2 Avios per £1. This does not fully offset the 2.99% FX fee, but comes close.

The IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard (click for review) gives you 4 IHG Rewards Club points per £1 spent abroad. These can be redeemed for free nights at Crowne Plaza, Holiday Inn, InterContinental etc hotels. I value these at roughly 0.5p per point, so 2p of value per £1.  Representative APR 41.5% variable including the £99 fee based on a notional £1200 credit limit.

If you are a high earner and qualify for HSBC Premier, their cards are also worth a look.  The free HSBC Premier Mastercard (click for review) earns double points abroad, so 1 Avios or other airline mile.  Representative APR 18.9% variable.  The World Elite version of this card, with a £195 fee, also earns double points abroad and is worth 2 Avios per £1.

Spending abroad also helps you to achieve spending targets.

The IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard mentioned above also gives you a free night voucher when you spend £10,000 per year.

The Virgin Atlantic cards offer upgrade vouchers when you hit specific spend thresholds.

And of course the BA Premium Plus Amex gives you a 2-4-1 voucher for Avios redemptions valid in any class when you spend £10,000 per year.  Representative APR 76.0% variable including the £195 fee based on a notional £1,200 credit limit.

You may find it worthwhile paying the FX fee on your credit card in order to achieve some of your spending target.  After all, for most of us our holiday is one of the main expenditures of the year.

Option 3:  Switch to the Curve Card, which has the same functionality as Supercard but with a 1% FX fee

The Curve Card is a similar product to Supercard, although it can be used in the UK and abroad.  Foreign currency transactions come with a 1% fee, which is cheaper than using your usual Visa or Mastercard.

The idea behind Curve is that you can link all of your Visa and Mastercard 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.

The basic version of Curve is free – in fact, Curve will pay you £5 for trying it out if you use my referral code below.  It is now available for Android users as well as iPhone and works with any other Visa or Mastercard you hold.

Curve is currently targeting the small business market.  You will be asked to confirm that you run your own business, are a partner in a partnership or have some form of self employed income on top of your regular job during the application process.  If you do not feel able to make this declaration, you should wait for the consumer version of the card which will be launched later this year.

If you use Curve in the UK, you can also benefit from Curve Rewards.  This pays you cashback, usually 1.5%, at various retailers including Argos, Marks & Spencer, B&Q, Boots, Debenhams, House of Fraser etc.  You earn the cashback immediately – it is literally added to your Curve account as soon as your card is swiped in a participating store.  (I use this in M&S on a regular basis and can confirm it works fine.)

It is important to remember that you earn Curve Rewards on top of any rewards you earn from your underlying Visa or Mastercard.  When I make a purchase in M&S, I get my 1.5% cashback from Curve plus 2 IHG Rewards Club cards per £1 from the IHG MasterCard which is linked to my Curve card.

Curve has one other perk. You can withdraw £200 per month from a cash machine, fee free, and it will be treated as a purchase – earning points on your linked credit card.

How to apply

Curve is a bit fiddly to explain, so the easiest thing to do is to sign up and try it for yoruself.  The basic Curve Card is free and you are paid £5 for trying it out.

The Android version of Curve can be downloaded here.  The iOS version for Apple devices is here.  Enter referral code OQB4J into the app on the first page when prompted. This is my refer-a-friend code and is required in order to trigger the £5 free credit. 

This code will get you a £5 credit added to your Curve Rewards account.  You can choose between the Blue card (no fee) or the Black card (£50 fee, higher rewards as outlined above).  To be honest, I don’t recommend you take the latter option unless you are certain that you spend enough money at partipating Curve Rewards merchants to justify the additional cashback you will receive.

The £0 fee may not show during the application process but will appear on your confirmation email.

Conclusion

It is shame that Travelex Supercard failed.  Those of us who were involved in the beta trial, when it was operated by a different payment processor, will confirm that the card worked better then.

I don’t think that I ever got a payment of over £100 to work on the relaunched version.  Curve may have a 1% fee but it is more reliable – I got a £1,500 hotel bill in Hong Kong to go through first time over Easter.  That said, don’t ever leave home with just the Curve Card in your pocket, irrespective of what their marketing says.

For many people, switching to the £24 Lloyds Avios Rewards credit card may be the best option.  This is especially true if you know that you will be using it abroad in places which take Amex, as the earning rate on the Lloyds Mastercard is weak at 0.25 Avios per £1.

If the Lloyds Avios Rewards card doesn’t work for you – and you may not want to pay the £24 annual fee – then it is worth giving Curve a try, linking it to a high earning rewards Visa or Mastercard.

In the worse case scenario, go for a fee-free Post Office or Halifax Clarity credit card.  It means adding another card to your wallet but you will still save 3% on every purchase compared to your usual loyalty credit card when travelling.


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 (192)

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

  • Ross says:

    Revolut or Mondo are far superior.

    Wish you would stop peddling Curve.

    • Roger 1 says:

      I wish people would stop promoting Revolut and Mondo as alternatives to Curve.

      They are not.

      • Rob says:

        Indeed. See my comment above. They are just dolled up versions of the prepaid card my 13-year old neice gets her pocket money on.

