Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Why the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard is the best cashback credit card for most people

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Barclaycard has just launched two new Avios earning Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit cards.

These are very, very good products with everything you could ask for, and are easily (in my view) the most attractive Visa or Mastercard credit cards in the UK. You get:

  • a great sign-up bonus which the majority of HfP readers will qualify for – and it’s even bigger if you apply this week
  • a very high Avios earning rate
  • an annual BA cabin upgrade voucher for hitting spending targets

Every HfP reader in the UK should seriously consider applying for one of these cards.

You can apply for the Barclaycard Avios Plus credit card here and the free Barclaycard Avios credit card here.

Barclaycard Avios

Why the free Barclaycard Avios card is exceptionally good if you want cashback, not Avios

Slightly counter-intuitively, the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard is now the best free cashback card in Britain for most people.

It even beats the two American Express Platinum Cashback cards unless you are a big spender.

It is equally as good as the free British Airways American Express card, but the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard is more widely accepted.

Do you believe Nectar points are as good as cash?

My argument assumes, of course, that you believe Nectar points are as good as cash. Whether you do believe this will depend on how much money you spend in Sainsbury’s, in Argos or on eBay.co.uk, the main outlets for Nectar points.

A reminder about how Avios and Nectar convert

In January 2021, Avios and Nectar unveiled their new partnership, making the two currencies interchangeable.

In a huge surprise, the two companies introduced two-way points transfers. This page of ba.com explains how Nectar transfers work.

Not only that, but the transfers were at a very generous rate for both parties:

HFP-Barclaycard-Avios-Card
  • 250 Avios gets you 400 Nectar points, which are worth £2 off your shopping at Sainsbury’s, Argos or eBay
  • 400 Nectar points get you 250 Avios, which HfP tends to value at around £2-£2.50

Following the launch of the partnership ….

  • the value of a Nectar point increased from 0.5p unless you have a very low valuation of an Avios point (and if you do have a low valuation of an Avios, you’re unlikely to be reading this)
  • Avios suddenly had a ‘floor’ value of 0.8p, since this was what you got by moving them to Nectar and redeeming for shopping credit. You would be a mug to redeem Avios for any other redemption which got you less than 0.8p per point.

This led to a big disruption to the established order. For example:

  • you’d be mad to redeem Avios for hotel bookings, car hire, seat selection fees or even, in almost all cases, ‘Part Pay With Avios’, since all of these get you less than 0.8p per point
  • most American Express Membership Rewards redemptions became irrelevant, because almost all of them get you less than 0.8p per point. You should transfer to Avios and into Nectar instead, guaranteeing the 0.8p valuation.
Nectar Avios light

The free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard has now become the UK’s best cashback credit card

….. for most people. Yes, weird but true.

If you know someone looking for a free cashback credit card, tell them to get the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard.

The representative APR is 29.9% variable.

There is a bonus of 5,000 Avios if you spend £1,000 within three months. This is worth £40 of Nectar points which is a very generous sign-up offer for a free credit card.

This is how the free Barclaycard Avios card compares to the best cashback cards.

It is clearly better than other Mastercard / Visa options such as:

  • Barclaycard Rewards Visa (0.25% cashback)
  • John Lewis Partnership Mastercard (0.25% in John Lewis vouchers)
  • Sainsbury’s Nectar Mastercard (0.1% in Nectar points)

Let’s jump straight to the top of the market. The UK’s best ‘pure’ free cashback credit card is American Express Platinum Cashback Everyday.

The representative APR is 30.0% variable.

It pays you, per calendar year:

  • 0.5% cashback on spend up to £10,000 (but 0% if your annual spend is under £3,000)
  • 1% cashback on spend above £10,000

The cashback comes as a lump sum at the year-end, added to your card balance.

Let’s compare this to the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard. The free Barclaycard pays:

  • 1 Avios per £1 spent, with 1 Avios converting into 1.6 Nectar points, worth 0.8p
HFP Amex American Express Platinum Cashback card

Compare the free Barclaycard Avios card to the free Amex Platinum Cashback Everyday

This is what you would receive each year in cashback with different levels of spending. Remember that Cashback Everyday requires £3,000 of annual spending before it pays out.

  • £1,000 – £0 with Cashback Everyday vs £8 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £2,000 – £0 with Cashback Everyday vs £16 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £3,000 – £15 with Cashback Everyday vs £24 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £4,000 – £20 with Cashback Everyday vs £32 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £5,000 – £25 with Cashback Everyday vs £40 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £6,000 – £30 with Cashback Everyday vs £48 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £7,000 – £35 with Cashback Everyday vs £56 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £8,000 – £40 with Cashback Everyday vs £64 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £9,000 – £45 with Cashback Everyday vs £72 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £10,000 – £50 with Cashback Everyday vs £80 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £11,000 – £60 with Cashback Everyday vs £88 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £12,000 – £70 with Cashback Everyday vs £96 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £13,000 – £80 with Cashback Everyday vs £104 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £14,000 – £90 with Cashback Everyday vs £112 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £15,000 – £100 with Cashback Everyday vs £120 Nectar credit with Barclaycard

Unless you spend over £25,000 per year, the free American Express Platinum Cashback Everyday card gets you a lower return than the Nectar points you’d earn from the free Barclaycard Avios credit card.

