Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Hit your credit card sign-up bonus by buying ‘no fee’ American Express gift cards

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I have written before about the range of American Express gift cards. They were not, to be honest, fantastic value.

However, they are now looking VERY INTERESTING if you have a spending target to hit on a new credit card. And if you don’t have a card with a spend target to hit, this might be a good time to apply for one!

Here is the official site for Amex gift cards.

American Express is currently offering gift cards with NO purchase fee and NO delivery fee.   You can buy up to five cards per order which means a maximum of (5 x £100 gift cards) £500 you can spend at a time.

You need to use promotional code AMEX4 to get the purchase fee and postage deducted.  The offer runs until 31st December.

Without the fees, you are effectively buying Amex gift cards for face value.  The standard fee plus postage on a £100 gift card is £3.95 so this is a substantial saving.

Amex accepts Amex plus Visa and MasterCard for the purchase of these cards.  The payment almost certainly goes through as a ‘purchase’ rather than a cash advance, because Amex would need to disclose it otherwise.

The most obvious use of this promotion is to bring forward spending in order to hit a time-limited sign-up bonus on a new credit card. If you would struggle to spend £2,000 in three months to get the 20,000 point (=20,000 Avios) Amex Gold bonus, for example, you can simply buy the difference in Amex gift cards.

The cards can be used for normal spending at almost everywhere that accepts Amex cards. If you end up with a small residual balance of a few pounds, the easy way to cash it out is to buy an Amazon gift certificate (via the Head for Points affiliate link if you like!) and add it to your Amazon account as a credit against future purchases.  Amex will also refund the balance of a gift card by cheque or bank transfer if you make a formal request.

Note that Amex gift cards can only be used in the UK.  They can be used for physical and online transactions but you cannot use them to obtain cash from an ATM.  You need to use up the balance on the card within 12 months otherwise a £1.50 monthly fee will kick in.

These are the main credit and charge cards which require a four-figure minimum spend to trigger the bonus and which may now be more attractive to you than they once were.  You have until 20th December to order your gift cards so there is plenty of time.

Amex Gold – 20,000 Membership Rewards points bonus (20,000 Avios) – £2,000 spend in three months – review

Amex Platinum – 30,000 Membership Rewards points bonus (30,000 Avios) – £2,000 spend in three months – review

BA American Express – 9,000 Avios – £1,000 spend in three months – review

BA Premium Plus Amex – 25,000 Avios – £3,000 spend in three months – review

SPG Amex – 10,000 SPG points (10,000 Avios) – £1,000 spend in three months – review

Lufthansa Amex & Visa – 11,500 Miles & More miles – £2,000 spend in three months – review

United Amex & Visa – 15,000 MileagePlus miles – £1,800 spend in three months – review

Etihad Amex & Visa – 20,000 Etihad Guest miles – £4,000 spend in six months – review

Emirates Amex & Visa – 12,000 Skywards miles – £1,000 spend in three months – review

Emirates Elite Amex & Visa – 25,000 Skywards miles – £2,000 spend in three months – review

American Airlines Amex & Visa – 15,000 AA miles – £1,500 spend in three months – review

Our full credit card directory can be found here.

Comments (134)

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

  • pazza2000 says:

    Off topic: has anyone had success in giving their Lounge Club card (2 complimentary passes) that came with the Amex Gold Rewards to someone else to use? I have no use for it, and I would imagine it’s simply swiped for access, though perhaps it has to be in the same name as one of the guests.

  • Alan Coltman says:

    I have a US Dollar Amex Gift card i was sent from Hilton on a Best rate guarantee claim. No US trips planned. Any ideas on best redemption use?

  • Roger says:

    Possibly OT but since the poor earning rate on the PRG card from the second year has been mentioned, here goes. 😉

    I just completed an online survey about PRG cards. After finding out a bit on which cards I use, their benefits, what I spent on them, how much I travelled and earned, they wanted to get my view on possible PRG enhancements they were considering.

    Good, thought I. Unless some of my answers disqualified me from certain pages, the ‘enhancement’ seems to be a choice between bonus Avios for £15K spend or £100 credit for spending at AmEx Travel. Haven’t we been here before? Harrumph!

    Oh, I said I was unlikely to renew.

  • Kai says:

    Banks won’t take them..

  • Citychap says:

    Banks have to take them – they are legal tender.

    • TimS says:

      “Legal tender” DOESN’T mean banks have to take them.

      Legal tender has a specific definition and that doesn’t include banks being required to accept them.

      • TimS says:

        From Royal Mint’s own website: Please note that whilst the coins are legal tender, banks are not obliged to accept the coins.

      • RIccati says:

        If you pay off a credit card bill with these coins, a bank cannot refuse them as they are a legal tender and so must be accepted in the payment of the debt. Untested point though.

        One can explain to a bank to send the coins to the Bank of England (or their appointed contractor) together with scrap. In that way, the bank should get ‘real’ money back (which will just be an electronic record on their account — those are the real money!).

        • Col A-B says:

          Just because something is legal tender doesn’t mean it has to be accepted – the bank could (quite rightly) refuse to accept them. As could a shop.

          • RIccati says:

            Legal tender means that a debtor cannot successfully be sued for non-payment if he pays into court in legal tender. It follows that if someone refuses the payment of debt made in form of legal tender, then they refuse your payment.

            There must be a way to send the special coins together with the scrap. That is why bank notes from Scottish banks are not circulating in England and get returned to Scotland.

          • sandgrounder says:

            Scottish bank notes aren’t even legal tender in Scotland, belive it or not. Unless you owe someone a debt, because you have already used a service, legal tender does not generally apply. A shop can refuse to accept because you are negotiating a contract of sale. They are under no obligation to conclude that agreement if they are not happy with the payment you offer.

