Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

The future of loyalty credit cards is here and it’s not a pretty sight

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

MBNA launched a new rewards credit card yesterday.  This is not a travel rewards card.  The reason I am writing about it is that it shows you what the future of free non-Amex reward credit cards will be like.

To put this card into context, you need to remember that MBNA has historically been the most generous player in the market when it comes to credit card sign-up bonus.  Back in 2013 it offered 35,000 American Airlines miles with the FREE UK AA cards.  As late as September 2015 it was offering 25,000 Etihad Guest miles with the FREE UK Etihad cards.

What is fascinating about this card is that it is possibly the first brand new free UK rewards card launched since interchange fees were cut to 0.3% last December.   It is a sign of what the card companies can now afford, and a sign of what you will see on existing cards once the current contracts expire.

The new card is targetted as customers of intu shopping centres across the UK.

The first thing to notice is that it only comes as a Mastercard.  

Historically MBNA has offered double packs of Amex and Visa / Mastercard products with higher rewards on the Amex card.  This is now dead because third-party Amex cards (ie MBNA, Lloyds, Barclays ones) are subject to the same 0.3% fee cap as Visa and Mastercard.

American Express is believed to be in the process of cancelling its licensing agreements with MBNA etc since those contracts are now pointless.

The second point to note is that the rewards are unexciting.  

This is what you get back from Year 2:

a £10 intu Gift Card when you spend £3,000 on card purchases
an additional £10 intu Gift Card when you reach £5,000 on card purchases

The best possible return you can get is 0.4%.  However, in order to achieve 0.4%, you need to stop spending on the card as soon as you hit £5,000.  The more you spend above £5,000, the lower your overall return will be.

These rewards are doubled in Year 1 but that is just a way of making the sign-up deal sound more interesting.

The third thing to note is that the card has a lot of soft offers which cost MBNA nothing.

These include one year of Gourmet Society membership, 30% off main courses at Pizza Express and free buggy hire at Intu shopping centres.

On the positive side, it is worth noting that the interest rate – at 16.9% – is lower than the 22.9% which is now charged on most of the MBNA airline cards.

Conclusion

This package – a maximum return of 0.4% on your spending and, realistically for most cardholders, less – is the best that MBNA thinks it can afford in the new credit card world.

Coming from the company that brought you hugely aggressive sign-up bonuses in the past, it is a vision of where all rewards card, including airline ones, will end up when the current contracts come up for renewal.


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2024 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit card, here are our top recommendations based on the current 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

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

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

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

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

15,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

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:

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

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

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

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

For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback on your spending.

Barclaycard Select Cashback Business Credit Card

1% cashback uncapped* on all your business spending (T&C apply) Read our full review

Comments (157)

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

  • Mycity says:

    I’ve seen it before on here but can’t remember the answer, so how many differant brands of MBNA cards allow you to have? I think Raffles has said five before but I may be wrong.

  • Cheshire Pete says:

    Well, we can’t have our cake and eat it! 0.3% interchange is meant to stop customers getting ripped off. Wonder how long BA will get away with their £5 flat fee (avoidable by the likes of us, but not widely known).

    I got an official response from BA about this last year along the lines of, the £5 comes from the average of all the fees charged by the companies spread across all its customers. So effectively small transactions were funding business travellers paying £1000s per ticket. Now this £5 was based on the average of approx 2.5% interchange fee. I estimate a 0.3% fee should make the £5 more like 50p……. Over to BA……

    • Mycity says:

      It won’t stop the rip off though will it, I went to the Manchester Arena a few weeks ago to a concert, a bottle of water was £1.50, they however had a min £5 charge for credit card use now that is a rip off

    • Nick says:

      The interchange cap had nothing to do with consumer protection. Nobody is pretending that it does. It is to protect merchants from mc and visa setting interchange at whatever they want.

    • Stevie G says:

      Wonder how long BA will get away with their £5 flat fee (avoidable by the likes of us, but not widely known)……………. interesting, errrrr how do you avoid the £5 Amex fee with BA?

