N26 review: we look at their new metal card. Do the benefits stack up?
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EDIT: Unfortunately, N26 closed its UK operation in February 2020 and it is no longer possible to open an account
This is our updated review of N26, the online bank, focusing on its new metal premium card. Is N26 worth joining? Is it worth paying for the N26 metal card?
You will be reading quite a bit about metal payment cards on Head for Points over the next couple of weeks. Metal credit and debit cards have been very rare in the UK to date but they are about to take off in a big way – if you are prepared to pay the fees they ask.
The standard N26 card is FREE. What is more interesting about N26 is the travel and other benefits that come with its paid metal version. In particular, you get free WeWork membership which gives you one day per month of free hot desking and access to the WeWork member network. This benefit immediately got my interest as I used the WeWork hot desk plan for a year before we took a full time office, and we were paying $45 per month for the privilege.
The N26 website is here. You can find out about the travel and other benefits of its metal card here.
We have covered Monzo, Revolut and Starling on Head for Points in the past few months. These are all ‘online only’ ‘challenger’ banks, aimed at a generation used to running their entire life via a smartphone app. They are morphing into identical businesses offering app-driven current accounts, 0% FX fee debit card transactions, money transfers at interbank rates and analytical spending tools.
N26 is older than Monzo, Revolut and Starling, having launched in Germany in 2013. It was only in October 2018 that it launched in the UK and a lot of HfP readers may never have heard of it. It is also active in Ireland, France, Italy, Spain, Austria and Belgium. Our review of Starling Bank is here for comparison.
What does the free version of N26 offer?
Let’s review the standard N26 card first.
A standard N26 account is FREE for life. The website claims that you can open an account in just 8 minutes.
N26 offers a range of benefits that will be familiar from other online banks. You sign up via the website here and then:
You receive a Mastercard debit card – which comes in funky clear plastic, as you can just about tell from the photo above – in the post (free, which is £4.99 cheaper than Revolut)
You get a sort code and account number, allowing you to use N26 as you would a traditional current account
All of your banking is done via the app, including locking and unlocking your card, changing your PIN etc
You receive push notifications of all transactions in and out
You can send and receive money from friends via the app
You pay 0% FX fees on overseas transactions (with no monthly limit and no weekend surcharges, unlike Revolut)
You can pay with Google Pay and Apple Pay
You can set up direct debits against your N26 account
You can withdraw cash for free from UK ATMs
The only charges you are likely to pay are:
Withdrawals from non-UK cash machines: 1.7% fee (Revolut allows one free £200 monthly overseas withdrawal)
14.9% interest rate if you go overdrawn
N26 does offer international money transfers but this is done via a partnership with TransferWise. If this is important to you then Revolut is probably a better option as it offers £5,000 per month of transfers for free.
There is a £20,000 limit on monthly card payments and a £5,000 daily limit. These are unlikely to trouble 99% of cardholders.
More interesting for Head for Points readers, however, is the metal version and its travel benefits.
What does the metal version of the N26 card offer?
Let’s move on to review the premium metal N26 card which is potentially of more interest to Head for Points readers due to its travel benefits.
Whilst a standard N26 account is totally free, the metal version of N26 offers a number of premium benefits. Whether they justify the £14.90 monthly fee is a different question.
The card comes in three different metallic colours. My favourite is probably the coral version:
…. which I can imagine looks good in the flesh. There is also a slate version pictured below and a black version.
This is what you get:
Unlimited free cash withdrawals outside the UK
Travel and purchase protection insurance
LoungeKey airport lounge access
FREE WeWork hot desk membership, allowing you to work from one of their offices anywhere in the world for one day per month (you can come and visit us at Moorgate!) – this is usually $45 per month as you can see here
10% off hotels.com bookings
20%-30% off IHG bookings (I think this is the standard partner discount which can also be accessed via various other routes)
World Elite Mastercard benefits
There are other partner benefits – see the N26 metal website – but I have just focused on the travel ones above.
This is an odd package to value. One thing is clear – if you can use the WeWork membership, and especially if you are already paying $45 per month for WeWork hot desk membership – this is great value. You are swapping your $45 fee for N26’s £14.90 fee, which is a big saving.
How would I value the rest of the package?
Value of a cool metal card in your wallet – up to you!
Unlimited free overseas ATM withdrawals – value depends on your travel patterns
LoungeKey membership – this is equivalent to a basic pay-as-you-go Priority Pass which costs £69 per year
Travel insurance – I haven’t seen the policy document so it is difficult to say how ‘strong’ it is, although many HFP readers will be covered via other sources
Hotels.com / IHG benefits – no real value as these can be found via other sources
For me, the package is driven by the WeWork benefit but obviously that is only relevant to a segment of our readers.
Conclusion – should you get the N26 metal card?
N26 is an interesting addition to Monzo, Starling, Revolut etc, all of which have launched very similar products in recent years. N26 gives the impression of being a slightly more grown-up and simpler package than some of its competitors, but at the end of the day the features are similar.
If I was still using WeWork on a hot desking basis I would have jumped on N26 Metal. For everyone else, £14.90 seems steep – even if the travel insurance is suitable for your needs – and I think I’d want to try the free version for a few months before I thought about upgrading. As it is free to sign up with N26, there is no harm in trialling it.
Of course, if you have always wanted a metal payment card for your wallet then this is an easy way of getting hold of one. The only question is whether coral, grey or black is slicker …..
You can find out more about N26, and sign up, on its website here.
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