        • Klaus-Peter Dudas says:

          That’s true at the moment though Monzo is extremely easy to top up at the moment via Apple Pay (takes seconds, great when you have free roaming) and any left over money at the end of my trip (if I am not going abroad again for over a couple of weeks) I use to pay off part of my AmEx… Also Monzo have their full banking license since April, so they should be launching their full current account some time soon. https://monzo.com/blog/2017/04/05/banking-licence/

        • Alan says:

          LOL you really don’t like them, do you Rob? 🙂

          Although I wouldn’t use them for spending, for cash withdrawals abroad at no cost they’re a very simple solution (no Halifax Clarity faff re paying back same day).

        • Singing Dwarf says:

          Curve is not an alternative to Supercard. Supercard was for consumers, Curve is for business.

  • Rob says:

    I have a history of using Monzo, currently using the Lloyds Avios Rewards Card which I found to be excellent over the past few weeks in the USA.

    A couple of my colleagues use Revolut and they say excellent things about it.

  • Roger 1 says:

    As a current Lloyds Duo Avios (formerly Air Miles) cards, I presume I’m still barred from getting the £24-fee card, even if I cancel?

    I must say, I don’t use them but keep them for possible ShopSmall promos.

    • Rob says:

      They will give you the card now (they chilled a bit) but you can’t get the refer a friend bonus.

  • BP says:

    Supercard always worked well for me. I even bought an £8500 diamond on it (split over 2 transactions/days) earning 34,000 IHG points as Supercard was always treated by Barclays as a foreign transaction. Pretty good points earning for the most expensive component of an engagement ring 🙂

    Anyone else earned more rewards from buying an engagement ring?

    • Rob says:

      When my wife wanted a pricey watch, I got it ordered to Watches of Switzerland at Heathrow and picked it up. Because I was flying intra-Europe they were forced to sell it to me at the VAT free price despite having to pay VAT on the sale.

      I got 20,000 Heathrow Rewards points due to a promo so about 25,000 in total ( I was on double base points too). I sat on them until there was a 100% Avios conversion bonus so I got 50,000 Avios out of them.

      That was effectively 20% of the price of the watch, plus the 15% or so discount I got in the first place because they deducted an amount equivalent to the VAT.

    • Axel says:

      Depends what value you put on having a wife. Mine’s worth more than 10000 Avios though I’m tempted at times to trade her in for a new one.

    • the_real_a says:

      If only wives and girlfriends offered airmiles for being with them…

  • Roger 1 says:

    I have a Curve card that I haven’t used yet, mainly because of the AmEx withdrawal and Supercard was cheaper.

    I’m happy to use the Curve card now. I logged in. At least I tried and needed them to send an e-mail link to get into the account, even though the card was already set up with my IHG MC. OK, did that, then tried to login again next day and still needed them to send me an e-mail link. Do I need to do this every time?

    BTW, I was able to click to receive an e-mail every time I use the card. I don’t remember this from before.

    • BigDave says:

      depends – on android once logged you dont need the email link unless you log out of the app

      • Roger 1 says:

        Ah, thank you.

        It’s Android on my mobile (most likely use) and iOS on my iPad (backup).

        • jfduncan says:

          I also have Curve on Android, and an install of the app on an iPad (which stays at home). I had a decline earlier this week (not Curve, but HHonors barclaycard did the declining based on some previous activity on my HHonors card), anyhow – I was told that Curve shouldn’t be used on 2 devices as it may cause “synchronicity issues / the wrong card being charged”..

          Might be best to remove it from your IOS device…

  • BigDave says:

    OT iberia are doing another of their ‘guess where to fly to to see this church’ sort of raffle thing on facebook for 120,000 points
    (its Asturias this time)

  • Neil says:

    Question on the Lloyds card (which I’m considering getting to replace my foreign FX fee-free Amex that earns no rewards) – the website mentions double Avios for the 1st 6 months. Does this apply on foreign transactions as well?

    • mark2 says:

      Yes it does.
      If you have a Lloyds current account you can use the Avios card for their own cash back and occasionally double-dip with Lloyds/Amex cash back on same transaction. My wife and I each get back far more than the £24 fee in this way leaving the avoided FX fees as profit, plus the Avios.
      Off to USA/Canada next week where I shall rarely have to use Mastercard.
      I could never see any real benefit from Supercard/Curve for the leisure traveller.

      • Polly says:

        Mark2, are these the Lloyds cash back offers you click on when you log into your Lloyds account? We have not noticed any cash back coming into the account, on using our avios Amex card. Just interested that’s all. Did you manage to get F to SEA or Vancouver using a 241 then? Know you go often…

        • mark2 says:

          Yes ‘Everyday Offers’; you have to keep logging in to see new offers (like Amex). All purchases are made using Avios Amex card and money turns up no problem. If yours has not you may be entitled to their generous compensation! Does the card show on your online account?
          We are flying to Seattle on 1st June and back from Vancouver on 19th with cruise to Alaska in middle. Sadly one-off (but I talk about it a lot). Am considering DUB to BOS with Aer Lingus for next autumn and travel through New England up into Canada in Fall. Only 100,000 Avios + £211 each off peak in J and can start from BHX, go through immigration in DUB etc.

      • Neil says:

        Thanks Mark, might consider this then.

  • Ammar says:

    Anyone managed to link hsbc premier mc with curve and withdraw 200 from atm?

    • Rob says:

      Absolutely no reason why it shouldn’t work.

      • Sh83 says:

        This is my sole card linked to Curve. Works a treat every month.

        • Kevin says:

          Works for me too.
          And is useful as premier MasterCard isn’t contactless.

    • Alex W says:

      I emailed Curve and my daily withdrawal limit is now £500 🙂

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

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