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HMRC to stop accepting credit cards on 13th January – no more cheap miles

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HMRC has announced that it will no longer accept personal credit cards for income tax, PAYE, VAT or any other payments after 13th January 2018.

You can see the announcement on this page of the HMRC website.

This is clearly a blow for those people, myself included, who have been using the incredibly low fees charged by HMRC for card payments to run up miles cheaply.

It will become illegal to surcharge credit card payments from January.  Companies will have to decide whether to stop accepting credit cards altogether or to absorb the costs.  With interchange fees now capped at 0.3% under EU law on personal cards, it should not make much of a difference to retailers.

That is the theory.  In reality, card processors appear to have got around the 0.3% cap on interchange fees by inventing new additional charges for retailers.

HMRC has decided to take the first option.

What is the current position?

Until 13th January, you can continue to pay any HMRC bills by Visa or Mastercard.  The fees are generally just 0.38% or 0.41% of the amount due.  I will be doing my best to prepay my January / February VAT, self-assessment and PAYE bills before then.

Here is the full list of fees:

VISA Personal Credit Card 0.415%
Mastercard Personal Credit Card 0.386%
Mastercard World Premium Credit Card 0.374%
Mastercard Signia Premium Credit Card 0.606%
Mastercard Elite Premium Credit Card 0.606%

VISA Business Credit Card 1.508%
VISA Corporate Credit Card 1.744%
VISA Purchasing Credit Card 1.755%
Mastercard Business Credit Card 1.973%
Mastercard Corporate Credit Card 2.248%
Mastercard Purchasing Credit Card 2.406%
Mastercard Fleet Credit Card 2.134%

Paying personal tax via self assessment?

To take full advantage of HMRC’s low fee, whilst it lasts, you need a Visa or Mastercard which has a decent earnings rate.  These are harder to find these days on free cards but some paid cards do have strong rates.

The Virgin Flying Club Black Visa, for example, earns 1 mile per £1.  Paying 0.4p per Virgin mile would be an excellent result.  The same goes for the Emirates Skywards Elite card.

The Lufthansa Miles & More Visa earns 0.75 miles per £1 – and the card is free.  There is even a 33% miles bonus for the first six months.  You would be paying around 0.5p per mile which would allow someone with large tax bills to get themselves into the excellent Lufthansa First Class product at low cost.  This is the card I used last January, carefully timed so that I was inside the six month period to get the 33% bonus.

The IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard earns 2 IHG Rewards Club points per £1, which I value at 0.8p – 1p.  The card has a £99 fee but this is offset by the sign-up bonus in year one.  You also receive a voucher for a free hotel night when you spend £10,000.

The Lloyds Avios Rewards Mastercard is the best Avios route if you don’t hold a legacy card.  However, at just 0.25 Avios per £1, you will be paying well over 1p per point.  It doesn’t make sense, frankly.

Alternatively, you could use the Tesco Clubcard Mastercard.  One problem with this card is that Tesco rounds down transactions to the nearest £8 which impacts your earnings rate.  On big payments like tax, however, it doesn’t make any difference.  You would earn 0.125 Clubcard points per £1 charged which gets you 0.3 Avios per £1.  This still doesn’t justify a 0.4% card fee, however, unless you have a definite plan to get at least 1.5p per Avios point of value.

If you have a substantial tax bill, and would use the other benefits of the card to justify the fee, the Tesco Premium Credit Card may be worthwhile.  You earn 0.6 Avios per £1 – assuming that the fee is 0.4%? – but there is a £150 annual fee to swallow and there is no sign-up bonus at the moment.

If you are prepared to jump through the hoops required to get one, the HSBC Premier credit card at 0.5 Avios points per £1 is interesting – you would by paying around 0.8p per Avios.  The HSBC Premier World Elite credit card is even better at 1 Avios point per £1, although the fee on that is 0.606%, so 0.6p per Avios.