    • HAM76 says:

      Business customers with expensive tickets are more likely to use a commercial credit card which still has fees of 2%+… I know, I do.

  • Harry says:

    Coming on top of the untimely but long expected death of Diamond Club, which was by far and away the most rewarding offering in the MBNA stable, this is bad news.

  • Simon says:

    Got an email from Amex yesterday – I can now use MR points to pay for purchases. £4.50 per 1000 points… Is this new?

    • Raffles says:

      No, for some reason they are saying it is though!

      • Simon Schus says:

        I thought this was odd/old news too. Glad it was confirmed. My US AMEX seems to have varying rates of using MR points to redeem as a statement credit, depending on the type of transaction you’re trying to redeem against (statement credits against merchants deem as travel and maybe groceries > redeem at a higher rate than statements against merchants deemed as tech firms).

        Simon.

  • Nate1309 says:

    O/T but I have a flight to SFO tomorrow and it disappeared, along with 3 other flights from my BAEC, can anyone confirm this is happening to other people or is it just me? I was hoping to check in at 11 :'(

    • Nick says:

      Check the news – ba systems are down worldwide (although they say it is only for US flights). Your position might be the knock on effect of that. Manual check in at the moment, apparently. Which takes time. Still, hopefully it will be sorted in time for your flight!

    • harry says:

      BA has been having massive IT problems these last 24 hrs. Cross fingers & try again later etc

    • Nate1309 says:

      Its back up on my BAEC page now. Was just worried they had all disappeared.

      • Nate1309 says:

        …… and they are gone again. online check in is meant to be how passengers are checking in as opposed to the airport but it seems the problems extend to this also.

        • harry says:

          checking in online ahead of time – not everybody realises that this [nearly] guarantees you a seat, ie you won’t get bumped off if it ends up over-booked

          so even if you don’t print the boarding passes etc, still do go through the motions

          and another thing – don’t forget that even if your choice of seats is poor, you can have a look later & change them again – or, better IMV – DON’T print your BPs/ save as PDF – as it makes this method unusable, but DO check in online – then go to airport and use the self check in machines – you can choose any available seat in your class free of charge incl emergency exit seas if available

          • Nate1309 says:

            thanks harry. I managed to check in, though BAEC is being very slow this morning and my upcoming flights are intermittently displayed. I had already chosen the seats I wanted thankfully.

          • Charlie says:

            Nice tip 🙂

        • Kinkell says:

          We are in NY, flying back today. Encountered problems yesterday and still trying to check in etc. We had issues on the way out as well , so not a great BA experience.
          A few ex gratis avios as compensation for stress??

  • MDW says:

    Slightly O/T. Just had an email from VA/MBNA asking if I would like to apply for the ‘White’ card with the currently enhanced 10K sign up bonus. This would be a nice little earner for a £1K spend when TRX’d to IHG as I only need a further 7K to reach AMB Spire. However, I had the VA/MBNA ‘White’ Amex/Visa last year but closed the account in Jan ’16. Question is: do MBNA allow churning and would I get the 10K bonus if I open a new ‘White Card’ account with MBNA? Thanks in advance.

    • Rob says:

      The rules are no longer stated. Anecdotal evidence is that you can churn Virgin, unlike the other MBNA cards. It isn’t clear what gap is needed.

      • RTS says:

        I’m half tempted to try and sign up for the White Card again now having just cancelled it two weeks ago… maybe i should wait a month…

  • Deb says:

    The intu gift cards only last 12 months. If you go over that by a few weeks and then ask the staff nicely in an intu centre if they can help, the only thing they are allowed to do is put it in the bin for you.

  • Rob says:

    RBS has bigger problems to worry about, lets be honest 🙂

    • Irons1980 says:

      Well, there’s no comment for them ending it and it’s the best rewards card out there (non-Avois) IMO…

      • Alan says:

        Indeed, seems a good option. RBS Rewards also excellent with 3% off lots of direct debits for £3/month – as a result I don’t try to pay bills by credit card any more.

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.