This assumes, of course, that you treat Nectar points as equivalent to cash. If you shop in Sainsbury’s then they definitely are as good as cash.

If you would need to go out of your way to use them, either at Sainsbury’s, Argos, eBay.co.uk or another partner, then you need to factor that in.

I would never deny that cash beats the equivalent value in vouchers, although you will get the occasional Nectar promotion where you can get more than 0.5p per point.

Compare the free Barclaycard Avios card to the £25 Amex Platinum Cashback card

American Express has a second cashback card, Platinum Cashback.

The representative APR is 36.0% variable, including the annual fee.  The representative APR on purchases is 30.4% variable.

This carries a £25 annual fee but has a higher return:

  • 0.75% cashback on spend up to £10,000
  • 1.25% cashback on spend above £10,000

The free Barclaycard Avios card is still more rewarding than the £25 Platinum Cashback card unless you are spending £17,000 per year.

Here is the return, adjusting for the £25 annual fee on the Platinum Cashback card.

  • £1,000 – £(17.50) with Platinum Cashback vs £8 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £2,000 – £(10) with Platinum Cashback vs £16 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £3,000 – £2.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £24 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £4,000 – £5 with Platinum Cashback vs £32 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £5,000 – £12.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £40 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £6,000 – £20 with Platinum Cashback vs £48 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £7,000 – £27.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £56 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £8,000 – £35 with Platinum Cashback vs £64 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £9,000 – £42.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £72 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £10,000 – £50 with Platinum Cashback vs £80 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £11,000 – £62.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £88 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £12,000 – £75 with Platinum Cashback vs £96 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £13,000 – £87.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £104 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £14,000 – £100 with Platinum Cashback vs £112 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £15,000 – £112.50 with Platinum Cashback vs £120 Nectar credit with Barclaycard

You need to spend £17,000 – adjusting for the £25 fee – before the American Express Platinum Cashback card beats the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard.

And, of course, the Mastercard is more widely accepted than the American Express cards.

How about the American Express Nectar credit card?

I know what you’re thinking:

“Surely the official Nectar American Express card earns you more from Nectar points than the free Barclaycard Avios credit card?”

Here’s the thing ….. it doesn’t. The Nectar American Express card has a £25 annual fee after the first year, which cuts into your return.

The representative APR from year 2 is 36.8% variable.  The representative APR on purchases, and in the first year, is 30.0% variable.

The Nectar American Express card earns you:

  • 2 Nectar points, worth 1p, for every £1 spent

This is how your returns stack up, adjusting for the £25 fee on Nectar American Express after the first year:

  • £1,000 – £(15) with Nectar Amex vs £8 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £2,000 – £(5) with Nectar Amex vs £16 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £3,000 – £5 with Nectar Amex vs £24 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £4,000 – £15 with Nectar Amex vs £32 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £5,000 – £25 with Nectar Amex vs £40 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £6,000 – £35 with Nectar Amex vs £48 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £7,000 – £45 with Nectar Amex vs £56 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £8,000 – £55 with Nectar Amex vs £64 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £9,000 – £65 with Nectar Amex vs £72 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £10,000 – £75 with Nectar Amex vs £80 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £11,000 – £85 with Nectar Amex vs £88 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £12,000 – £95 with Nectar Amex vs £96 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £13,000 – £105 with Nectar Amex vs £104 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £14,000 – £115 with Nectar Amex vs £112 Nectar credit with Barclaycard
  • £15,000 – £125 with Nectar Amex vs £120 Nectar credit with Barclaycard

You need to spend £13,000 before, adjusting for the £25 fee which kicks in from Year 2, the Nectar American Express gets you more ‘pseudo’ cashback than the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard.

Conclusion

It’s a weird old world, but – as the numbers above show – the free Barclaycard Avios credit card is now the best cashback credit card in Britain for most people, unless you are spending over £13,000 per year.

To beat the return on the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard, assuming you transferred your Avios into Nectar points, you’d need to spend:

….. before it became a better deal.

Is any non-flyer really going to apply for the free Barclaycard Avios credit card purely to use it as a cashback card? Probably not, but they should.

To learn more about the cards, read our Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card review here and our Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card review here.

PS. Before anyone mentions it ….. I am aware that you can make the same case for the American Express Rewards Credit Card. This is free for life and earns 1 American Express Membership Rewards point per £1. These would convert 1:1 into Avios and then 1:1.6 into Nectar. American Express remains less flexible than a Mastercard, though.

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

Get 5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

Comments (85)

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

  • Qrfan says:

    Unless you have >£1000 per month of non amex spend surely the better approach is one of those other cards, then get the premium Barclays avios for the bonus once every 24 months. The bonus opportunity cost of holding the free card is significant.

    • Willy says:

      Bonus is every 6 months. It’s Amex that does the 2 year rule

      • Rob says:

        No, apparently the small print says that you can only get a Barc bonus after a 24 month gap even though you can reapply after six months.

