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Should you apply for Amex Platinum before the fee jumps to £575 on Tuesday?

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The UK version of The Platinum Card from American Express will see big changes on Tuesday 11th June.  If you are thinking of applying before the fee jumps up, you are very nearly out of time.

You should read my full article on the Amex Platinum UK changes here, but in summary:

  • the annual fee rises from £450 to £575
  • the card becomes metal
  • you will receive a £10 per month Addison Lee taxi credit (primary cardholder only)
  • you will receive $200 back on every onefinestay house rental (valid multiple times)
  • the spend required to trigger the 30,000 points sign-up bonus doubles from £2,000 within 90 days to £4,000

American Express Amex Platinum card

There are other minor tweaks but this is the crux of what is changing.

There is a 48 hour window of opportunity here for anyone who is not already a Platinum cardholder.  If you apply before 11th June (ie by midnight on 10th June):

  • you lock in the £450 annual fee for 12 months
  • you lock in the £2,000 spending target to trigger the sign-up bonus
  • you will receive 11 or 12 x £10 Addison Lee credits between now and your renewal date in June 2020

Assuming that you are based in London and can use the Addison Lee credit, The Platinum Card is now better value than it previously was – at least for the first year – if you lock it in at £450.

I thought I would run through the full card benefits again today.  However, for clarity, there is no ‘right’ answer about whether The Platinum Card represents good value.

It is SOLELY down to how you travel and which of the card benefits you can use.  This varies from person to person.  Most people value the Priority Pass airport lounge access cards the most, for example, but I don’t because we usually fly Business Class and my wife and I both have British Airways status anyway.

On the other hand, as non car-owning Londoners, we do disproportionately value the car hire insurance and the Fine Hotels & Resorts luxury hotel benefits, since the 4pm guaranteed late check-out is a real boon if you are only away for a long weekend.  Who wants to be kicked out of their hotel at 11am on a Sunday?

I run through this in more detail below.  It is why, of all the credit and charge cards we cover on Head for Points, American Express Platinum is the one that people often find the hardest to get their head around.

What is the sign up bonus on The Platinum Card?

American Express Platinum offers the biggest single sign-up bonus of any UK travel card.  (It is, temporarily, matched by the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard which is offering 30,000 Virgin Flying Club miles until 30th June – details here.)

You receive 30,000 American Express Membership Rewards points which convert into:

  • 30,000 Avios
  • 30,000 Virgin Flying Club miles
  • 30,000 Singapore Airlines, Emirates, Etihad, Flying Blue, Alitalia, Asia Miles, Delta, Finnair or SAS miles
  • 60,000 Hilton Honors points
  • 45,000 Marriott Bonvoy points
  • 90,000 Radisson Rewards points
  • 2,000 Club Eurostar points

….. and many other non-travel rewards.  I wrote this article on the most valuable Membership Rewards redemptions.

If you apply before 11th June, you need to spend £2,000 within 90 days to receive the 30,000 points.  From 11th June you will need to spend £4,000.

The card currently has an annual fee of £450.  This will increase to £575 on 11th June and to £575 from 1st August for existing cardholders, kicking in from the next renewal.

You can, of course, cancel the card at any point for a pro-rata fee refund.  This reduces the risk considerably if you don’t find it is right for you.

Remember that the Platinum card is a charge card, not a credit card.  You MUST clear your balance in full at the end of each month.

I have had one since 1999, so clearly there is real value to be had – although, in recent years, I have used it purely for HFP-related expenditure which allows me to treat the card fee as a business expense.

Even if the card is right for you, it may not be right for you in two years or five years.  If it isn’t right for you today, it might be next year.

American Express UK Platinum £575 fee

Here are the American Express Platinum core benefits (for me)

Here are the key card benefits to me.  As you read on, you will probably say to yourself that you would value some of these at nothing.  That’s fine.  You may value some of the benefits that I never use.  As I said, there is no right or wrong decision about whether Platinum works for you.

Full travel insurance

You receive travel insurance for yourself and your family as long as you are under 70.  You can insure five other people and their families by giving them supplementary cards on your account.  Some benefits require you to pay for your trip with an American Express card (any UK personal Amex card, not necessarily Platinum) but the core medical benefit is automatic.  My family relies on this as our core family travel policy and do not pay for any other cover.  It may not be suitable for you if you have pre-existing conditions as there is no ability to pay a supplement to have them included.

Car hire insurance

You receive full car hire insurance.  As we live in London and don’t own a car, this is very useful for us as we hire 3-4 times per year.

Airport lounge access via Priority Pass

You and your main supplementary cardholder will each receive a Priority Pass card.  This gets the cardholder plus a guest into 1,000 airport lounges across the world for free, including the Club Aspire lounge in Heathrow Terminal 5 reviewed here.  As you get two Priority Pass cards, each of which allows a free guest, you can get a family of four into a lounge.  This article (click) looks at the UK lounges you can access with Priority Pass.

Platinum cardholders can also access the impressive Plaza Premium lounge in Heathrow Terminal 5 by showing their Platinum card – this lounge is not in Priority Pass but Amex has a direct deal.