Paying VAT or employee NI / PAYE?

The maths is different here because the credit card fee is a deductible business expense in the same way that the fee for writing a cheque would be if you paid that way.

Depending on your tax rate – which will depend on whether you operate as a sole trader (and in that case what your personal tax rate is) or a limited company – you could be paying a net card fee as low as 0.2% – 0.25%.  This makes the deals I outline above look more attractive.

You can even make a profit on your tax.  Get a Mastercard or Visa paying the equivalent of 0.5% cashback (ASDA, Amazon or John Lewis, for example) and you are in profit after paying the fee.

Corporate credit cards WILL continue to be accepted after 13th January.  However, with fees of 1.5% or more, you are unlikely to get any value from this, even after deducting the card fee for tax purposes.

January 2018 is going to be your last opportunity to take advantage of these cheap miles from HMRC.  If you are expecting to have a tax bill to pay, you may want to start making plans.

PS.  You cannot pay HMRC bills with an American Express card.  The only option is to use Billhopwhich we wrote about here – as an intermediary, paying their 2.95% fee.  This may make sense if you are a little short of the spending required to trigger a sign-up bonus.


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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:

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Comments (157)

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

  • Kevin says:

    Just tried Curve, it thinks it’s a “premium” credit card wanting it to charge 1.76%. Annoying. This is bad news.

    • Rob says:

      Curve is a Business MasterCard, which is how they make money. 1.6% fee charged, 0.3% interchange fee when recharging your personal card.

  • Robert says:

    Is this banning of surcharges going to stop British Airways charging up to £20 per person for me to use our BA Branded Amex?

  • Polly says:

    Billhop good if you need to spend a small amount to reach a target spend. We used it last month to trigger a 241 rather than drag it into another month spend, and it was less than the monthly pro rata fee. It’s a balancing act. Then lay the remainder of bill with a low avios earning card. Shame really, another avenue gone for higher payers. Always get a kick out of earning avios for for bills.
    Surprised HMRC don’t issue a Pay Point card, to make it easier to collect tax payments. Now there’s a thought….

  • John D says:

    Oh well . It was good while it lasted. Found out about this on HfP ( thanks yet again Rob) and used it just the is July to pay a Corporation Tax bill of £40,000 which netted me over 47,000 Avios/IHG points and Marriott points spread over 6 different transactions at a net ( tax deductible ) cost of £154. Might manage one more VAT bill before it finishes!

  • guesswho2000 says:

    Presumably Curve will continue to work, since it’s a corporate card, which can then be linked to the others? Albeit at the higher fee.

    • Rob says:

      Yes it will, but this is only marginally beneficial eg if you are desperate to hit a spend target by a certain date.

  • ambient says:

    In addition to the miles/points, the facility to move a tax deadline out by up to six weeks is the feature I shall miss most.

  • Simon says:

    I may be stupid but a corporate amex would still work, no?

  • Optimus Prime says:

    Well I was using our IHG Black credit cards to pay for my business Corporation Tax and VAT so we could bag 2 free night certificates each year… I guess it’s time to make the last payment and cancel them.

    Next even worse news will be Amex forbidding churning in UK.

    • Polly says:

      Perish the thought! People still put big spends through Amex, so they would lose that business if they stopped churning here. In the US where they have stopped it, there was sometimes a bonus of 100,000k MRs. Or avios. That was completely unsustainable.

      • William Avery says:

        Tell me that is just rumour?

        • Rob says:

          No, we’ve seen 100,000 miles bonuses on US credit cards a few times. Massive minimum spend ($20,000 or so) to get the full lot though in most cases.

        • Will says:

          I mean a rumour on the churn stop here?

          • Rob says:

            It was stopped entirely in the US a couple of years ago. There were reasons why it carried on here but at some point Amex may look again at how they operate.

          • Alan says:

            Nope, it’s mainly when people read US blogs and assume it’s talking about the UK.

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

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