Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

3V cards no longer accepted by National Savings, utilities, council tax and HMRC

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Since I first wrote about them in June, a minor cottage industry has sprung up around the purchase of 3V Virtual Visa cards.

Basically, you can purchase these Visa gift cards in Tesco stores for face value.  The main reason for doing this is to take advantage of the ‘150 Clubcard points for spending £50 on gift cards’ promotion.  It can also help you meet the sign-up spending target on a new credit card.

Once you have your 3V card, you can use it for purchasing goods ONLINE.  If you have a few pounds left on any particular card, you can buy an amazon.co.uk gift certificate for the exact remaining balance. 

You can add these onto your Amazon account without having to make a purchase, so the money is there next time you buy something.

The most common ways of using 3V cards were, however, NOT for purchasing ‘things’ online.  They were used for paying off bills, eg:

  • Council Tax
  • Gas and electricity
  • Inland Revenue
  • Mobile phones
  • Sky / Virgin bills

The most impressive use was to pay them into a National Savings Direct Saver bank accountThis was basically free Avios points.  You would go to a Tesco and spend £50 on 3V cards on your (say) BA Premium Plus Amex.  You would earn 75 Avios for the credit card spend and 360 Avios in Clubcard points.  Pay the money into National Savings and withdraw it.

As of yesterday, though, the game has changed.

3V cards are being declined for internet transactions where you are not buying ‘things’.  Council tax, Inland Revenue, National Savings, gas and electricity companies, Virgin – all dead.  Only Sky still appears to be working.

For a few people who had bought a large quantity and had yet to pay them into their account, they have a problem – albeit not a disastrous one.  They still seem to be accepted at High Street Vouchers, and Amazon still lets you buy gift certificates with them to add to your Amazon account.  They also, apparently, work for buying gift cards via TopCashBack’s TopGiftCard site.

If you are sitting on a pile of cards, you can also withdraw the balance to your bank account.  The smartest thing to do is pay £1.75 per card to merge the balance onto another card (max £1,000 balance) and then just pay one £3.50 fee to transfer the entire sum to your bank.

It is possible that this is some sort of IT bug.  However, as transactions to Amazon are still going through OK, it does seem that 3V has decided to strictly enforce the ability to only use the cards for ‘things’.

All ‘miles and points’ bandwagons like this come to an end eventually.  Something equally lucrative will be along again soon.  Luckily, because you can cash out to your bank account – albeit for a fee – no-one is going to lose a lot of money on this.

Interestingly, the last straw for 3V may have been people who were buying 3V cards in Morrisons – where they were far more easily available – instead of Tesco.  Morrisons was giving out vouchers for 1p off a litre of fuel for every £10 spent on gift cards.  Assuming that your car takes 70 litres of petrol, you were getting 70p off a full tank for every £10 of 3V cards you bought.  Add in the value of the credit card points and it was pretty lucrative.

3V cards are still worth buying in small quantities, if only to fund your Amazon purchases.  It is worth noting that the ‘other’ Virtual Visa cards sold in Tesco (the ones with the £3.95 fee per £50 card) ARE still being accepted by National Savings, HMRC etc so this is definitely a move instigated by 3V.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous 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

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Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

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There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

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British Airways American Express

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You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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The Platinum Card from American Express

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Run your own business?

We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios.

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You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus.

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

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There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

American Express Business Platinum

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American Express Business Gold

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Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (172)

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

  • What's the Point says:

    Our Council site is still accepting 3V cards for council tax, just paid some in.
    Hopefully it still allows payments when we get next year’s council tax bill!

    • Ian says:

      But how do you pay this if you have several £25 cards? Does the system accepts several £25 cards or you have to merge the cards to reach the amount you want to pay?

      • TimS says:

        All you need to do is make £25 payments with each separate card.

        That’s whay I do with my council tax & also my Sky account.

      • Jude says:

        I just made individual payments for £25 each. Quite time consuming but they were accepted ok.

  • edp says:

    A shame but all good things come to an end,
    Was left with 10 cards left so paid them all into my Eon account, wonder how long that will last?!

    • TimS says:

      Funnily enough I paid a load in to Eon a couple of weeks ago & then last week I got a letter from them saying they were reducing my DD down (as my account was now significantly in credit) and would refund the remaining overpayment to my bank account!

