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Review: the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card

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This is our review of the new (launched 2022) Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card.

It is part of our series of articles looking at the major UK loyalty credit cards and discussing whether or not they are worth applying for. These articles are linked to the relevant sections of the ‘Credit Cards‘ area in the menu bar. Our other UK airline and hotel credit card reviews can be found here.

Key link: Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard application form

Barclaycard Avios Plus credit Card review

Key facts: £20 per month annual fee, added to your monthly statement

The representative APR is 80.1% APR variable, including the annual fee.  The representative APR on purchases is 29.9% variable.

Reward credit cards generally have high interest rates and are not suitable for anyone who does not pay off their full balance each month. If you do not clear your balance, you should look for a non-rewards credit card with a low interest rate.

This article was updated on 1st April 2024, and all of the information is correct as of that date. Ignore the original publication date shown.

About the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card

The Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card is issued directly by Barclaycard. This analysis is focused on the £20 per month version of the card – I review the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card (with a smaller 5,000 Avios bonus) here.

You are 100% OK to apply for this card if you already have a British Airways American Express card. Indeed, Barclaycard knows that a lot of people – at least initially – will choose to use their Mastercard alongside a BA Amex, at places where American Express is not accepted.

What is the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard sign-up bonus?

You receive 25,000 Avios when you spend £3,000 within three months.

This is a substantially better deal than the 5,000 Avios bonus which comes with the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard. Even if you believe, long term, that the free card may be better for you, you may want to get the paid card purely for the bonus and then downgrade.

What are the rules for qualifying for the sign-up bonus?

The sign-up bonus is available to everyone unless ….

  • you have had either of the Barclaycard Avios credit cards in the previous 24 months (in this case, you can apply again but will not receive a bonus) or
  • you have had ANY Barclaycard credit card, Avios or non-Avios, including the ‘closed to new applicants’ Hilton Honors credit card, in the previous six months (in this case, you cannot apply at all)

You WILL receive the sign-up bonus if you have a British Airways American Express card as this is nothing to do with Barclaycard.

You will definitely receive the bonus if you are only a supplementary cardholder on someone else’s Barclaycard Avios credit card.  As far as Barclaycard is concerned, that card belongs to the primarily cardholder and does not make you an ‘existing cardholder’.

You WILL receive the sign-up bonus if you currently or recently had a Barclaycard small business credit card, such as Barclaycard Select. These do not count.

Review Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card

Any other benefits with the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard?

When you spend £10,000 in a card year, you will receive an Avios upgrade voucher. This voucher is valid for two years.

We wrote an article here which explains how the Barclaycard Avios upgrade voucher works.

Put simply – and I strongly recommend you read our full article linked above – the voucher lets you book an Avios flight paying only the Avios of the class below.

Book a Club World business class flight on Avios, for example, and you only pay the Avios required for World Traveller Plus premium economy. The usual Club World taxes and charges must be paid.

The voucher can be used to either:

  • upgrade a return flight for one person, making this a great product for solo travellers, or
  • upgrade one leg of a return flight for two people

The official rules for using the upgrade voucher are on this page of ba.com.

It is important to note that you cannot choose which combination of Avios and cash are used when redeeming a Barclaycard upgrade voucher. You will always be given the ‘most Avios, least cash’ option, which is not great value on short haul redemptions. It is generally the best option on long haul redemptions.

You can take 7,000 Avios instead of the voucher

From April 2023, it has been possible to take a one-off bonus of 7,000 Avios instead of the upgrade voucher. You can select your choice in the Barclaycard app and it is possible to swap from year to year, or indeed during the year if your current voucher has not yet been issued.

Most people will get far more than 7,000 Avios-worth of value from the upgrade voucher but you do now have the option of taking a lump sum instead.

There is an airport lounge benefits too

Cardholders can buy passes for any airport lounge in the DragonPass network – including the excellent Plaza Premium lounge in BA’s Heathrow Terminal 5 – for the heavily discounted price of just £18.50 per person per visit.

