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Curve Card relaunches (Part 2)

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This is Part 2 of my article about the new Curve Card subscription plans which launched on Monday.  Part 1, which reviews the flagship Curve Metal product, is here.

To summarise the changes:

The basic Curve Card remains FREE – in fact Curve will pay you £5 for trying it out if you use my referral code of OQB4J

Curve Black costs £9.99 per month and allows £1,000 per month of free American Express top-ups (0.65% thereafter)

Curve Metal costs £14.99 per month or £150 per year and has unlimited American Express top-ups, a choice of three cool metal cards to choose from and some travel and insurance benefits

(EDIT:  A couple of days after this article ran, American Express withdrew from Curve.  This article is now only useful as a history lesson.  Our most recent introductory article on Curve, reflecting the split with Amex, is here.)

What are the three different type of Curve Card?

Part 1 explained what Curve Card is all about and reviewed the £14.99 per month Curve Metal card.  In this review I will look at Curve Black and the free Curve Blue.

Are you an existing Curve Black cardholder?  If so, you will get three months of ‘new’ Curve Black membership for free (see 4.2.1 of the T&C’s).  People who were on the Amex ‘beta’ trial will get six months.  After that you can either switch to a subscription or you can drop back the ‘old’ set of Curve Black benefits with no fee.  Alternatively you can upgrade to Curve Metal and get four months for free, but in this scenario you lose the option to drop back to a free ‘old’ Black card.

What are the features of Curve Black?

This Curve website compares the three different types of Curve Card.

Fee: £9.99 per month, no annual option

Card:  Plastic, not metal

Availability:  UK and various other EEA countries

Amex usage cap:  £1000 per month for free, with a 0.65% fee thereafter

Foreign exchange fees:  Unlimited transactions with no fee (0.5% fee $ or € and 1.5% fee for other currencies applies to transactions made on a Saturday or Sunday)

ATM withdrawals:  Overseas: £400 per month for free, 2% thereafter (can only be charged to a Visa or Mastercard) / UK: 10 free withdrawals per month (max £200 per day, fair use policy applies), 50p fee thereafter

These are the key benefits.  There are other benefits which I do not value highly but which some readers may find useful:

Travel insurance underwritten by AXA  (this looks OK, and with an age limit of 70, although the rules are stricter than many policies in terms of, for example, sports you may not play on holiday. Baggage and personal belongings are not covered for Black cardholders.)

Gadget insurance (maximum value £800 with a £50 excess)

1% cashback from six premium retailers for the first 90 days of membership.  This is on top of the rewards you will earn from your underlying card.

This card has the possibility to be attractive to Head for Points readers.  Let’s look at a couple of key areas:

Your ATM withdrawals (10 per month in the UK for free, £400-worth per month in foreign currency) will earn you miles and points on any underlying Visa or Mastercard.  This will also count towards spend-based bonuses on those cards.  This can offset a lot of the annual fee.

You can charge all of your foreign spending to a miles or points earning card – including an Amex – whilst paying 0% FX fees, which should lead to a sharp increase in your points earning

You can charge some day-to-day debit card spending to Curve and turn it into spend which earns miles, points and ‘spend-related target bonuses’

However, I would argue that Curve Metal is a better package than Curve Black.

Is Curve Metal worth paying £2.50 to £5 per month more than Curve Black?

That’s a good question.  If you pre-pay for Curve Metal at £150, the difference in cost is only £30 per year or £2.50 per month.  For your extra £2.50, you get:

  • Unlimited Amex usage (Curve Black is capped at £1000 per month for free and charges 0.65% afterwards)
  • CDW car rental insurance (not part of Black)
  • £600 vs £400 of free overseas ATM withdrawals (this in itself is worth £1 or so in extra Visa or Mastercard rewards)
  • Travel insurance includes lost baggage and personal belongings (Curve Black does not)
  • No ability to pay £15 per visit for LoungeKey airport lounge access

You also get the novelty of a metal card. On this basis, I think Curve Metal justifies the extra fee.

Finally, let’s look at the free Curve Blue card.

What are the features of Curve Blue?

Curve Blue is free – free to apply and free to operate.  American Express usage is charged, but for low spenders you may find it cheaper overall than paying the monthly fee for Curve Black or Curve Metal.

This page of the Curve website compares the free different types of Curve Card.

