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Why you should get a free Curve Card to maximise your miles and points from credit cards

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Yesterday we looked at new changes to Curve Card, including the ability to pay your credit card bill with another credit card via Curve, for a 1.5% fee.

I promised that I would run an updated version of our introduction to Curve Card for the benefit of new Head for Points readers who may not have heard about it and don’t understand what it offers.  Here you go!

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

Why should you get a free Curve Card?

Curve Card is an intriguing payment product which has a lot to offer to miles and points collectors.  Whilst this introductory article is a little complex at times, the key thing to remember is that Curve Card is free – in fact, they pay you £10 for trying it – so you have nothing at risk.

The key benefit of Curve is that – if you link it to another Visa or Mastercard which earns miles or points – you will be earning miles on debit card as well as credit card payments, and foreign transactions will no longer have a 3% FX fee.

You will even earn miles and points on ATM cash withdrawals up to certain limits.

Whilst we talk about Curve in a UK context in this article, it is actually available in all 31 countries in the European Economic Area.

What is Curve?

Let’s start by saying what Curve isn’t.

Curve is NOT a bank account.  It is NOT like Revolut, Monzo, Starling or Monese.  If you take out a Curve Card you are NOT getting a ‘current account on a card’.

Curve is simply an intermediary card, a Mastercard to which you can link all of your existing Visa and Mastercard payment cards

Via the Curve app you can select which linked card you want to use at any particular time.  Curve transactions are automatically recharged onto that card.  Even if a shop does not accept credit cards at all, only debit cards, you can still pay with your Curve Mastercard, which is a debit card, and earn miles on the underlying Visa or Mastercard.

Council tax is an obvious possibility, along with some utility bills.

You cannot pay HMRC, the Government and ‘financial institutions’ such as credit card companies and mortgages for free using Curve.  There is a 1.5% fee.  The fee is waived if you have the £14.99 per month Curve Metal card, which we discuss in more detail below.

Curve Metal may be attractive to you if you have substantial tax or credit card bills each month due to the points you could earn on your underlying Visa or Mastercard.

Any transaction you make is automatically recharged to the relevant Visa or Mastercard by Curve.  Your card statement will show as ‘CRV*XXXXXX’ with XXXXXX being the name of the original merchant.

Curve has some other unique features:

Cash withdrawals are charged as a PURCHASE.  Yes, a cash withdrawal on your Curve debit Mastercard will be recharged as a purchase to your linked Visa or Mastercard. This is FREE for £200 per 30-day period on the free card.  Note that Tesco Bank and NatWest / RBS do NOT allow credit card holders to make free cash withdrawals via Curve. 

Overseas purchases are converted without an FX fee during Monday to Friday (except for free Curve Blue which is capped at £500 per 30-day period of free FX transactions with a 2% fee beyond that).  This is a better deal than using a separate free ‘no rewards’ credit card with 0% FX fees because you still earn rewards on the underlying linked card.  On weekends and UK public holidays, a 0.5% fee is added for € or $ transactions and 1.5% for other currencies.

ALL miles and points Mastercard and Visa credit cards carry a 3% foreign exchange fee.  By using Curve as an intermediary, you will now pay as little as 0% in FX fees and still earn miles and points.

What are the Curve Card limits?

Irrespective of the limits on your underlying cards, Curve has its own daily, monthly and annual limits.  Your limits are increased as Curve begins to ‘trust’ your behaviour.

These are the maximum limits you can get according to the website, although some people have been given more:

Daily spend (inc ATM withdrawals) – £3,750
Daily ATM withdrawal cap – £1,000
Monthly spending limit (on a rolling 30 day basis) – £20,000
Annual spending limit (on a rolling 12 month basis) – £50,000

You may not get this limit from Day 1 but, as you begin to use the card, your limits will be increased.

What are the three different types of Curve Card?

There are three different Curve Cards you can get:

The basic Curve Card (Curve Blue) is 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 unlimited foreign exchange recharging and provides some travel and insurance benefits

Curve Metal costs £14.99 per month and has a choice of three cool metal cards to choose from, allows unlimited foreign exchange recharging, pay-per-use airport lounge access and a broader range of travel and insurance benefits

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

To sign up to Curve, simply go to this page of their website to download the app.  You will see our special £10 bonus.  The easiest thing to do is order the free Blue card and then think about upgrading to Black or Metal once you are familiar with it, although you can start immediately on Black or Metal if you want.