If you have both a Barclays Premier current account with Barclays Avios Rewards and the Barclaycard Avios Plus credit card, you will receive four free airport lounge passes each year via DragonPass.

What is the annual fee?

The Barclaycard Avios Plus credit card has a monthly fee of £20, so £240 per year. It is billed monthly and added to your card statement.

What do I earn per £1 spent on the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard?

You receive 1.5 Avios per £1 spent on the card.

This is the same rate as you receive with the more expensive £300 per year British Airways Premium Plus American Express credit card, and is very generous compared to similar Visa or Mastercard reward credit cards.

The maximum amount of Avios you can earn per month is 4x your monthly credit limit. This is highly unlikely to be an issue for you, since it would require spending your entire credit limit every few days and then paying it off immediately.

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard review

What is an Avios point worth?

How long is a piece of string!

This article is my best attempt to calculate the value of an Avios point.

If you assume that the ‘worst case’ scenario for spending Avios is turning them into Nectar points (1 Avios = 1 Nectar points, convert here) then you are getting back 0.75p for every £1 you spend. This would make the Barclaycard Avios Plus card the most rewarding Visa or Mastercard credit card in the UK.

Can you swap between the two Barclaycard Avios credit cards?

If you have the Barclaycard Avios Plus card, you can use the Barclaycard app to downgrade to the free card once you have triggered your Avios upgrade voucher or have banked the sign-up bonus.

Any spend you have done towards the annual Avios upgrade voucher to date will NOT be carried over. It resets to nil. It therefore makes sense to only upgrade once you have triggered the upgrade voucher in your current year.

You can also do this in reverse. If you have the free Barclaycard Avios card, you can upgrade to the Plus version at any time. Your spend to date towards the upgrade voucher will reset to nil if you have not already triggered it. You will not receive another sign-up bonus.

Is the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard a good card to use when travelling?

As Barclaycard adds a 3% foreign exchange fee, you might want to get a separate free credit card to use abroad.

Unfortunately there are no credit cards with 0% foreign exchange fees worldwide which earn airline or hotel points. (The Virgin Atlantic credit cards have 0% FX fees in the Eurozone.)  One option is to get a free card from Currensea. Currensea is a simple but clever idea. You pay abroad with your Currensea Mastercard debit card. Currensea translates the cost to Sterling with just a 0.5% fee (83% less than Barclaycard charges) and withdraws the money from your bank account. You can find out more about Currensea by clicking here. Currensea is free so there is no risk in giving it a try.

Barclaycard Avios Plus credit Card review

Is this card ‘better’ than the £300 British Airways Premium Plus American Express card?

‘It depends’ is the slightly frustrating answer.

However, irrespective of which card you stick with long-term, you should get both and pick up both sign-up bonuses!

The Barclaycard and Amex products are very similar but on the face of it, the Barclaycard Avios Plus card looks better:

  • a lower annual fee of £240 vs £300 for the British Airways Premium Plus American Express
  • an annual voucher which is easier to earn (£10,000 of spend vs £15,000 of spend with the BAPP Amex), especially as Mastercard is more widely accepted
  • both cards have a 25,000 Avios bonus, a 1.5 Avios per £1 earning rate and a two year expiry period on their voucher

The key difference is how the annual voucher works:

  • the British Airways Premium Plus Amex comes with a 2-4-1 companion voucher, letting you book two Avios flights (any cabin) for the Avios of one ticket, or one ticket for ‘half Avios’. You still pay the full taxes and charges on both tickets. The voucher can be used on Aer Lingus and Iberia as well as British Airways.
  • the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard comes with an Avios upgrade voucher, letting you upgrade a return Avios booking by one class for one person or a one-way Avios booking for two people. First Class is excluded. It is only valid on British Airways flights.