Fee: None

Card:  Plastic, not metal

Availability:  UK and various other EEA countries

Amex usage cap:  No free Amex usage – you pay a 0.65% fee on each transaction

Foreign exchange fees:  £500 per month for no fee (0.5% fee $ or € and 1.5% fee for other currencies applies to transactions made on a Saturday or Sunday) with a 2% fee thereafter

ATM withdrawals:  Overseas: £200 per month for free, 2% thereafter (can only be charged to a Visa or Mastercard) / UK: 10 free withdrawals per month (max £200 per day, fair use policy applies), 50p fee thereafter

1% cashback from six retailers for the first 90 days of membership.  This is on top of the rewards you will earn from your underlying card.

One key Curve feature is unchanged, however.  Even users of the free Curve Blue can pay any debit card bill and have it recharged as a purchase for free to a linked Visa or Mastercard.  There are no usage limits except for the day / month / annual limits imposed by Curve which are increased as you become ‘trustworthy’.  It is only Amex transactions which are charged.

A free Curve Blue holder can also do 1 x £200 free overseas ATM withdrawal each month and pick up a few points for free on their linked Visa or Mastercard.  You get the same allowance of UK ATM withdrawals (10 per month for free) as Black and Metal cardholders.

Charges only kick in when you start recharging purchases to an American Express card.  For a lot of HFP readers, the free Curve Blue will be good enough.  If you find yourself needing to charge a few thousand pounds of Visa or Mastercard debit or credit card spend to your Amex to, for example, hit the BA Premium Plus Amex 2-4-1 voucher, you can do so for just £6.50 per £1,000.  Unless and until you do this, there is no charge for getting or using Curve Blue.

If you value all of the ‘extras’ attached to Curve Metal at £zero, you could recharge £23,000 per year to an Amex via Curve Blue at £6.50 per £1,000 before it becomes cheaper to have Curve Metal at £150 per year.

Conclusion

The ability to recharge your Visa or Mastercard debit or credit card payments to an American Express card is, for many HfP readers, a game changer.

That said, Curve is doing its best to annoy people with odd little rules which also make the product unreasonably complex.  The 0.5%-1.5% weekend FX surcharge, for example, means that it may still make sense to have a separate 0% FX fees credit card in your wallet.  Stripping luggage and personal possessions coverage from the Black travel insurance will remove the value for many people.  Having different ATM rules for UK and overseas transactions is another unnecessary complication.

To be honest I am not overwhelmed by the benefits of Curve Black and I’m not sure it will survive long term.  If you pre-pay for Curve Metal then it is only £2.50 per month more than Curve Black and the extra benefits are well worth that.

At the other end of the scale, Curve Blue remains freeBlue is a risk-free introduction to Curve and you can easily upgrade via the app to Curve Black or Curve Metal if you choose to do so at a later date.  A lot of HfP readers will be perfectly fine with the free card, preferring to ‘pay as they go’ for American Express transactions. 

If you will recharge less than £20,000 per year onto your American Express card via Curve then – if you don’t need the travel insurance, CDW car rental waiver, the ‘cool’ value of having a metal card in your wallet and the 0% Monday-Friday FX fees benefit – free Curve Blue is probably good enough.

How to apply for your Curve Card (free if you choose Blue)

Curve will pay you £10 for trying it out if you use our link.

I am interested to see how the new-look Curve Card goes down with the wider market.  For miles and points people like us, especially those in thrall to American Express products, it is great.  It remains to be seen how it goes down outside our circle.


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 (299)

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

  • Peter C says:

    Hi,
    I have just completed paying my tax bill through Curve and on to HSBC MC for the Avios, and thought I would share a couple of potential traps.
    I needed to make several separate Curve payments which in total would have exceeded my credit limit on the card. I phoned HSBC to stretch my limit, but they quickly pointed out “you can’t pay tax on personal cards anymore” — I didn’t go into details about Curve, but I suspect I spiked my own aims as presumably they then were thinking “hmmm, why would he pays his tax bill by cash advance?” In any case, I managed to get a small increase, but not enough to cover the whole tax bill.
    So, to suport the series of Curve payments, I then added transferred a five-figure sum to my HSBC MC to enable me to put through the transactions. However, HSBC then blocked the payment as being potentially fraudulent and blocked all my accounts. They did phone me but I didn’t recognise the number so pushed it to voicemail, but they didn’t leave a message.
    I got the whole thing sorted, but as a result, I lost a couple of days in my series of Curve transactions.
    So the oral of the story is to make sure that you leave yourself a few days spare when paying large sums by Curve. Actually, I guess that’s prudent advice in all circumstances.
    As for Curve itself, I find it really good. I have Blue and as Rob alludes to in his article, i think Blue will be enough for me for the time being as I only have a few small non-Amex purchases. I will see how the Amex interface settles down and may move to Metal to cover next year’s tax bill.