            There is a good explanation on wikipedia if I remember rightly, although it doesn’t cover all situations.

          • Singing Dwarf says:

            But you can eat a meal in a restaurant and then pay in legal tender.

          • TimS says:

            Legal tender applies to court-ordered debt as I recall, therefore the shop/restaurant could refuse your payment and take you to court. If you then settled the court debt with legal tender they would have to accept it at that point.

            All in all that is an extreme (and potentially time consuming) way to churn a hundred quid or so. Personally I’d rather buy a few 3v cards and not have to bother with arguing the toss with banks, shops and/or the court!

          • RIccati says:

            To work, laws don’t have to be interpreted by courts all the time. If the creditor knows that the court would make them to accept a legal tender (and possibly expenses) then it would be very stubborn of them. With banks this will gets resolved at the level of them receiving advice from their solicitors and finding a way to accept the coin (which is what a bank should do).

            I put a specific formulation: paying off a credit card debt/bill.

            Practically, Post Office (in large cities) will accept Royal Mint coins for goods and services (unclear if they would for deposits).

          • Richard says:

            “Your Honour, I demand to be allowed to pay this debt in coins with even the Royal Mint says aren’t meant to be circulating, as part of a scheme to earn airline miles by exploiting a legal quirk. Now please award costs in my favour.” Good luck with that one.

          • RIccati says:

            That was really unwarranted. Commemorative coin is a proper coin.

            “Each crown issue is authorised by Royal Proclamation in accordance with the requirements laid down by the Coinage Act 1971.”

            You do not need the leave from a court to pay with legal tender. It is clearly vice versa, the court would not find against you if you offer coins as means of payment of debt. As said, Post Office accepts commemorative coins for goods and services (given it’s not some remote branch where they had no prior experience).

            What is interesting that Bank of England has a scheme to exchange old bank notes from the public but does not work with coins.

          • TimS says:

            The BoE doesn’t have a scheme to exchange coins as it doesn’t issue British Coinage.

            The Royal Mint produces and issues British coins, not the Bank of England. That’s the simple reason why.

          • Richard says:

            “the court would not find against you if you offer coins as means of payment of debt…”

            Well, we differ on that one. They wouldn’t “find against you” in the sense of finding you hadn’t offered to pay the original debt, but you raised to question of costs, which are very different. Courts have very wide-ranging discretion regarding costs, and whether the parties are acting reasonably is one of the factors they are specifically allowed to take into account.

            The law about legal tender is there to stop a malicious lender holding you in their power, by refusing to accept any means of settling the debt. The situation you’re picturing is the exact opposite – the lender offers a vast range of commonplace ways to pay but you reject all of them. If you want to try to persuade a court that’s reasonable, then as I say, good luck with that.

          • RIccati says:

            Richard, it is unsurmountable for me that a court can refuse a proper coin issued in accordance with the law (Coinage Act 1971). It would create a precedent after which any other coin (same under the law) can be refused as a payment.

            Given that some merchants (e.g., cited Post Office) accept commemorative coin at face value, the argument of cost is already lost. It understandable that a small merchant might have a problem with coin, but the larger merchant, not to mention a large financial institution must be able to find ways to negotiate with Royal Mint/clear the operation with the BOE if that is involved.

            The lenders today are far from offering “a vast range of commonplace ways” — some would refuse to process a cheque payment (or cite impractical deadlines for that) just the same.

            Besides, it is a reasonable situation to offer coins as means of payment. Yes one might have other cash but that’s for other purposes. A bank should figure out way to work with coinage

    • pazza2000 says:

      I purchased a few of these coins. My bank wouldn’t except them, this was a medium sized RBS branch in Scotland. I can not even return them to the Mint (at a cost) as I’ve torn them from their display packet so here is hoping I have better luck with a larger branch in London later this month. My own fault if I am ‘stuck’ with them but here is hoping I can cash them out.

      • RIccati says:

        Would depositing to one of your bank accounts via Post Office work?

        • pazza2000 says:

          Are post offices more likely to ‘cash’ these coins in than the Bank? I would have thought otherwise.

  • avidsaver says:

    It says 10 per billing household.

  • James H says:

    OT question (sorry!)… I already have an Amex gold card which has just hit the anniversary bonus. While I’m waiting for it to be credited, and for an avios transfer bonus (hurry up!), can I apply for the BA Premium Plus card and still get the sign up bonus once I’ve spent the £3k? I’m not sure if the 6 month rule applies when switching from Amex to BA Amex. Finally, has anyone tried referring themselves for the extra 9k points?

    • Rob says:

      Rule does not apply in your case so no need to wait.

      A BA cannot refer a Gold so your last point doesn’t matter!

      • James H says:

        Thanks!

        Not sure what you mean by “a BA cannot refer a Gold” though? The option to refer someone for a BAPP from my Amex Gold online account is there. I’m guessing it’s unlikely a ‘self-referral’ would make it through, but thought it’d a least be worth investigating!

        Cheers

        • TimS says:

          BA cardholder can only refer someone for one of the two BA cards.

          A Gold cardholder can only refer or Plat, Gold or Green cards.

        • Rob says:

          It’s not anymore. The website was revamped earlier in the year. When you click through you will see you can’t do it.

          You could, of course, simply put in your Gold number where it asks for your BA Amex number to make the referral ….

    • scottydoobuy says:

      i got the gold then applied for ba standard a week later got 20,000 avios for the gold then 9000 for the ba 2 months on i applied for the bapp and they have given me the 25,000 bonus target on top only £600 left to spend to get that =)

  • squills says:

    O/T anybody on the 23p free calls & free data deal with T-Mobile = they’ll renew it but might go up to 40p! 😉

    It’s BRILLIANT!

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