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Curve card ‘pauses’ Amex functionality

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(EDIT:  Curve has changed a lot since this article was published.  Please do not rely on the information here.  Instead, please click here to read our detailed 2020 Curve review, which includes a link for a free £10 credit when you sign up.)

Let’s keep Curve discussion here, please, to stop other threads getting clogged up.

I will do an analysis on this tomorrow.  My gut feeling in the short term is that – assuming you can easily spend £1,000 on Curve in the next three months (and £600 of that can be free ATM withdrawals linked to a Mastercard or Visa, earning points) – you might as well do that.

You will get the £35 credit, which if you have the basic card means you are in the same financial position as taking a refund, and you still have the Curve card for overseas use (if you don’t have a 0% card) and ATM use and for places where it is treated as a debit card.

Curve prepaid MasterCard

And, of course, if you take a refund you would need to pay £35 again later if / when Amex functionality returns. If you have the premium version, the maths is different and you may find the full refund better than a £50 credit.

It is always fun and games working with start-ups ….

The email:

I’m Shachar, the CEO of Curve. Today we’ve got some disappointing news. American Express have asked us to pause their functionality with Curve – which means you will not be able to use your Curve card with your Amex for the time being. This begins at midday on May 31st UK time – you’ll shortly receive another email with practical details of what will happen when we pause the American Express functionality – your Curve will continue to work with Mastercard and Visa.

American Express want to ensure there is a seamless customer support process for their Members when using their Card with Curve. We’re continuing discussions with their management, and hope that American Express decide to come back to Curve soon.

We’re continuing to build something big at Curve. The first ever platform to connect you to your everything money – transforming the way you handle your finances, bringing value and saving you time and money. We’re already connecting up all your bank cards, tracking your expenses in real time and saving you money with zero FX fees when you travel. This is just the beginning – we’re working hard on future features such as the ability to move charges between funding cards after you’ve paid, bespoke loyalty rewards and cash-backs, peer-to peer payments and much more.

As a big thank you for being one of Curve’s early adopters we are giving Blue card members £35 and Black card members £50 worth of Curve Points if you spend a total of £1000 over the next three months. You’ll be able to spend your Curve Points at any merchant that accepts Mastercard using your Curve. Please see our FAQs for further details.

We hope you choose to stay with us to continue the exciting journey we’ve begun together. Please write to me directly – I’m happy to answer any questions you might have.

I’ll keep you updated.

Yours,

Shachar Bialick


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Comments (437)

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

  • Harry says:

    Has anyone even received their £10 credit using the code on the original article

    • Nick Burch says:

      Nope – they changed their wording after everyone signed up to say it’d be £10 credit to their mythical loyalty program instead

  • Benjamin Kaye says:

    I just cancelled mine, the AMEX feature was the main draw for me.

    • jonboy73 says:

      I may cancel mine but not until the end of the month..

  • Fadi says:

    I’m glad I gave Curve the swerve.

  • jonboy73 says:

    I bought a plane ticket using curve the other day, forget if it was flybe or easyjet, had to pay the credit card price, £5 more, as they said it was not a debit card… I thought that was the point of this card…

    I am also in 2 minds now about keeping this, I have opened an n&p current account for overseas atm use. £200 a month is no use to me when I spend 2 months at a time abroad.

    • Lord Horse says:

      Nope, nowhere did Curve ever suggest it was a debit card, where’d you get that idea from?

      • jonboy73 says:

        ok, turn of phrase perhaps, more precisely “treat as a debit card”. like the v3, remember them lol.

      • AndyR says:

        They did say on twitter that it was a debit card a while back.

    • the_real_a says:

      No it was never a debit card. Its a prepaid mastercard which attracts credit card charges in most places since its more expensive for the merchant to process.

      • jonboy73 says:

        certainly not the case everywhere, I can “use it as a debit card” on one site that for sure don’t take credit cards.

  • Muryu says:

    I’m out, Amex everywhere was the only draw for me.

  • Tom C says:

    HSBC Premier World Elite MasterCard is looking even better now

  • Nick Burch says:

    Given the problems they’ve had and still have – the double charging, online payments being declined to merchants but still charged to the underlying card, how authorisations work – I’m not surprised that Amex felt there were too many customers getting confused and/or asking Amex for help with it. All 3 have hit me, all 3 have confused me, and all 3 have required emails to curve to understand and/or sort. Only takes a few similar people to contact Amex rather than curve, or Amex to worry a few people will, and I can see why they asked for the pause

    Having used it heavily for a week a home then a week of travel, followed by moderate use for a week after too many problems, the process of working out which charges should and shouldn’t have ended up on my credit card when they all just save “CURVE LONDON” and tracking which refunds correspond to which incorrect initial transactions is a pain. For light use (so there’s not too many transactions to figure it out for) I still think it’s good, but it did seem to launch too early, and I’d already decided to use the card less until they sorted the bugs out

    • Singing Dwarf says:

      Supercard had similar issues – the CC statement just says TUXEDO MONEY now.

      I believe you still need to contact Supercard directly to get refunds credited to the source card (I have had to).

      These cards are a nice idea in theory, but just add complexity and increase risk (no Section 75).

  • James A says:

    Just read the email and naturally I came straight here to discuss 😉

    Massive massive blow to curve (and us ) to lose Amex. The wording on the second mail makes it sound far more permanent than the first!

    Not sure I’ll have a use for it now but I’ll give it a few days and see what happens.

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