    • Mr Dee says:

      Not a good idea to prepay a credit card at anytime and definitely need several days in between to pay a bill larger than 3k

  • Stan says:

    Are Amex cards issued to non-UK residents excluded? Mine got rejected and it failed the 6-digits validation on the Curve website. Any non-UK user experiencing the same issue?

    • EwanG says:

      I had a chuckle looking at that page, cards 2 and 3 are the old bmi cards which I fondly remember! They disappeared a couple of years ago. Virgin Black and White went last year. I’m not as clued up as others here but by my reckoning less half of the cards they have images for are still available!

    • Mark2 says:

      At least half of those cards have ben discontinued e.g. MBNA

    • Stan says:

      Thanks, this confirms what I was thinking and makes the card useless for me. The main reason why I got the Curve Black a couple of months ago was their announcement they were considering Amex (again).

    • Lumma says:

      I’ve got an old Red amex that I’ve added to curve that’s not on that list

  • Mark2 says:

    As an experiment I have added a Lloyd’s Avios American Express card to my Curve account.
    It went through without a hitch and even used the correct card picture.
    Now just waiting until March 14th to be able to use it.

  • Brian says:

    Does the physical colour of my curve card actually represent my current colour?
    I’m sure I signed up as blue, but they sent me a replacement black card 3 months ago – confused!

    • Mark2 says:

      Yes, the ‘Blue’ card is black and the ‘Black’ card is also black, but you can get a blue ‘Metal’ card, I think!

  • AndB says:

    Just had an email from curve with updated T&C includign updated fair use policy link which says “ATM credit card withdrawal fair use.Curve strongly discourages using an underlying credit card in order to withdraw cash. Please note that your underlying credit card issuer may charge you fees for making such transactions with your Curve card.In addition to the above fees, Curve may charge you an additional 2% for withdrawals above £200 (or currency equivalent) per calendar month, when using a credit card as the underlying card. Please note that this not a limit per credit card, but a cumulative for all credit card withdrawals using your Curve card in a calendar month. This charge does not apply to ATM debit card withdrawals.”

    So does this mean you can make 10 withdrawals linked to a CC per month but if the total amount is over £200 in that month, 2% on the extra is charged? That’s how I read it.

    • Anthony Holt says:

      Hi Rob

      Curve accepts my visa / MasterCard – it won’t scan my Amex Plat card nor see it in the verification process? I’ve entered it manually and tried loads of 0.49 amounts to verify and it keeps saying cannot verify?

    • Alex W says:

      @AndB the £200 monthly limit for credit cards is I think the same as it was before (in theory if not in practice).

      That does raise the question though as to why limit debit card withdrawals? You could just withdraw cash directly from the debit card without using curve.

      • Alex W says:

        Interesting, which debit cards are there that earn rewards? I’m only aware of Tesco, which seems not to work based on your comment.

    • Doug M says:

      I think Curve’s main benefit is using it in a way they don’t want, and if clamped down on it becomes largely useless.

  • Shoestring says:

    So Curve isn’t a bank & doesn’t hold your money?

    In which case, who/ what is holding the money in your Amex wallet? I think we should be told.

    Does Curve even have a banking licence?

    • Andrew L says:

      Why would it need a banking licence? As you so clearly stated in your post….it’s not a bank!

      • Doug M says:

        Isn’t any kind of deposit taking highly regulated? Doesn’t nitbeing a bank and holding deposits from people bring its own set of issues?

    • Alan says:

      I thought it was Wirecard that held the funds and have a German banking licence?

  • Rajiv Raja says:

    Can you upgrade to a black or a metal.one for a couple of months and then downgrade down to the free one ? Or are you tied into a year contract?

  • Andrew L says:

    As long as you currently have the free black card, you can downgrade back to what is now know as legacy black at the end of your 3 months free trial on paid black.
    If you upgrade to the metal card then there’s no going back.

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

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