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Curve Card introduces 0% foreign exchange fees – and more change to come

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Curve Card has announced a new benefit for cardholders today – 0% foreign exchange fees.

There is another major announcement to come in around 8 weeks, but you will have to wait for that one ….

(EDIT:  Curve has changed 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.)

Curve has always been a good deal for making payments abroad.  Historically it levied a 1% fee on foreign transactions, which it recharged to any linked Visa or Mastercard.  If you didn’t have a separate 0% FX fees credit card then using Curve was better than paying 3% to your standard credit card provider.  Even if you did have a 0% FX fees credit card, it was often more valuable to pay Curve’s 1% fee and pick up miles or points from your linked credit card.

From today, Curve will drop its foreign exchange fee to 0%, albeit with a small weekend surcharge.  It is important to note that it is using the interbank rate and NOT the official Visa / Mastercard rates – which are a tiny bit away from the spot rate – so there is absolutely no FX loss at all.

This means:

If you currently have a 0% FX fees credit card which comes with no rewards, you should definitely consider switching to Curve

If you currently have a 0% FX fees credit card with 0.5% cashback (Aqua or Tandem), you should consider switching to Curve if you have a Visa or Mastercard credit card with more valuable rewards

If you currently have the 0% FX fees Lloyds Avios Rewards Mastercard, you should consider switching to Curve when your Lloyds Avios Rewards card is closed (the replacement you will get charges a 3% FX fee)

Curve introduces 0% foreign exchange fees

The only snag is that Curve is imposing limits if you have the free card:

If you have the free Curve Blue card:

You can spend £500 per month in foreign currency at 0% FX, after which a 2% fee applies

You can withdraw £200 per month from an ATM in foreign currency at 0% FX, after which a charge of 2% or £2, whichever is higher, applies

Like Revolut, there is a weekend surcharge of 0.5% for £, $ and € (1.5% for other currencies) to reflect the currency risk taken by guaranteeing the closing Friday rate

If you have the £50 one-off fee Curve Black card:

You can spend an unlimited amount (subject to a potential fair use charge of 2% beyond £15,000 per year) in foreign currency at 0% FX

You can withdraw £400 per month from an ATM in foreign currency at 0% FX, after which a charge of 2% or £2, whichever is higher, applies

Like Revolut, there is a weekend surcharge of 0.5% for £, $ and € (1.5% for other currencies) to reflect the currency risk taken by guaranteeing the closing Friday rate

Curve Card 0% foreign exchange fees

If you are abroad a lot, the £50 Curve Black card now looks attractive.

Let’s imagine that you have £10,000 of annual foreign spending.  You would be paying £300 in fees on a standard credit card.  You could use a 0% card with 0.5% cashback like Tandem and receive £50 back.  Alternatively, you could a premium Mastercard or Visa – at the top end, the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ card – and pay 0% in FX fees and earn 15,000 Virgin Atlantic miles.

This new Curve benefit is also a good way of helping to trigger a long term spending bonus, such as the free night on the IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard (requires £10,000 of spending) or the 2-4-1 vouchers on the new Virgin Atlantic credit cards (require £10,000 – £20,000 of spending).

If you were thinking of upgrading to Curve Black, I recommend doing it sooner rather than later.  This card will see a substantial change to its benefits package and fee in a few weeks, but by upgrading now you will be locking in the £50 fee for 6 months.

Curve Card 0% FX fees

What is Curve?

If you’re not familiar with Curve, this is how it works.  Curve is a Mastercard DEBIT card that recharges every purchase you make to a linked Visa or Mastercard credit or debit card.

This is why Curve Card is worth having:

You make your debit card purchase – including tax payments – using Curve Card

Curve recharges it to your linked Visa or Mastercard credit card

It goes through your linked Visa or Mastercard credit card as a purchase

It therefore earns points from your linked Visa or Mastercard

You have just earned credit card points from making a debit card transaction

And the best bit is that Curve Card is free.  In fact, it is better than free – Curve Card will pay you £5 for taking it out.

It actually gets even better, due to two additional Curve Card benefits:

You can withdraw £200 of cash per month from an ATM and have it charged to your credit card as a purchase – this means it earns miles and points.  This benefit may go away soon as credit card companies can now see what you are doing following a change in how these transactions are processed, but for now it is business as usual.

Foreign currency transactions made on Curve are recharged to your linked Visa or Mastercard in Sterling with a 0% foreign exchange adjustment as we discussed above.  This makes it a better deal than using the underlying card which is likely to have a 3% FX fee.  There ARE FX fees for transactions at weekends and if you go over £500 per month.

One thing you CANNOT do with Curve is pay a financial services institution.  As with Billhop, HMRC is NOT treated as a financial services institution so you are fine.

Curve Card has an annual payment limit of £50,000.  This is fine for most people.  You won’t get this ‘out of the box’ however – you need to use the card for a few months until your limits build up as the company begins to trust you.

