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End of an era as American Express retires its iconic ‘Green’ card

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Today is a symbolic moment for the UK payment cards industry, although – in a sign of the times – it won’t actually impact many people.

The American Express Green Card has been removed from the UK market.

This is the first half of a two-part announcement today. Amex has also announced that The Platinum Card will become a credit card and not a charge card – with a huge sign-up bonus of 60,000 points and an extra £200 to spend on travel – you can apply for that here.

Originally launched in 1969 in the United States, the Green Card was, at least when I was young, the symbolic archetypal American Express card. Despite that, it wasn’t actually the first Amex card, which was purple.

If you are a certain age, as I am, the words ‘American Express’ immediately conjure up a picture of the card above.

You probably also remember TV ads like this one, with the ‘Don’t Leave Home Without It’ strapline:

Click here to see the original of that ad on YouTube. Note the bit at the end recommending that you go to Oracle page 196 for more information ….

Today, American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is arguably the most high profile of Amex’s own brand cards. The British Airways cards dominate the co-brand side. There is no real role for The Green Card.

Neglected, but The Green Card had its fans

The Green Card has been neglected. We didn’t even mention it on HfP until a couple of years ago, and even recently our coverage was limited to one card review per year. It has never been on our main credit card directory page.

That said, it wasn’t entirely useless. I know that there are HfP readers who have the card primarily for its purchase protection coverage, which is NOT standard across other Amex cards.

To quote from the old Amex Green website:

  • When the manufacturer’s warranty expires on your favourite new purchase, we’ll give you a year’s Extended Warranty up to £1,500 per item
  • Enjoy Refund Protection on eligible items.  If the UK retailer won’t refund or replace the eligible item, we will, up to a maximum of £200.
  • You also get Purchase Protection. If you bought it on your Card and it’s stolen or damaged within 90 days, we’ll replace or repair it, or refund you up to £2,500 per eligible item.

A surprising (to me) number of people were happy to pay £60 per year for The Green Card in order to access the purchase protection benefit.

That said it also, of course, got you access to Shop Small, kept your Membership Rewards balance from expiring if you were cancelling a more expensive Amex card and came with the usual Amex statement credit offers. You were very likely to get your £60 back in savings over the year.

An iconic image

The Green Card is, without a doubt, one of the iconic consumer images of our time.

Whilst Andy Warhol never got around to painting one, when I was in Palma last year, I saw this image – which is about three foot wide – for sale in a gallery:

I doubt we’ll be seeing the Tesco Clubcard Mastercard credit card treated the same way in a hurry …..

The Green Card was, apparently, originally known as the Money Card and the colour was chosen to match dollar bills. It was launched at the same time as the Boeing 747 opened up international travel to the American middle class (Pan Am started operating the 747 in early 1970, The Green Card was launched in 1969) and was intended to work alongside the key American Express business of issuing travellers cheques.

The card became a status symbol and was promoted – as per the Roger Daltry ad above – as something to be used for travel and business. It wasn’t meant to be the card you used at Tesco. The idea that Costco would eventually become the biggest American Express co-brand partner in the US would have been anathema. (The Costco deal was lost in 2014, a blow so hard that the Amex share price fell by 50% and took three years to recover).

Faded glory

Over the years, of course, The Green Card has faded. As competition in the payment card space increased, American Express was forced to add better rewards and benefits to its products.

Rather than wreck the ‘purity’ of Green, and potentially to keep annual fees from Green cardholders coming in without offering anything extra, new cards such as Amex Gold were introduced.

It soon made little sense to pay £60 per year for The Green Card, a card which didn’t even come with a sign-up bonus.

With the closure of The Green Card and the conversion of The Platinum Card to a credit card (437.9% APR!), American Express is getting close to exiting the charge card business in the UK.

For consumers, the charge card model has few benefits except for people who want a card which forces them to repay their balance every month.