You can also get into Amex’s own network of high quality ‘Centurion’ airport lounges for free.  These are primarily in the US but are rolling out globally – new ones opened in Hong Kong and Melbourne recently.  The first UK Centurion lounge, at Heathrow Terminal 3, is due to open in late 2019.

I do not personally use this benefit as I have British Airways status and our long-haul travel is always in Business Class.  That said, we do occasionally find ourselves at airports where BA does not provide lounge access.  Obviously if you do not have airline status then this benefit has substantial value.

Hotel status

You will also receive permanent – for as long as you hold your Platinum card – status in various hotel schemes:

  • Gold in Hilton Honors
  • Gold in Marriott Bonvoy
  • Gold in Radisson Rewards
  • Jade in Shangri-La Golden Circle
  • Gold in MeliaRewards

I value these cards highly and usually plan my stays around hotels which will give me additional status benefits.  You can also get status with Taj Inner Circle because they have an official status matching policy with Shangri-La Golden Circle.

Eurostar and Delta lounge access

Other benefits include Eurostar lounge access in London, Brussels and Paris whatever your class of travel.  You also receive lounge access when flying with Delta although any guests must pay $29.

I do value the Eurostar benefit because I tend to travel Standard Premier which gets the business class seat but without lounge access.  No guests are allowed although your partner can come in if they have a supplementary Platinum card on your account.  At quiet times they will unofficially allow children in.

Exclusive events

American Express offers an exclusive events programme.  This is a mix of free events and special paid events with top restaurants or shows.  Now that I have a couple of kids my ability to nip off to every free party I get invited to is much reduced, but I have attended a few good evenings over the years I have held my Platinum card.

The value here obviously varies massively.  Would you be interested, for example, in joining a private meal hosted personally by a high-profile chef in their flagship restaurant even if the cost was higher than a standard meal in the same venue?  Would you be interested in the best seats in the house for a high profile concert, with a private drinks reception beforehand for Platinum guests, if the cost was higher than a standard top-priced ticket (which sold out months ago)?  Some would be keen, some wouldn’t.

Exclusive benefits at luxury hotels

There is an exclusive hotel booking scheme called ‘Fine Hotels & Resorts’ which offers valuable additional benefits on your stays.  If you are a regular visitor at five star hotels then you can recoup your entire membership fee via FHR bookings.

I wrote more about FHR here – for me, the guaranteed 4pm check-out on every stay is invaluable, especially for weekend breaks.  We use this benefit whenever I must have a 4pm check-out, which can make a real difference on a short break.

Of course, if you are not bothered about a guaranteed 4pm check out, you can get similar benefits (free breakfast, upgrade if available, $100 food and drink credit) at similar hotels by booking via HFP’s luxury hotel partner Bon Vivant.  Details of that service are here.

£10 monthly Addison Lee taxi credit

This is a new benefit from 11th June.  It does not roll over, so you need to make one taxi ride per month to receive the money.  We never use Addison Lee at all at the moment, but the lure of £10 per month means that I almost certainly will download the app.  If you apply now you will still receive this benefit from 11th June even though you are paying the old fee and not £575.

$200 cashback per onefinestay home or apartment rental

I don’t see my family using this one.  We have never been villa people.  onefinestay is high end and you won’t find much in Europe or the US under £300 per night, with a 3-night minimum stay in most cases, so the deal is not as good as it first appears.

If you are a villa or home rental person, however, you will do exceptionally well here as you can earn the cashback as many times as you want.

What do I earn per £1 spent on the card?

You receive 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on the card.  1 Membership Rewards point is equivalent to 1 Avios or other airline mile per £1 if you choose to transfer them.  Spending with American Express Travel, booked and paid for online, earns 2 points per £1.

To be honest, many people who have the card focus their spending elsewhere – in order, for example, to trigger the 2-4-1 voucher on the British Airways American Express card.

Can I get the sign-up bonus if I have a British Airways American Express card?

Yes.  The new rule is that you will not receive a sign-up bonus if you have held a Platinum, Gold or Green American Express charge card, or the Amex Rewards credit card, in the 24 months before you apply.

You WILL receive the sign-up bonus if you have a Corporate or Business American Express Green, Gold or Platinum card via your job and you receive Membership Rewards points from it.  This is a recent change to the rules.  Only PERSONAL cards impact on whether you qualify.

For clarity, you will definitely receive the sign-up bonus on The Platinum Card if you already have a BA Amex, SPG Amex, Platinum Cashback Amex or any American Express card issued by Lloyds or MBNA.

You will also definitely receive the bonus if you are currently a supplementary cardholder on someone else’s Amex Gold or Platinum card.  As far as Amex is concerned, that card belongs to the primary cardholder and does not make you an ‘existing cardholder’.

What is the target spend to receive the bonus?

If you apply before 11th June – which, for clarity, means by midnight on Monday 10th June – you need to spend £2,000 within 90 days to receive the bonus.  New applicants after 11th June need to spend £4,000.

There is clearly a substantial benefit to applying before 11th June to lock in the £450 fee for the first year and have the lower £2,000 spend target to trigger the bonus.