Once you have received your card, you can link it to your ‘miles and points earning’ Visa and Mastercard products and start spending.

How to choose the right Curve Card for you

What are the features of free Curve Blue?

Curve Blue is free – free to apply and free to operate.

In summary:

Curve Blue fee: None

Card:  Plastic, not metal

Availability:  UK residents and various other EEA countries

Foreign exchange fees: £500 per 30-day period for no fee (0.5% fee $ or € and 1.5% fee for other currencies applies to transactions made on a Saturday, Sunday or on a bank holiday) with a 2% fee thereafter

Fee for paying off credit cards, tax and other financial transactions via Curve:  1.5%

ATM withdrawals: Overseas: £200 per 30-day period for free, 2% thereafter / UK: £200 per 30-day period fair use cap

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

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’.  The 1.5% fee only applies to HMRC, Government and ‘financial institutions’ transactions.

For most HfP readers, the free Curve Blue will be good enough.

What are the features of Curve Black?

In summary:

Curve Black fee: £9.99 per month

Card:  Plastic, not metal

Availability:  UK residents and various other EEA countries

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)

Fee for paying off credit cards, tax and other financial transactions via Curve:  1.5%

ATM withdrawals: Overseas: £400 per 30-day period for free, 2% thereafter / UK: £200 per 30-day period fair use cap

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 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.)

1% cashback from three premium retailers for as long as you hold the card.  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:

You can charge all of your foreign spending to a miles or points earning card 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 as I explain below.

What are the features of Curve Metal?

In summary:

Curve Metal fee: £14.99 per month (if you pay cancel or downgrade within six months, a £50 cancellation fee will apply)

Card: Funky 18g brushed metal card in red, blue or rose gold.  I have the blue one and it is a bit boring to be honest so I’d recommend one of the others!

Availability:  UK residents only

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)

Fee for paying off credit cards, tax and other financial transactions via Curve:  None

ATM withdrawals: Overseas: £600 per 30-day period for free, 2% thereafter / UK: £200 per 30-day period fair use cap

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 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)

Mobile phone insurance (maximum value £800)

Car rental CDW waiver coverage  (I have this via Amex Platinum but if you do hire cars and don’t have a standalone policy this will be worth something to you – the car must be worth under £25,000 however)

Airport lounge access via LoungeKey (this is NOT free access, you will need to pay a fee of £20 per visit)

1% cashback from six premium retailers for as long as you hold the card.  This is on top of the rewards you will earn from your underlying card.

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

You can charge all of your foreign spending to a miles or points earning card whilst paying 0% FX fees which should lead to a sharp increase in your points earning (0.5% fee $ or € and 1.5% fee for other currencies applies to transactions made on a Saturday or Sunday)

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’

You can pay off your credit cards, as well as pay HMRC and fund National Savings accounts and buy Premum Bonds, for no fee and have the cost recharged as a purchase to a miles-earning Visa or Mastercard (you need to test first that your underlying credit card does not treat these transactions as a cash advance)

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

That’s a good question.  For your extra £5 per month, you get a snazzy metal card plus:

  • 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 or stolen baggage (Curve Black does not)
  • The ability to pay £20 per visit for LoungeKey airport lounge access
  • The ability to pay unlimited sums (subject to your Curve Card limits) to HMRC, credit card companies, the Government and ‘financial institutions’ for free whilst earning points on the underlying Visa or Mastercard
  • 1% cashback from an additional three retailers

On this basis, I think Curve Metal justifies the small extra fee over Curve Black.  However, for many HfP readers the free Curve Blue card will be enough.

Conclusion

Curve Blue is a risk-free, NO FEE introduction to Curve.

For most HfP readers, Curve Blue – the free version – will be good enough.  You can easily upgrade via the app to Curve Black or Curve Metal if you choose to do so at a later date.

If you want to pay off – for free – your credit card bills with Curve, buy Premium Bonds, pay into National Savings accounts or pay HMRC, you need to get Curve Metal.

