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The end of pay.com – an easy Avios earning opportunity closes

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It looks like the pay.com bandwagon ground to a halt 10 days ago.  This was one of the easiest ways to generate free Avios points and potentially trigger credit card sign-up bonuses quickly.

pay.com cards were previously known as 3V Virtual Visa cards.  Available in Tesco, Morrisons and elsewhere, you purchased them for their face value of £25.  

They were designed to be used for online shopping at places which accepted Visa.  For a long time, a loophole allowed you to also use them for certain financial services transactions, including paying them directly into certain bank accounts which accepted debit card deposits.

Pay com card

When bought in Tesco, you earned the standard gift card bonus of 150 Clubcard points for every £50-worth purchased.  

At one point, you picked up 360 Avios (plus a chunk of credit card points) simply by throwing £50-worth into your trolley during your weekly shop and then registering the cards and making a £50 deposit into your bank account or against your tax or credit card bill.  You could scale it up as much as you wanted as long as you could find enough cards.

Even when the cards were blocked against financial services transactions, there were still ways of using them in full without messing around with online shopping transactions.  Sky, Vodafone and many utility companies would accept them as payment towards your account balance for example.

My guess is that the problem for pay.com / 3V is that they couldn’t make any money.  I would estimate that over 90% of the 3V cards purchased in the UK were bought purely to generate Clubcard points and/or credit card spend.  The people who bought these cards knew how to empty out every penny of the £25 from the card.

(I would be intrigued to see the due diligence done when 3V was taken over at the end of 2014.  Surely the new owners would have been aware of this?  A simple Google search would have brought up the various HfP articles for a start.)

If I am right – and I would like to stress for legal reasons that I could be wrong! – this would have destroyed the 3V business model.  Let’s assume that production, servicing and retailer profit margins ate up £3 of every £25.  3V needed you to leave behind at least £3 on every card before they made any money.

On paper, this could happen.  Few online shops let you use multiple credit cards per transaction.  3V assumed that if you received a £25 card as a gift, you might use £19.99 to make an online transaction and then forget about the remaining £5.01, because few online purchases are that small.  After a year, 3V would charge monthly fees which would quickly wipe out the balance and make them a profit.

That wasn’t happening.  Even people who did use the cards to make an online purchase discovered, if they read HFP, that they could top-up their Amazon account balance for their exact remaining 3V  balance.

What exactly has happened to pay.com?

It isn’t clear.

One major supermarket is emailing customers who enquire with a message saying that “pay.com have gone into administration”.  I cannot get any verification of this.  The ultimate owner of 3V / pay.com is a quoted company – SafeCharge – and they have not made any official announcements about any of their subsidiaries being put into receivership.

This is what we do know:

No pay.com cards purchased after 14th October will activate via their website.  You have bought a worthless piece of plastic.  Tesco moved quickly to stop pay.com cards activating at the tills and removed any existing stock from their shelves.

Morrisons did not, however. If you are sitting on a card which you bought but which will not activate via the website, you must return the cards to your place of purchase for a full refund.  pay.com is also willing to refund cards directly if you post them in.

Cards purchased up to 14th October can still be activated.  I would be tempted to clear them out as quickly as possible however, just in case.  If you don’t want to top-up your Amazon account, a list of other merchants who acccept them is in this article.

pay.com vouchers can still be purchased via Paypoint terminals.  There is a minimum transaction of £30 and a maximum transaction of £150.  As no retailer knowingly allows the use of credit cards for Paypoint transactions, this is of little use to HFP readers.  I doubt they are selling more than a handful of vouchers via this route.

It is not clear what will become of pay.com.  There is talk on the SafeCharge website of launching a new app-based payment wallet in Quarter 4 of 2015.  Whether this comes to pass or not remains to be seen.  In any event, it makes little difference to HFP readers looking to earn free Avios points and / or hit a credit or charge card sign-up spending target.  Time to move on.


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

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

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

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

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

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

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.

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 Read our full review

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

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

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

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

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

Comments (126)

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

  • World Traveller says:

    More info on the acquisition of 3V and future plans when the takeover was announced late last year.

  • rob says:

    Thx for the heads up. Just spent the last hour paying bills with the £500 worth stocked up! Thankfully all bought before the 14th. Had a blast maxing up the clubcard pionts. Where do I go now…

  • Gavin says:

    Had 16 cards left over so used them all up this morning. Unfortunately one has failed to activate and I no longer seem to have the receipt so it might be a write-off.

  • harry says:

    I can’t see Pay.com going into administration just yet. I’m hanging onto a couple of cards but will probably reduce the balance. They are useful to use when you don’t want to let the other party have details of a real credit card. Eg taking out the free £20 deals on Sun+, getting the free NowTV sports passes etc. The other side generally doesn’t bill you anything, but they need to see a genuine card number to let you get the deal. Obviously you cancel before they get the chance to bill you.

  • PJK says:

    Crikey, thanks for that Raffles, you do look after us!

    I committed the cardinal 3V sin and had been sitting on £275 cards bought earlier this year. Thankfully I had activated them some weeks ago but hadn’t got around to using them all just yet.

    Thank goodness (and thank Rob) that the HfP e-mails come first thing and are such an enjoyable habit to open & read first thing.

    As soon as I read this today, I got the numbers out and ploughed them all into our Yorkshire Water account (thought I could leave Amazon as a fall-back to use just in case) and thankfully all 11 cards went through without a hitch! Phew!

  • Tony says:

    I think as well cards being used for the nefarious reasons stated above, I think part of the reason for the demise of this sort of card is that the whole “Pre-Paid” proposition ain’t what it’s cracked up to be.

    The market is saturated with “me too” cards, they are expensive to manage (for the issuer and consumer), marketing budgets are limited and the target market isn’t defined enough.

    For the savvy user, loopholes can be found, destroying any margin, and for the user who can’t get credit who might find them useful, they aren’t easy to find or understand. Joe Blow users in the middle ground soon realise they aren’t cheap to load and withdraw from.

    Emporer’s New Clothes if you ask me. I still don’t understand the industry’s fascination with pre paid.

  • avios123 says:

    Hi Everyone

    Like others have reported you can still push the cards through.

    I have just processed £150 of cards through Amazon and EDF.

    These cards were purchased on 4th October from Morrisons and only processed this morning (24th Oct) on the 3v website.

    This may have been as I bought them initially before 14th Oct.
    Has anyone managed to process cards purchased after 14th Oct?

  • Eastland says:

    Thankyou so much – bar the 10 mins of stress and jumping out of bed in a hurry on a saturday (admittedly at 10.30) i have just redeemed all 4 of mine and have the amazon credit. Phew. Slight panic mode there!!!
    Had planned to do via EDF but ive had one fail before and it took 2 weeks to get the credit back. Dont want that again at this stage so stuck to amazon!
    Thanks for warning us all!

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

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