Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Are the Amex Platinum Cashback cards a good alternative to miles and points cards?

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We tend not to focus on the two American Express Platinum Cashback cards much on Head for Points because they do not offer miles or points.

They are decent products, however, offering cashback on all of your spending. You can find details of the Platinum Cashback card here and the Platinum Cashback Everyday card here.

Avios, miles and points earned from credit cards are not free.  You might think they are, because you have not explicitly handed over any money for them, but you have sacrificed something else – the money you would have received from using a cashback credit card instead.  On that basis, I thought it was worth taking another look at these cards.

Cashback Visa and Mastercard products are not hugely generous following the recent cap on interchange fees.  Most have cut their rewards down to 0.2% of your spending (ie 20p per £100!).  The best options are Tandem, John Lewis / Waitrose and Amazon, all of which still offer 0.5% back in cash or vouchers.

American Express has two different Platinum Cashback cards – the American Express Platinum Cashback credit card and the American Express Platinum Cashback Everyday credit card.

What is the difference between the Amex Platinum Cashback and the Amex Platinum Cashback Everyday cards?

Basically, the annual fee and the cashback tiers.

The Cashback card (£25 fee) pays you cashback at the following rate:

  • 5% cashback on all your spending in the first three months, up to £2,500 of purchases
  • 1% back if you spend under £10,000 from month 4 to month 12 (and annually thereafter)
  • 1.25% back on your spend over £10,000 from month 4 to month 12 (and annually thereafter)

The Cashback card comes with a £25 annual fee.  The Platinum Cashback credit card has a representative APR of 28.2% variable, including the £25 fee, based on a notional £1,200 credit limit.  The interest rate on purchases is 22.9% variable.

Meanwhile …..

The Cashback Everyday card (free) has a tiered reward system:

  • 5% cashback on all your spending in the first three months, up to £2,000 of purchases

After the first three months, you will earn:

  • 0.5% on the first £5,000 of spend (but you get nothing if you spend under £3,000)
  • 1% back on your spend over £5,000

Cashback is paid in a lump sum at the end of each card year.

The Cashback Everyday card is free.  It has a representative APR of 22.9% variable.

Which is the best card to get?

Time for a quick bit of maths.

The break-even point for getting the £25 card is £10,000 of spending per year.  For everyone except the highest spenders, you are better off with the free Platinum Cashback Everyday card.

For example:

spend £9,000 per year and you will receive £65 on the free Platinum Cashback Everyday and the same £65 on the Platinum Cashback card, adjusting for the fee

spend £11,000 per year and you will receive £85 on the free Platinum Cashback Everyday and £87.50 on the Platinum Cashback card, adjusting for the fee

What is the sign-up bonus?

Both cards have the usual generous American Express sign-up bonuses:

The Amex Platinum Cashback card pays you 5% back on your spending in the first three months, to a maximum spend of £2,500 (so capped at £125 back).

The Amex Platinum Cashback Everyday card pays you 5% back on your spending in the first three months, to a maximum spend of £2,000 (so capped at £100 back).

However, unless you are planning on spending over £10,000 between month 4 and month 12, I would not necessarily be tempted by the extra £25 as the free card is better in the long term.

What more should I know?

You do not receive your cashback month by month.  Instead, it is paid onto your Amex statement at the end of each card year.  You cannot cancel the card early because you won’t receive your cashback.

However, this does not mean that it is more difficult to cancel the Cashback card with the £25 fee.  This is because Amex will refund your fee, pro-rata, when you cancel.  If you feel like dumping the card at any point, wait until the start of your next card year for the cashback from the previous year to arrive.  You can then cancel, and should get back at least £23 of your £25 fee as a pro-rata refund.

American Express no longer has a minimum income requirement for its cards.

Conclusion

I am not suggesting that you should drop your existing reward credit cards and switch to cashback cards instead.  It depends what value you place on your miles and points as well as the other benefits offered by these cards, such as the 2-4-1 voucher on the British Airways American Express.  It is always good to be aware of the alternatives though.

If you do decide to go for one of these cards, I recommend the free Everyday card unless you plan to spend more than £10,000 per year.