        • Harrier25 says:

          It Virgin Atlantic that has the 6 month rule.

        • Qrfan says:

          Yep, very clear in the terms.

          2 We’ll only apply one Avios Welcome Bonus in relation to your card to your BAEC account during the lifetime of
          your card account. If you close your card account after you receive your Avios Welcome Bonus and then open
          another Barclaycard Avios card account within 2 years after you closed the original account, you will not be
          eligible for another Avios Welcome Bonus.

  • David says:

    Barclaycard Avios is unfortunately not available to Crown Dependency residents, even like me, you are already a personal client of Barclays for more than 35 years. I assume there are no plans to change card acceptance rules?

    • Rob says:

      It’s down to Avios I think. It is in their interest to carve out the Channel Islands to allow an offshore bank to launch an Avios card in the future.

  • Pb says:

    I am assuming these cards have better app and desktop function than the business card which has very clumsy presentation of information and desktop month statements are very behind the game , the statement info summary is diabolical.

  • captaindave says:

    I have had current account and mortgage with Barclays for many years now, and also have an Avios account which has never had any avios in it ( i set it up to link to my Nectar account for a competition IIRC )

    Question is, i use my “main” email for Barclays & Nectar, but use a “secondary” email for the empty Avios account. Is this likely to cause me any issues if i open the “FREE” Barclays card and want to swap the Avios over to Nectar ?
    Ta

    • John says:

      Nectar doesn’t need to be in the same name as Avios

      Only need to use real name and details for nectar if you want the nectar amex

  • Nigel Hamilton says:

    And is fee free abroad.

    • Qrfan says:

      I think the chase experience is fantastic too. The app “just works” and the fact you view your card details in the app is very convenient (I wish amex did this). There’s no section 75 though so be careful where/when you use it.

      • Olly says:

        Agree. Very impressed with it so far

      • Blindman67 says:

        The “app ” does not work on any of my Samsung phones-Android v10 +
        CS says there is no work around.

        No, I am not buying another phone….

        • Qrfan says:

          It probably doesn’t work on a Nokia 3310 either but that doesn’t change my view on it. Keep your old phone and use a legacy bank that opens 4 days a week 9-3.30. I’m sure you’ll be happy regardless.

  • aseftel says:

    I think you ought to make it clearer in the article that existing Barclaycard customers would not qualify for the bonuses.

  • Darren says:

    I also think it is a little misleading to say that all should be thinking of moving to this card when existing Barclaycard holders don’t qualify. It is a great shame that Barclaycard treat their existing customers so poorly. As a Platinum Barclaycard holder I am seriously considering closing my account and moving my business elsewhere.

    • Rob says:

      To be honest I have been very surprised by how many HfP readers had a Barclaycard. I would have put it at under 5% (and perhaps it is, and they are just a noisy bunch!) The Hilton card has been shut for years and there was little to recommend in the rest of the portfolio.

      • nwmgc says:

        Some of us are a bit older – once upon a time Barclaycard was (along with Access which became a Mastercard), the only Visa card available (I got mine in 1974). I still have it with a very substantial limit, unused, but I cannot swap to this new card which I would use!

        • Michele says:

          I have the same problem. I can’t remember the last time I used mine. I have been trying to cancel it – wish I had pursued cancelling more over the years but alas. I am going to cancel mine and if any of the offers come up again in 6 months time then I will look to reapply and use it.

      • WaynedP says:

        I have a Barclaycard Platinum Visa that I only use for balance transfers – a couple of years ago I was able to put a few chunky flight&cruise packages through for a 1.9% transfer fee and pay off over 18 months without any further interest.

        This article prompted me to shop around and I have just taken out another card with a 20 month interest free balance transfer that will receive the even chunkier cost of new double glazing (paid on Virgin card at 1.5 miles per pound).

        Will cancel my Barclays platinum today and wait six months to assess (from comments) how well or poorly this new proposition fares before potentially jumping in.

        Rob, would it be cheeky of me to suggest that you diarise another conversation with Barclays for another HfP bonus offer in about six months time ? 😉

      • Kevin says:

        Mine has been dormant for the last 12 months but earlier this week I finally cancelled it. Hopefully the sign up bonus will be around in six months time

      • Rob says:

        It was a terrible card for spending on though. You were meant to get it, take the free night and then close it again. I even gave an infamous conference speech to a credit card industry event where I held this up as (from their point of view) the worst co-brand credit card on the market. This was – and I kid you not – the month before it was shut down.

        • WaynedP says:

          Hmmm, coincidence, or not, that is the question.

          What’s it feel like to potentially enjoy Gerald Ratneresque powers, Rob ?

  • Miss London says:

    Rob, any news on if the HFP bonus points will still be honoured if you apply before the 4th but aren’t approved until after that date? I applied on Monday 28th and got the “we need to do more checks” message. Still not heard anything back yet so don’t know if/when approved, though I can see a soft affordability search on my credit file (surprised it’s not a hard search?)

    • Rob says:

      They will be, and I changed the article wording to make it clearer.

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

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