The Curve Card is FREE so there is no harm in trying it.   Curve will pay you £10 for trying it out if you use our link.

The Curve website is here if you want to know more.  You need to download the Curve app for your phone and order a card from there if you want to try it out.

Conclusion

Depending on whether £500 per month covers your foreign currency spending or not, this new development is either a major benefit or just a small tweak to the Curve package.

If you are a heavy foreign spender who would benefit from the £15,000 per year of 0% FX spending – and you have a suitably rich Mastercard or Visa rewards card to recharge your spending to – then you may want to upgrade to Curve Black for £50.

As I said earlier, there are other fundamental improvements to Curve coming in a few weeks which will be of strong interest to Head for Points readers, so it is definitely a product to keep on your radar if you do not have one already.


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Comments (362)

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

  • Roger says:

    OK, that means for my VAT I can safely pay using my Visa card and not wait for Amex.
    Thanks, Rob.

  • Genghis says:

    I didn’t realise there was much of a difference between Black and Blue anymore? I had the paid Black and received a Black when the debit version came out. My wife had the free blue but received a black card (exactly the same as mine) when she got the debit version.

    • Paul says:

      Locking in £50 fee for 12 months… does that mean an annual fee is coming for black?

    • Leo says:

      Yes mine is also black, debit and free…

    • 80 says:

      Mine also looks very black but it’s the free debit version. How do you know if you have the free version with the quite useless forex limits, or the black one with higher limits?

      Or is the free black one a 3rd variant with the same limits as the free blue one?

      • Alex W says:

        Black gets 3% rewards instead of 1.5% on blue.

        • 80 says:

          Which means my Black card is free and earns 1.5%

          Blue is free
          Black is £50

          But some black cards are free…

      • fivebobbill says:

        I received a FREE Black debit card when I applied for Curve about 2 months ago.
        My card limits are showing as:
        SPEND (£)
        3,750 per day
        20,000 per 30 day window
        50,000 per 365 day window

        ATM (£)
        1,000 per day
        20,000 per 30 day window
        40,000 per 365 day window

        I have never been charged a fee, nor have I been informed of a pending one.

    • Alex W says:

      I never bothered with that because the SPG Amex was (is?) earning 6 Marriott points per £ spent in their hotels.

    • Peter K says:

      Only Marriott UK though.

    • Genghis says:

      Any advice Rob? If my card is black (in colour or otherwise), would we receive the new black card going forward? How does this interact with the fee proposal?

  • Leo says:

    I need to pay a smallish hotel bill in about 3 hours time (It’s 6am in UK). I was going to use my Horizon card. Should I now use Curve? As in its all ready to go from now?

    • Alan says:

      Personally I’d just use Horizon card until there’s been an official notification from Curve themselves.

  • DaveA says:

    So the “Teaser” on Twitter was pretty much the whole story then? It’s a welcome change, but tbh was expecting a bigger announcement.

  • Roger says:

    OT: Is anyone having trouble paying HMRC with their curve card.
    Tried my HMRC bill twice, using two different underlying Visa / Master card and it failed both times.

    It failed similarly last time when I tried paying a week or so ago.

    • Thomas Howard says:

      I paid a income tax/NI bill on 18/09 no problem. I did have a patch of intermittent failures with other payments but it was because I’d forgotten to update Curve with my new address, I’d only told the underlying card and the place I was paying.

    • H says:

      No problems- used it yesterday to PAYE

    • 80 says:

      Yes, lots. but try smaller amounts.

    • Aliks says:

      Roger,
      When I got my Curve card in July, I tried paying an HMRC Corporation Tax bill. I started with a £1,000 payment – refused. I steadily reduced the amount and was refused each time down to £200 which was accepted.
      For the next couple of days, I tried various amounts, but only £200 was allowed. I think it took about 2 weeks before the Curve algorithms woke up and allowed me to make a £1,000 payment.
      After that – no issues with HMRC payments.

    • the_real_a says:

      You have to determine where it is failing… are the transactions getting through to your underlying cards? If you suddenly hit a £5k transaction on a card that you generally spend little on then the transaction will be blocked until you phone up and confirm the transaction. CC companies dont always bother to inform you.

  • Ian M says:

    Good improvement, but sadly I have months to wait until I can spend on the Curve card again. Maxed out the £50k limit paying VAT bills.

    Would love to see higher limits.

    Has anyone had any success getting more than one card?

  • Dev says:

    Is this a viable long term product if you are an expat overseas but receiving your salary and allowances in an UK account?

    • the_real_a says:

      It depends on the risk you want to take. Do you want to lock in the exchange rate on a specific date? – if so then revolut is a better product, you can exchange all of your salary/contract payment that month in bulk as soon as it hits. I use this on a EUR contract if there is a long gap between contract and payment dates.

      If you are happy to take the FX risk and just convert when you pay on the card – then curve works. But the limits will probably be very restrictive depending on your ex-pat overheads.

  • tm84 says:

    Is MBNA’s Horizon still better value for using abroad?

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

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