The British Airways Premium Plus American Express voucher is likely to be the most valuable option for most people. It’s not that simple though:

  • if you have high enough annual credit card spending, you may want to get both cards and earn both the Amex 2-4-1 companion voucher and the Barclaycard Avios upgrade voucher each year
  • because both cards let you earn a sign-up bonus again after a two year gap, you may want to jump between the cards every 24 months

Irrespective of your long term plans, however, you should seriously think about getting the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard purely for the sign up bonus. You may decide to keep it after all, or swap to the free version later.

What other cards have large Avios sign-up bonuses?

Don’t forget these less obvious options

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold credit card offers 20,000 Membership Rewards points for signing up and is free for the first year. These convert to 20,000 Avios points.

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 American Express Platinum credit card offers 40,000 Membership Rewards points for signing up. These convert to 40,000 Avios points. It has a £650 fee.

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Conclusion

25,000 Avios for getting the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card is an excellent bonus for a credit card which costs just £20 per month.

In terms of on-going earning rates, 1.5 Avios per £1 is excellent compared to most other Visa or Mastercard credit cards. It matches the 1.5 Virgin Points per £1 rate on the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard and no other non-Amex card on the market comes close.

Whether the card works better for you than the British Airways Premium Plus American Express will depend on your circumstances, but it is highly likely that you will want one of the two Barclaycard Avios credit cards in your purse or wallet.

The application form for the free Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card can be found here.

(Want to earn more miles and points from credit cards?  Click here to visit our dedicated airline and hotel travel credit cards page or use the ‘Credit Cards’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.)

Disclaimer: Head for Points is a journalistic website. Nothing here should be construed as financial advice, and it is your own responsibility to ensure that any product is right for your circumstances. Recommendations are based primarily on the ability to earn miles and points. The site discusses products offered by lenders but is not a lender itself. Robert Burgess, trading as Head for Points, is regulated and authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as an independent credit broker.

Comments (61)

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

  • The Paw 🐾 says:

    First line shouldn’t say “free”!!

  • G says:

    Any indication when/if some better sign up bonuses will be coming this year? Last year it seems there was a different sign up bonus every month.

  • James says:

    Never had so many issues with a credit card as I have with this. Barclaycard are a joke of a company. I closed my account in May 2022, they reopened in in November without any consent (?!) and slapped a £20 charge on it. They were charging me interest then instantly refunding it. Applied for a mortgage last week when I received a “nope, sorry”. Experian informed me it was due to a missed Barclaycard payment. Contact made, Barclaycard admitted fault and negative credit notice is going to be removed within next 6-8 weeks. Awaiting a formal letter from Barclaycard so I can commence with my complaint to the Financial Ombudsman. My partner got the card in November last year, she’s had 0 Avios on spend since opening it – the answer from Barclaycard? “No one has received Avios on spend yet, it’s an error in the system that we’re working on”. Think long and hard before getting this card.

    • 1958 says:

      Agreed. The app has problems – but the standard approach from all Barclays’ staff is, “I can’t help. Please try the app.” (After waiting ages for a call to be answered).
      The avios points awarded for sign-up are generous, but the customer churn must be enormous, given the number of problems.

      • James says:

        I would never ever recommend this card, even getting Avios on spend seems to be a challenge. HfP must be getting serious £££ to be pushing it.

        • JDB says:

          @James I understand you had a bad experience, but the vast majority have had good experiences and some of your comments such as an alleged difficulty in getting Avios on spend are sufficiently ridiculous to devalue the rest. I note also that you say you closed your account in May 2022, within three months of launch and shortly before a mortgage application, so that doesn’t seem very serious.

          Barclays clearly underestimated demand for the Avios cards and 100k promotion so have at times inevitably struggled with execution, but have nevertheless recovered from that on each occasion.

          From your comment, it is not clear what you will be complaining to the Ombudsman about as you suggest Barclays has corrected its errors.

          • James says:

            JDB, I suggest you re-read. Account closed in May 2022, mortgage application made last week.