Conclusion

As always, whether or not the fee on The Platinum Card represents value for money long-term depends on how many of the card benefits you will use, although you can cancel for a pro-rata fee refund at any point.

If you think it could work for you – and you should easily come out on top for the first year when you factor in the 30,000 points, the insurance, the airport lounge access, the hotel status cards and the new £10 Addison Lee credit – I would make a move before 11th June.

You won’t receive your card in metal – Amex is still sending out plastic ones until 11th June.  If that really matters to you, a quick telephone call on or after 11th June saying you have lost your plastic card or the dog bit it and destroyed the chip should ensure a new metal one is sent to you …..

My full review of American Express Platinum is here.

The application form for Amex Platinum can be found here.


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 (184)

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

  • koroleon says:

    Another Green to Plat upgrade question: are there any time restrictions on this? If I have had a Gold Amex in the last 6 months can I still do this?

  • Jimmy says:

    Just been pointed out too, this card looks different to the US metal card – it’s a different font & also there’s no Platinum wording on the card, probably irrelevant change but just to point out

  • s879 says:

    OT: I applied for the BA Amex free card but haven’t hit the required spend to get signup bonus. If I upgrade to the Premium one before I hit the target spend, will it give me the bonus for the premium card. I realised I should have gone for the premium one and then downgraded but trying to get the higher bonus. Please advise.

    • Shoestring says:

      you need to spend more 🙂

    • Peter K says:

      No chance of getting higher bonus by upgrading and highly unlikely you will get the bonus on the lower value card if you upgrade before you hit it.

  • aceman says:

    I think I have to cancel platinum. The travel insurance has become worthless to me. They just denied a claim on luggage because my flight connected in london. Any connection to your home country basically invalidates baggage delay insurance.

    So AMS-LHR-XXX with a 1 hour connection and they say sorry, you’ve returned home…. Great for a traveller…

    • Cash says:

      Get on to FOS

    • jc says:

      Ask them on what grounds. The T&Cs exclude “Baggage delay or extended baggage delay on the final leg of Your return flight” – which yours clearly wasn’t. And if they won’t play ball (as has often been the case for me recently with promised things they’ve then backtracked on – not necessarily insurance related), the Ombudsman will sort it.

  • Chris Jones says:

    Austrian platinum issues.

    I referred myself (not sure if allowed) for a platinum in Austria as this is now my official residency. Banking sector here is from the 80s. When I signed up it said 30k points bonus for spending limit. Now I have the card they say only valid in the UK. Is this a battle I can win?

    • Peter K says:

      Maybe if you have screenshots of what was promised. Otherwise unlikely. Also, is it worth potentially annoying amex so they just block you in future?

  • Roy says:

    I’m surprised you don’t use Add Lee, Rob. It’s my default cab company for most journeys, business or personal – including airport transfers (when I chose to use a cab rather than public transport). Although I do sometimes use Gett to hall a black cab at peak times if Add Lee have a long wait time or I’m in a sufficient rush that I value the ability of black cabs to use bus lanes to avoid the jams…

    Not as cheap as a local minicab firm, sure, but more reliable IME. (I personally don’t use Uber so not able to make a comparison there.)

    • Crafty says:

      You are probably in the minority. Add Lee lost a huge amount of its business both corporate and personal to Uber once it started its growth in the UK.

  • Timbo says:

    Does anyone know whether the new card will be as pictured above, or if it will include the word ‘Platinum’ on the front, as per the Norwegian version? Small detail, but just curious!

    • Rob says:

      The picture I used was sent to my by Amex so I am guessing it is accurate.

    • S says:

      Most likely this. It’s their new branding. The Norwegian one has the old branding.

      The typeface of this is just like on the US gold, so seems like we’ll get the newly redesigned Platinum first.

      • LeeR says:

        That’s right. This is part of their new branding; part of the new branding is removing the word “Platinum” from the card. Also notice the new centurion image, which debuted on the American metal Gold Card.

  • S says:

    OT: Does Amex do per-card spending limits? My and my SO separated and I no longer want her to be able to use my account, but I don’t want to cut off all the Platinum benefits, so I was just wondering if there’s a way I could set a limit on her card to something like £1000?

    • Si says:

      Sorry to hear.

      Unsure of answer but I suspect not. Assuming you’re the main cardmember, you’re responsible for all repayments on both cards. A quick call would do no harm though.

      (For what it’s worth, if it were me, I’d politely cancel the supplementary card.)

      Good luck though…never a fun time for anyone.

    • Replicable Username says:

      Her hotel stautuses would persist for a while after her card is cancelled.

      I don’t know anything about either of you, or the amount of trust between you of course, but what I do know is that you are obligated to repay on time whatever she spends, no matter how much, and that if she then didn’t repay you either you’d have to swallow it or take her to court.

      • Replicable Username says:

        I forgot to say that I asked Amex once if I could put a limit on a supplementary card, and they said no.

    • Stephan says:

      Similar situation, had the odd online subscription etc come through after ex-SO stopped using the card. Amex was able to put a hold of some sort on it to disable the card, but PP etc all still in place. Give them a call?

    • S says:

      Can’t set spending limit or stop the card.

      Just cancelled the supp.

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