      Therefore Eon essentially cashed out my 3v cards to my current account at no cost to myself!
      I may have been lucky with the timing though as my 6 month DD review was just about due.

  • What's the Point says:

    Similar thing happened to me with EDF – they paid £330 back into my bank account due to overpayments via 3V cards.
    I think by law now, they can’t just sit on a credit balance, all part of the energy company witch hunt that is going on.

  • Roger says:

    For those with access to the CSMA website – you need to be a member of the Civil Service Motoring Association – there’s a way of using 3V credits by buying shopping cards.

    I have just bought 2x £25 Sainsburys card credits with a 3% discount, so costing £24.25 each with no c/c surcharge or postage fee for an electronic transfer to an existing shopping card. I don’t shop much at Sainsburys, but will take advantage of this.

    Clearly, this isn’t available to everybody but may prove interesting for some HfPers.

    Oh, yes. I can now buy 2x £0.25 Amazon vouchers …

    • Stevo says:

      Big Thumbs Up to Roger.
      Thank you

    • andy l says:

      Roger, i am loving the ingenuity employed here (even though i am not eligible i admire the approach!)

    • Nick says:

      Some employers offer discounted gift cards. My previous two employers did. Typically you get 5% off at Sainsburys, and until recently that used to include petrol although it is just for use in store now. You could also buy discounted Tesco vouchers. I think the discount was about 4%, so a £25 gift card would cost you £24. Buy two of these with two 3v cards, and use the two tesco cards to buy the £50 visa gift card with the £3.95 fee. Transfer the remaining pound on each 3v card in to a Amazon voucher. This does have a £1.95 cost, but it should mean you get 300 clubcard points (150 for the 3v cards, 150 for the Visa cards), plus you get to buy the 3v cards on credit card. With a amex PR card and using the voucher for the bonus cc points each time, that works out at, I think, 500 clubcard points and when combined with the Amex PR points means 1350 avios. That is 0.14p per Avios, which is still a decent return.

      Obviously this requires tesco allowing you to buy a Visa gift card with a tesco gift card, and involves the use of three gift cards and a lot of hassle. You will also need to do it in bulk as typically you need to spend over £100 to get free delivery on the cards. It also requires that 3v allow their cards to be used for this…. but if you get over all of those hurdles and you are an employee with access to one of these discount gift card schemes, it might be a decent way to monetise any 3v cards that people are holding. Not sure I’d bother using it going forward though, it is a lot of hassle!

  • Roger says:

    I had another look at CSMA discounts. They have many including Asda 3%, Morrisons 3%, Harrods 4%, Debenhams 7%, Toys R Us 7%, Starbucks 8%, Strada 11%, Laithwaite’s 9%, Love2Shop 4%, House of Fraser 7% etc. I can live with some of these if it means my 3V liability reduces.

    Some are reloadable plastic cards, some are paper vouchers. IMO the best are reloadable cards – just the one card to top up, better if you already have one so no P&P.

    Other shopping sites are available. Can anybody recommend one which is available to more of us, preferably without a monthly fee?

  • Nick says:

    The 100th comment. I thought this would be a busy blog today Rob.

  • Brian says:

    As already mentioned, a new list of where these cards CAN be used might be helpful. The ‘old’ list seems to contain a few options that no longer apply. For instance, I don’t seem to be able to pay off either my IHG Rewards credit card or my Hilton one with 3V – both require a postcode, and since the 3V cards aren’t linked to a postcode, that seems to scupper the process.

    • YL says:

      Postcode will be the address you registered your 3V card with.
      I might be wrong, but I think it no longer works on paying IHG & Hilton card.

      • Simon says:

        YL is correct these no longer work with the IHG & Hilton cards, I used them in the summer to pay my bill and they worked fine but tried a few months ago and the transactions were declined.

  • kipto says:

    I have a question with the 3v visa cards now my national savings loophole has ended.it is for anyone who is with eon for electricity/gas. I pay by direct debit. will they allow me to ring up each month prior to my direct debit going out and use multiple 3v vouchers to pay my bill as sky do ?

    • TimS says:

      E-on payments from 3v are in addition to your existing DD. They don’t reduce the monthly DD. However it appears that when your credit balance gets too high they will refund your overpayment to your bank account that they take the DD from.

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