          • JDB says:

            @James – playing around with credit cards is never a good idea and sensible mortgage brokers will tell you to keep a clean sheet for six months to a year. Opening and closing credit cards does not give the appearance of the stable, reliable customer they are looking for. This is a classic example of how rushing to grab a SUB can have unexpected and costly consequences.

          • James says:

            Now you’re just not getting the point…

            Forget your opinion on opening/closing credit card accounts, that’s a totally different matter. The negative rating was based on the above – them illegally RE-OPENING my account without any consent and adding a charge to it. What are your thoughts on that?

          • JDB says:

            @James my thoughts are that Barclays messed up big time, but you shouldn’t have been trying to take advantage of Barclays to nab a SUB; sometimes these poor decisions have unintended consequences or some might call it karma. I think you missed my point – you have a personal experience that isn’t reflective of the product as a whole, so it’s rather gratuitous to suggest that people “should think long and hard before getting this card” or that HfP is pushing a bad product because they are being paid £££ when Avios Plus is in fact one of the best products on the market.

          • No longer Entitled says:

            Don’t worry James, it read perfectly well the first time.

            Barclaycard, in my sample size of one, are inept. It’s a good card but comes with a roll of the dice as to what user experience you get. Not worth it for 25,000 Avios but P2 will jump on board once the next bonus comes along.

          • apbj says:

            How can you possibly know the “vast majority” have had good experiences?

            I have also had a list of problems with the card and encountered an almost sinister unwillingness to help.

          • JDB says:

            @James – because this isn’t the right platform to vent your personal anger; that’s TrustPilot. I too have had terrible experiences with many financial services firms over the years and I’m sure you have read similar experiences to yours on these pages about most banks and Amex but that doesn’t necessarily mean those firms or those products are bad. It’s a very low bar, but I don’t think Barclays/Barclaycard is any better or worse than HSBC, Lloyds or RBS/NatWest who all also make lots of serious mistakes, but are by and large OK.

            Inevitably a small percentage of customers in any organisation have terrible experiences and these get aired more than those who have routine experiences, so a more objective consideration of a firm or product is what’s needed to assist people in deciding whether to apply for a product.

  • The other Kevin says:

    I’ve had absolutely no problem with the card since getting it last year. Bonus avios arrived when promised as do all monthly spend avios. I’d be interested to know how to get the completely free lounge passes though when holding the premier account as well. The only offer I have received is the discounted price of £18.50.

  • Tony says:

    Another dissatisfied user here. When I had the paid for card, I had issues with the initial bonus in that the card was delayed in being issued by some three weeks which in turn meant that a significant payment I was going to make on it couldn’t be, and I missed out on the bonus.

    No-one was interested in sorting this out. Card was cancelled- lesson learned!!!

  • Numpty says:

    My annual spend counter still hasnt reset for new account year, so not possible to see this years spend towards the BA upgrade voucher. Seems to be a known issue, but still not fixed.

  • DC says:

    If you have a good credit history and a track record of high spend and paying off in full, they will bounce your application for this card.

    • JDB says:

      Your application won’t be rejected for the reasons you suggest, but more likely that someone has too much overall open unsecured credit, something to which Barclays is particularly sensitive and Amex increasingly so. I, many family members and friends fall into the category you describe and have had no problems applying. Having lots of high credit limits you don’t actually need is pointless and can work against you.

  • Mayfair Mike says:

    I must be an exception as my experience has been flawless. Existing barclays premier account holder and had a legacy plat barclaycard (for good balance transfer offers).

    Applying/upgrading from the plat to the avios plus card took 10 seconds in the app and even the existing balance transfer was maintained automatically on the same terms.
    Admittedly its not super intuitive but I was already familiar with the app.

    Avios have tracked and posted from the start, targets are viewable, vouchers have been credited, and the monthly rebate for both Premier and avios plus applied automatically.

    Dragonpass set up also was easy and used 2 of them already with no issues.

    If I were to d/g to the free avios card, does anyone know what would happen to any unused dragonpasses ? Are they forfeited?

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