The Amex site for the Platinum Cashback (£25 fee) card is here.  The site for the Platinum Cashback Everyday (no fee) card is here.

Comments (76)

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

  • Stu N says:

    RBS/ NatWest rewards black card is worth a look too. 0.5% rewards, convertible into cash or some higher value vouchers. Also no FX fees and you do get rewards on non-£ transactions. If you don’t have a Black account the annual fee is £84, so quite expensive but high nonAmex spender on MC with lots of overseas spend then it could work out ok.

  • TGLoyalty says:

    Yep plus 18k MR if you hold a Platinum card. Just done very nicely out of this card

    • lazyloki says:

      Can you clarify this, please? I’ve been out of the loop for a while but are you saying you can now self refer yourself?

    • Wally1976 says:

      +1

      • Ba says:

        Yes lazyloki
        Need 5 referrals to max out, so in a year without friends it might be useful.

        I was 15k short for a redemption and did just that.

    • Munch says:

      I assume applying for this card does not affect any future applications for bonus points on say the gold amex. I’m 3 months away from re-applying for the gold card so was considering referring from my wife’s plat for the everyday card so she receives the extra 18K MR?

      • tom1 says:

        interested in the same.
        as it has a different ‘reward currency’ – i.e. you earn cash back, not MR points, I assume it doesn’t impact the gold.

        my next question is what do you plan to do in 3 months now that the gold charge card is no more, and you can’t go from gold credit, to plat charge?

      • Munch says:

        Not sure if to go for gold or plat after the next 3 months. Probably plat as more bonus points and improved referral points. I need to work out a plan around maximising the referrals in the shortest period of time so I can cancel quickly to reduce the £450 fee.

  • TGLoyalty says:

    But those offers are usually on all cards so doesn’t matter if you have the free or £25 version.

    Unless anyone knows of amex offers are especially excluded from the free version

    • Alan says:

      I get plenty of offers on my Everyday card. Wife not so much for some reason – maybe they don’t like her

  • Memesweeper says:

    Yes, but it’s not open to applications, so unless you already have one it’s not a consideration.

  • Tilly71 says:

    Just hit my spend requirements on platinum charge card, anyone know how long it takes for the bonus MR to arrive?

  • Alan says:

    Signed my wife up for the Everyday card from my MR Gold card around Easter. Received the 9000 referral points and she received a £20 bonus plus the introductory 5%. As we were between churns it proved to be quite profitable.

    Make sure you take note of Rob’s point that you get nothing if you spend under £3K on this card s don’t just do the 5% introductory offer and stop.

  • Alan says:

    Get referred from another AMEX card is a much better return

  • Roger1* says:

    Talking about Horizon, I ended up with 3 separate cards/accounts. I phoned MBNA yesterday to combine them with just the one limit, cancelling the redundant ones.

    it took 18 minutes, including the dead time listening to the holding messages. The person did as requested, pointing out that the closed cards would be reported to credit rating agencies. (Eek! Have I done the right thing? 😀 ) One unexpected question: what is my current salary? She seemed satisfied by my rough and ready answer.

    I made sure that it was the M&M replacement that was retained, as MBNA had promised a £15 bonus if I kept the card until now. I just checked, and the bonus is already there, having been posted yesterday. 🙂

    • Kevin says:

      I received two identical Horizon cards and wasn’t offered a bonus on either so just kept the one with the higher limit.

      I think I got a retention offer while I was cancelling – 0% interest for a time or something but I was quite jet lagged at the time and not really paying full attention.

    • the_real_a says:

      I did the same, and reduced my credit line with MBNA whilst i was on the call. If you are planning to take out “other” cards then closing and reducing your potential credit lines is a positive thing (relative to your salary)

      • Lumma says:

        Is it reported differently if you request a credit decrease rather than the bank forcing it onto you? I’ve always felt that it would look on the report that they bank may not think you’re trusted to have such a high limit

        • the_real_a says:

          I dont believe there is any flag to determine if a decrease was requested or forced (based on the backend raw data dumps provided as part of a subject access request).

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