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Register for a new £10 cashback offer at BP garages with American Express

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American Express has launched a new cashback offer with BP.  You may, or may not, find this under the ‘Offers’ section of the online statement page of one or more of your Amex cards and will need to register.

You will receive £10 back on a £30 fuel purchase before 31st December.  You can only earn the statement credit once per card.

You need to download the BPme app to your smartphone and add your American Express card as your means of payment.  When you arrive at the garage, you open the app, type in your pump number and how much you want to spend, submit, and you can then load your car up to the payment limit you entered.

You can add your Nectar card to the app so you don’t lose out on those points either.  Not all BP stations are BPme enabled but apparently there is a map of participating garages in the app.


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 (253)

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

  • Julian says:

    Regarding the BP petrol discount offer (which I notice that none of the other entirely Off Topic posters have even commented on) its definitely not available to Lloyds Rewards Amex card holders as it requires you to be registered with Amex online services in the first place to qualify for these promotions and the site at https://global.americanexpress.com/myca/oce/emea/action/home?request_type=un_Register&Face=en_GB#/ is refusing to register my still valid Lloyds Amex card. I also know for a fact that in my Lloyds Rewards Avios card online account that we are not made aware at all of any of these special Amex card holder related promotions.

    I also checked out the position on continued validity of the old Lloyds Rewards £24 per annum fee free foreign exchange and Avios booking flight class upgrade voucher Amex/Mastercard pairing and got some very knowledgeable guy in the main Lloyds Amex card call centre (this guy was based in Newport but he had lived abroad for many years in Spain and Greece before returning to the UK and so was totally in tune with users of this card unlike most of his colleagues) who told me that those of us who have not received a letter about the move to the free Mastercard only product will do at some point in the next few months and that from getting the letter we then have 2 months before the current Amex and Mastercard pairing are cancelled and replaced by the new single Mastercard. He also said that the conversion program was due to be totally completed by next July.

    So this implies to me I have at least two more months left to earn another flight class upgrade voucher and currently I have spent over £5,000 since the membership renewal date in late August (not my typical level of spend in that time period but reflecting being an Executor of my late mother’s estate and being able to settle various related bills either directly on the Amex or Mastercard or in a number of cases via Curve recharging bills to the Mastercard with accountants and the like, who frequently only accept debit and not credit cards).

    So hopefully I will earn another flight upgrade voucher before the ability to earn it is withdrawn. Of course it seems unfair that some people got another flight upgrade voucher without having to hit the required spend target at all. But it is also highly unfair that some people may only have a few weeks to spend £7,000 and earn another flight class upgrade voucher while other customers will have nearly a full membership year to do so. Also unfair too that some customers will have the Amex card and earn Avios at the higher rate with free foreign exchange for up to a year more than some other customers of the same product.

    To me the smart way to have closed the product down was to have closed all the cards on the same date but to have given everyone on the paying card a further flight upgrade voucher in their final membership year regardless of their level of spend on the card. Then Lloyds could not have been accused of being blatantly unfair to any of its customers.

    • Nick_C says:

      Has anyone had their Lloyds Amex closed yet?

      • Julian says:

        I would imagine yes as I believe the first letters giving two months notice of closure were sent out in August with a two month deadline for the cancellation of the existing Amex and Mastercard Duo or Rewards card pairing.

        Also the dedicated (but generally completely useless knowledge wise) call centre for queries relating to the conversion process (the call centre in Basildon, Essex) opened at that time plus people who had already received the closure letter for the existing products also passed on copies of them to Rob at that time (last August).

        So when Lloyds said this process would last a year they meant either that the final letters giving two months notice would be sent out in July 2019 (with those cards not being withdrawn until 2 months after that) or that the final Amex and Mastercard pairings would be terminated in July 2019 (implying that the related letters for those customers would be sent out in May 2019).

      • Julian says:

        P.S. I paid a renewal fee on my Lloyds Rewards card in mid August but I believe if I don’t get a full year’s use out of it that it will be refunded pro-rata in terms of the remaining number of membership days)

      • Geoff says:

        Data point on Lloyds Rewards cards – I’ve not had a letter at all yet, but my partner had one a few months ago saying it was all ending and would become a MasterCard, as we expected. BUT she had another letter this week saying that it is all sliding to the right and she can continue to use her current cards until Jan 19.

    • Shoestring says:

      Julian – sorry to hear about your mother.

      • Julian says:

        Thanks for reading that far Shoestring.

        The worst of the grief regarding my mother’s loss to the breast cancer (which the lying Harley Street medics claimed she was complete free of only four months before saying it had spread throughout her bones following on from their probably unsafe and unwise mastectomy, aggressive radiation therapy and their final fatal onslaught with poisonous Taxol chemotherapy that only kill her more quickly and unpleasantly than letting nature more gradually take its course) began to abate after 8 or 9 months but the ongoing hell of dealing a house sale, probate and extensive IHT robbery (which forced the sale of the family home of the last 50 years that without that IHT I could afforded to make my own main home) continues.

        • Shoestring says:

          Sure not a good place to be. OTOH I won’t inherit anything much as my parents messed up. So – no IHT for me! Where would you rather be?

        • Julian says:

          Shoestring I agree I am lucky to be inheriting several hundred thousand pounds from my late mother but still it feels like legalised theft for the state to be taking away over a quarter of the money when that money has all already been previously taxed under income tax and when many much richer people avoid paying almost any IHT tax at all by giving away most of their money (because they have far more money so can afford to do so without becoming homeless) more than 7 years before they die or being able to distribute large amounts of money as “surplus income” (that is they are so rich they have hundreds of thousands of pounds income a year they do not spend and such “surplus income is not taxable for IHT, even if the person giving away the money does not survive 7 years).

          Bottom line is the money that vanished in IHT means having to sell a family house we have owned since I was age 5 (even though I have my own 2 bed flat) whereas if there were no IHT or my mother had chosen to avoid the IHT (doable but somewhat inconvenient for herself) then we would have been able to keep that house.

          • Rob says:

            Given a choice between taxing the dead and the living, there is clearly a preferred route ….

  • Dale says:

    Re the BPme app – don’t even bother downloading it, tried today despite seeing the advice on the Playstore reviews….and hey presto at the pump and it didn’t work. Total waste of time

    • Shoestring says:

      Other people here had good success.

      I unfortunately forgot my new BPme password at the pumpo station but will try again tomorrow.

    • Julian says:

      I personally found Shell’s similar pay at the pump Android app in conjunction with their Win A Million Avios Promo of a couple years ago to be a total and utter pain in the derriere.

      Very frequently didn’t work although points of failure were multiple and showed no proper testing or disaster recovery plans of any kind.

      Yet Tesco’s PayAtThe Pump system, that they use extensively at night for otherwise totally unmanned filling stations, always seems to work with the only issue being that receipts sometimes run out, meaning you have to get them printed out at another pump.

    • ThinkSquare says:

      For me the BPme app seems to work OK as long as I am nowhere near a BP station. When I am, it just locks up. Very frustrating.

  • kevbar says:

    I nearly didn’t bother with BPme with all the bad feedback but it worked really well for me today, even the amex email came through immediately.

  • What's the Point says:

    BPme – waste of time. Spent 5 mins faffing about at the pumps. Got an email from Amex saying that I had redeemed it. But that’s just the pre-authorisation going through – I still had no fuel!
    Gave up in the end, and went inside to find out what was going on. Only to be told by the cashier that they can’t get BPme working yet.
    I drove off in a huff, and filled up elsewhere!

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