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

To sign up to Curve, simply go to this page of their website or download the app.  The easiest thing to do is order the free Blue card and then upgrade to Black or Metal once you have got familiar with it, although you can start immediately on Black or Metal if you want.

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


earns points from credit cards

Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2025 update

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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.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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British Airways American Express Premium Plus

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The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

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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:

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Capital on Tap Pro Visa

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Comments (238)

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

  • Simon says:

    The no FX fees is useful but can someone please clarify the timing.

    eg.I check out of my hotel in Sydney Australia at 7am local time on a Saturday. This is of course still Friday in the UK. So, will I be charged the 2.99% FX fee?

    Added complication – is the timing based on the date and time of the transaction or the date and time of the posting to your underlying credit card.

    Lastly my Virgin Atlantic Credit Card has justtolsme that it will no longer charge FX fees for transactions within the EEA but it then says transactions in Euros, Sterling,Swedish Krona and Romanian Lei- and as weall know there are several other currencies for EEA countries. The call centre did not know so i have raised a “complaint” in order to get this clarified and will post the answer when i get it.

  • JoshO says:

    Hi all – I was recently stung for interest by Revolut for topping up (direct) via IHG. After a number of calls complaining – on the basis that there was no warning of the rule change – I received a refund from IHG. The interest was added across two months statements and they refunded the first one (there and then on the call), and then the second one (immediately, without calling again) once that statement came thru. Thought it was worth sharing this.
    However, I don’t have a Curve but I am wondering would an indirect iHG top via Curve get round the problem above?
    Thanks in advance for any thoughts/experiences/advice

    • Andrew L says:

      I asked the same question yesterday. It’s worth a try with a small amount.

    • FloriGuy says:

      No. Curve pass through the MCC details to the underlying supplier.

    • Jimmy says:

      Why on earth would you call and highlight this! FFS

      • winston says:

        There are the types who are getting all these routes shut down. Crying because they lost a few pounds. And shouting from the rooftops when a new opportunity arises. Free Points in this game is fast coming to an end…

        • Spaghetti Town says:

          I’m sure another opportunity will appear at some point. Curve didn’t exist as route 2 years ago. Always knew it would come to an end.

          • Genghis says:

            Curve have been around since early 2016 IIRC and have been useful since the start.

      • Michael says:

        That’s what my comment below yours was getting at.

      • JoshO says:

        Calm yourself down mate. The coding has changed and fees are being charged – regardless of my call, it’s done. Plus do you honestly think some CS advisor has the clout to make changes in the way you imagine. Honestly. Engage it next time chief.

        • Peter K says:

          Actually, they can do, yes. I made a suggestion once to a Barclaycard agent about not automatically sending out envelopes for cheques to be sent in with payment if the person pays in full by DD. Within a handful of months they implemented it!

          • Peter K says:

            This was back in the days when paper statements were sent with an envelope in them for those who wanted to send payment that way.

        • Lady London says:

          Be very sure @JoshO : newbies calling about tiny amounts they are suddenly charged, or something beneficial not working in a way it did before, or asking the provider themselves questions about an idea they saw on the internet, has brought provider scrutiny to many, many useful features of products users had worked out, were using and were discreet about.

          Newbies did this instead of – shutting up and working it out for themselves, or – trying to adapt without making a fuss with the provider when something has disappeared, or -*discreetly* asking on the internet if anyone has come across the same thing and does anyone know of a workround. You’ll find us quite helpful on here for that. But if you blurt or draw the provider’s attention, no one will want to eat their lunch with you. If you want people to share be very discreet.

          I’ve not been in this game that long. But I remember many times the effect of someone contacting the provider was that those beneficial features were suddenly removed for everyone.

          • RedEyeDonkey says:

            Yep in case anyone new is reading this and wants to enjoy this game once things get back to normal… NEVER ring the provider… think you NEED to…? Still don’t call. Thanks!

          • Dezbez says:

            It’s a bit like Fight Club.

          • The Urbanite says:

            I agree with Lady London here.

            Easy routes shared online attract people who are blasé about drawing attention to the routes and care the least about getting them shut down. Curve, Revolut and the Post Office/Monese have all been busy shutting down MS routes shared on websites. I suspect NS&I is going to be a casualty sooner rather than later – we’ve seen in the past they know how to block cards by their BIN and one day Curve cards might suddenly stop working with them. They’re also doing KYC now.