Whilst the charge cards used to be promoted as ‘you don’t have a credit limit so you can buy anything you like’, this has not been the case for a long time – the charge cards do have limits, albeit unpublicised to users. The Amex app even has a ‘Check Spending Power’ button. Click it, type in a transaction value and you will be told if it will be accepted or not.

The Green Card isn’t totally disappearing, at least for now. It will continue to exist in other markets and, if you really want one, American Express will let UK residents apply for the International Dollar Card or International Euro Card. I have an Amex Green card in a US$ version via this route, something I use purely to access different Membership Rewards partners.

For clarity, if you currently hold The Green Card in the UK, nothing changes. It will continue to function as usual and will be renewed. The card is only withdrawn today for new applicants.


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Comments (81)

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

  • PIC says:

    This discussion thread really takes me back. I used Amex dollar-denominated traveler’s cheques on my first trip to the US in the mid 80’s (LHR-DEN-SFO on American Airlines). They were like cash even in small stores. I had just got my Green Amex Card a few months earlier (and I thought that I had really arrived as a professional because I had been approved!). You could order Amex traveler’s cheques on your card account and they were posted to you, so long as you sent a personal cheque for the GBP amount drawn on your UK bank account by return. You could send it by post or you could pop in to one of the American Express Travel Shops dotted around central London in those days and do it all over the counter. Great memories of international travel. I never held on the to Green card but I really did like the look of it. Even when I got Gold and then was “invited” to upgrade to Platinum when it was invitation-only, I still actually thought the Green card really looked the business! I should have held on to it. Certainly, the end of an era.

  • Talay says:

    Used to have a green card as part of Centurion so as to not look quite so ostentatious.

    What’s the odds on this:

    Marks and Spencer, Islington, London N1, circa 2001, 3 people in a row paying for their produce by Centurion card, the two people in front of me and me.

  • merlin90 says:

    The only green Amex I ever had was a corporate card. I wonder if that will be changing too.

  • namster says:

    have been given a green amex from work prior to me applying for the bonus referral from Rob for platinum. Will I still get the added referral bonus points as soon as I hit the 4k spend ?

    • Rob says:

      If you have a Membership Rewards account on the Green card then No. If you don’t earn points on the Green (and some company cards block points earning) then Yes.

      • Harry Hightower says:

        The terms on the platinum offer say “holding a personal American Express Card enrolled in the American Express Membership Rewards programme” is what disqualifies you from the bonus, which makes me wonder if a corporate card wouldn’t be considered a “personal” card?

        I have a corporate green and a personal green (technically “The American Express Card”), both enrolled in membership rewards, and the points go into separate MR accounts (I can see the balance for both using the same Amex login, but they show different MR points balances).

        When I rang the MR team, after putting me on hold for a while they told me it’s not possible for points from a personal and corporate card to go into the same MR account, nor can they transfer points between corporate and personal accounts – which makes me think maybe they’re set up as different product reward families internally (either that or the agent got it wrong).

        • Rob says:

          Personal is personal, everything else isn’t personal. Hundreds of readers have proved this.

      • namster says:

        just checked my amex plat account showing 30,000 once I reach 4k , does the 70k referral points show after a certain period of time?

  • Symon says:

    Purely by chance I was talking to a friend today who holds a UK Green Card. He showed it to me; I was surprised to see it has been updated to look like the US one – a light mint green with a thin boarder. Wonder why Amex UK went to the trouble of a redesign.

  • john says:

    I have the Green Card and I do not understand why the article claims it is somehow worse then the Gold one? You earn the same amount of point on standard purchases as Gold card with a much lower annual fee. What’s the problem? Do people value a one of PriorityPass entry in a year as somehow making the Gold part better? I think the Green card is actually the best card in terms of what you get and what you pay in annual fee ratio. Strange article.

    • john says:

      And if you do not qualify for the sign up bonus, as a lot of folks would not, then Green Card is a no brainer. Shame it’s gone, going to hold on to mine.

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