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The Costco TrueEarnings American Express card – the UK’s best travel credit card – closes

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The next wave of American Express changes is here.

The Costco TrueEarnings American Express card has been closed to new applicants.

It should already have been removed from the American Express website by the time you read this.  If not, it will be gone in a few hours.

This is not hugely surprising.  In some ways, I am surprised it took so long.  A couple of years ago American Express lost its contract to issue Costco credit cards in the US.  This was a huge blow to the company, representing 10% of its global business.

For people who don’t know Costco, it is a US-based chain of – effectively – cash and carry warehouses.  There are 29 sites across the UK.  They sell a huge range of items and whilst the stores may be cheap-looking the products are not – wine buffs, for example, tend to swear by Costco for cheap Cloudy Bay and Dom Perignon.

In theory, you need to be ‘in business’ to become a Costco member.  In practice, their rules are pretty lax and you may well qualify for individual membership.  Anyone who works in finance, or is a retired employee of a bank, qualifies for example.  There is also a long list of professional bodies that are accepted.  If you are self-employed you are definitely OK.  Some big corporates also have company-wide deals for their employees.

Individual membership is £28 + VAT per year.  You should save that pretty quickly.

Why was the Costco TrueEarnings American Express card interesting?

For a small subset of HfP readers, the Costco Amex was very interesting.

There was no sign-up bonus but that was offset by some very generous returns:

No annual fee

1% cashback on all of your spending (capped at £300 per year)

3% cashback on all of your restaurant spending (no cap)

2% cashback on all of your travel spending (no cap)

The only ‘gotcha’ was that, to receive your cashback, you had to visit your nearest Costco to redeem a voucher sent to you annually by American Express.

You can probably see what got people interested.  If you were a heavy traveller, 2% cashback on all of your travel costs could be a significant amount of money.

The only snag is that there was the usual 3% foreign exchange fee. If you were spending money on travel abroad you were better off with an ‘FX free’ card. If you were travelling a lot in the UK, were booking a lot of foreign travel priced in £ or were paying travel bills abroad and getting repaid by your employer, however, this was very interesting.

Even the 1% cashback on all of your general spend was a decent deal given that the card had no annual fee.  Had there been no FX fees on this card, I think it would have been in the pockets of far more HFP readers than it was.

However, the card has now bitten the dust.

Are the Harrods, Starwood Preferred Guest (Marriott Bonvoy) and Nectar cards at risk too? I honestly don’t know:

the Harrods card occupies a very tiny niche and presumably makes little money

the Nectar card is widely held but there is also a Nectar-earning Mastercard issued by Sainsbury’s (with the super-ungenerous rate of 1 Nectar point per £5 spent, 80% less than the Amex card).  Now that Sainsbury’s owns Nectar outright, wouldn’t it prefer to promote a credit card issued by its own banking arm?

Creation is – in theory, but they are now 8 months behind schedule – relaunching the Marriott Rewards Mastercard

None of these three cards is irreplaceable …..


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Comments (79)

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

  • Ben says:

    I have this and it s certainly requires discipline to spread the spend across with Virgin Money fee card.

  • Rooster says:

    Probably would have been a good idea to suggest this card after the last round of Amex changes before it was cancelled.

    • Polly says:

      Not everyone can be accepted.
      So curve will help here if they stop accepting amex.

    • Rob says:

      I do agree that, with many people unable to get Amex bonuses, it became more interesting. It takes us time to come around though. Lack of a bonus was the reason for lack of interest from readers in the past.

      • Rooster says:

        Fair enough, it is limited in appeal having to be a Costco member.

        PS you can get a Costco membership if you have a national trust card or just an Amex card at some warehouses especially in the midlands as its in their press releases on local newspapers!

  • Hardik says:

    Thanks Rob. I just applied. Wondering who is going to be the new Costco partner is going to be? Believe they got visa citi in the US

  • Relaxo says:

    I’ve just applied as well since there’s a Costco 5 mins away from me. No idea if I will actually switch any of my shop to them but the cash back rates made sense for me, especially the 3% on restaurants. Do all restaurants have a specific code that amex uses for identification?

  • Navara says:

    Never realized the cash back was so high. This card would have been more useful now considering that I will soon have to pay for travel with all the recent changes.

  • Will says:

    I’d be interested to know if this now changes their payment policy. The only Credit Card that Costco in the UK currently accept is Amex. Could this change?

    • HGT says:

      Yes, likely UK will follow USA Costco and drop taking Amex.

    • Rob says:

      Almost certainly.

    • Rooster says:

      It may change in the future but Amex would obviously like them to continue with it and its not going to change without at least some sort of announcement IMO

  • Roger* says:

    When I looked at this before on HFP – thanks, Rob! – i thought it wasn’t for me.

    Apparently qualifying for Costco membership as ex-bank staff, how would I get confirmation from decades ago with Midland Bank (now HSBC)? Also, there were no practical nearby Costcos.

    I see today that online membership is now available at £15 p.a. incl VAT. Is this new? Unfortunately it does not qualify for the credit card.

  • Dan says:

    Sorry if this is a newbie question, but what practically happens when Amex withdraw a card? Do they swap it for a different one (I.e green) or keep the card alive for existing members and just close it to new ones?

    I currently hold the BAPP, SPG and Gold Charge so interested what they would do with the SPG if it were to close?

    • Rob says:

      Depends on the contract with the co-brand partner. Amex may be forced to close your card under the terms of its deal, with no alternative. Or it may not.

    • JPa says:

      Hilton Visa is also still working fine, and the Creation Marriott. However all the MBNA various cards all switched to the Horizon card (which has never been available for new applications). So just depends….

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

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