            The people who put in the effort to research and test routes for themselves tend to be discreet and careful as it’s known the life of the route is shortened when you go ruffling feathers. Some under-the-radar routes come to a natural end and others have been going for years unhindered.

            The people who lose out the most are those who appreciate routes being shared and treat them responsibly.

          • JoshO says:

            Keen to listen/learn/understand LL – very keen to. However if the change has already happened (ie IHG now charging for top ups), where is the damage in asking for the charges back? I’m a bit confused on this point and keen to understand, genuinely. How does me phoning make the situation worse if they already know about it and have changed the rules/system.
            Also happy to ask on here for help but it does seem quite hard sometimes.
            Lastly – more than happy to stand corrected and be told not to do something, or be asked to stop doing it – but there is a way of doing that. Banging the F word around isn’t that way imho. A polite nudge in the right direction is far more likely to yield the right results. I’m obviously not referring to your message here, which is appreciated.

          • The Urbanite says:

            Creation always charge you if you transact with a merchant with MCC 4829. It’s in the T&Cs that you pay for cash-like transactions which is pretty much what 4829 merchants offer.

            Revolut are the ones who quietly changed their MCC from something else to 4829, multiple times, thus getting you charged. The banks aren’t actually to blame for this. MCCs change and if a merchant offers a cash equivalent service they may well have to change their MCC to reflect that. As a points collector I wish they wouldn’t. I’ve stopped topping it up with cards that charge as since November 2019 it has become a very unstable and unpredictable route. Others who continue to top it up 5 months after they started changing the MCC around are taking a risk of incurring charges and getting zero rewards for their trouble.

            The banks seem to be spending time and resources on this and something will give if people keep topping up Revolut then going to them or their credit card issuers for fee and interest refunds!

    • Michael says:

      If you don’t mind me asking how much interest were you charged? I was charged £6.51 by IHG on my last statement after tipping up Rev. No cash advance fee though and for the small amount I didn’t think it was worth chasing IHG.

      • Secret Squirrel says:

        I was charged £4.62 last month but it was my fault, I didn’t pay off top ups for over a week.

      • FloriGuy says:

        I don’t understand. Why would Creation charge interest but not a Cash Advance fee? I would have thought if it was not a cash advance there would be no interest.

      • JoshO says:

        £29 month 1, and £21 month 2. £21 in month 2 automatically credited when the statement generated – tbf they said they would do that but I had little faith.

    • Cloud says:

      I topped up Revolut via Curve last month (underlying card is IHG Premium). Creation charged interest on that transaction.

  • FloriGuy says:

    Brilliant! Let’s shine the light on what already is a very precarious opportunity for those in the community. 3V all over again.

    I hope the extra ad revenue is worth it.

    • winston says:

      It seems the Free Points days are pretty much over from 3V, Churning, Revoult, Curve + Amex, now this. All sold to the masses for a few quid….
      241 voucher on BA next as the masses exploit that to the max cancelling their refundable flights to gain the voucher.

      • FloriGuy says:

        Churning?

        • Secret Squirrel says:

          Credit card bonus intro offers, every 6x months but most shut down that route now.

          • FloriGuy says:

            Ahh – I was aware of that but never really did it. Never had the time. I ended up getting my wife additional Amex cards but ended up keeping them since they came in handy

      • Rob says:

        You’re clearly not paying huge tax bills with a Lufthansa credit card ….

        • Neil Donoghue says:

          I used my Miles & More card once using Curve for a cash withdrawal and got hit with a savage chunk of interest! Do you use it directly Rob?

          • Rob says:

            Same happened to me when I tried it.

            But the M&M Mastercard is a debit card and acts like one (albeit one which doesn’t allow cash withdrawals for free).

          • Neil Donoghue says:

            Thanks Rob, makes sense!

        • Spaghetti Town says:

          Another credit card that may become useless soon.

    • Rob says:

      We’ve run versions of this article every few months for the last 3 years!

    • Doug M says:

      No, so long as you say Seagulls and Ernie the code will never be cracked…..

      • bazza says:

        I raise you a government bank and Brighton!

      • FloriGuy says:

        Ernie? Can you be less cryptic

      • Lady London says:

        Code words are helpful though Doug. When I worked for one of the best marketing companies in the world a few years ago I was shocked at how they have machines to pick up every word said about them on social media, analyse and report *daily* so they can re-strategise.

        So using words that have regular meanings, in a particular way, on here will add a layer of cloaking to the social media analysis engines. For providers to pick it up, extra effort would have to be made to target sites like these and vocabularies would have to be regularly updated to these by engines.

        Not impossible but each step you add means a provider is less likely to spot a useful feature they don’t really want to give us, quickly.

        • Doug M says:

          Interesting. I would however be amazed if Seagulls didn’t know all about how their cards are used, I bet they knew all about self-referrals, churning and so forth. They stop it when the level determines that it is no longer offset by their wins, and then when the IT changes are ready.
          I’d be equally amazed if Curve knew what day of the week it was. The T&C’s simply aren’t applied in many areas in my experience. Great card for me, lousy for investors.

          • Rob says:

            In general, they don’t know. We see them now and then for a chat and they use us as a sounding board occasionally. Their big problem is that they need to become a mainstream business but I don’t see a path to that. Doing stuff that works for our readership isn’t going to get them to 5 million cardholders.

            It could, clearly, be profitable as a very niche business but they have raised too much money now. They have no choice but to double down because their equity investors want a big return.

            If HFP took £10m of investment next week then we’d have to do the same – there is a natural cap of around 2-3 million page view per month for what we do, I reckon, but if we raised £10m we’d need to be looking at 20 million views per month. We’d become Conde Nast Traveller with a 5% miles and points content. And we’d soon be bust.

          • Secret Squirrel says:

            Wasn’t there a rumour someone who works for the Seagulls FC lurked on here?

          • Rob says:

            There are 90 Amex employees on the HFP email list – probably more as I assume some use personal email accounts and not aexp.com.

          • Spaghetti Town says:

            @ Rob – so what you’re saying then amex have known about this all along, both through HFP and their own systems.

          • Rob says:

            Everyone reads HFP. Even super-senior people read it, because the normal trade sites are just full of republished press releases so it is tricky to find insight. Oddly the UK credit card industry doesn’t have a single trade magazine devoted to it, so we are as near as it gets.

        • The Urbanite says:

          A lot of people are very interested in reading reasoned comments about things they have influence over at work. Therefore I’d be surprised if people working for the rewards credit card issuers aren’t reading this site and the comments!

  • jason says:

    I have the following message when paying with my curve card… Open your app to verify your payment, my curve card is linked to IHG, might be being thick but what app am i supposed to open?

    • bazza says:

      Clearly! Throw your card away and never use it again!

    • Peter K says:

      Curve app. It’s a weird glitch where sometimes curve will create an accept/reject notification you need to accept, but sometimes it doesn’t provide this and you need to cancel the transaction and start again.

  • makrxx says:

    So if I were to use my Curve card (linked to HSBC Premier Elite World MC) to top up my Hargreaves Lansdown ISA, I will now be hit with a 1.5% fee right?

  • Roger* says:

    ‘,,, ALL miles and points Mastercard and Visa credit cards carry a 3% foreign exchange fee …’

    That would seem to exclude Virgin Atlantic MasterCards from Virgin Money, who say they don’t surcharge transactions in EEA currencies.

  • shane says:

    Which time zone is operative when ensuring one avoids weekends on overseas transactions?

    Is it UK time (and if so BST or GMT?); local time wherever one happens to be; or some other time zone (e.g. East Coast USA for transactions that get converted first into USD and then into sterling)?

    • RTS says:

      tbh… don’t think i have ever been charged a FX fee on the curve blue card

      • Genghis says:

        I ran the numbers back in January based on comments from others and found no evidence of weekend loading. YMMV.

        • shd says:

          Q: were you doing EUR or USD transactions?

          I’ve never been completely confident about the rate Curve is using for EUR transactions, even Monday-Friday.

    • Don says:

      It could be that people are hitting the £500 fee-free on the weekend which makes it look like the weekend loading is applying.

  • Boi says:

    Can curve give us 2 weeks notice atleast before this 1.5%.
    I know it won’t happen but just asking 🤣

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