Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

(SUSPENDED) Are you going to cancel an Amex card before fee refunds are scrapped?

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

EDIT: Amex has now suspended these changes until at least 2024. See our top story.

American Express has traditionally offered one feature which other UK credit card companies did not.

If you took out a card with an upfront annual fee, you would receive a pro-rata fee refund if you cancelled your card part-way through the year.

This feature ends on Sunday 1st October for most cards.

You will still be allowed to cancel your card but you won’t get any portion of the annual fee back.

Does this change apply to all American Express cards?

No.

The change only impacts credit cards.

If you still hold a charge card – although all personal charge cards have been withdrawn from the market over the last couple of years for new applicants – then nothing changes. You will still be able to cancel it at any point for a pro-rata fee refund.

The two core small business cards – Business Gold and Business Platinum – are charge cards and will not be impacted by this change.

How will this change the card market?

That’s a good question, especially as you also need to factor in the appeal of competing products – the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard, for example, has a fee of £20 per month and so can be cancelled at any time without penalty.

Let’s look at a few of the cards:

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is free for the first year, so the appeal of this card (you receive 20,000 Membership Rewards points as a sign-up bonus, £120 of Deliveroo credit and four airport lounge passes) is unchanged.

The Platinum Card from American Express

The Platinum Card is more complex, but at a non-refundable £575 for the first year it remains a good proposition. In year one you would get 30,000 Membership Rewards points bonus, up to £600 of dining credit, £150 of Harvey Nichols credit, two Priority Passes, travel insurance etc.

During special offers such as the recent ‘60,000 points + £200 of Amex Travel credit’ promotion it becomes exceptional value for the first year, even at the full £575.

No more pro-rata fee refunds for UK American Express cardholders

British Airways Premium Plus American Express

The British Airways Premium Plus card becomes less attractive for a quick pump and dump, with the 25,000 Avios bonus equalling but not exceeding the £250 annual fee on our valuation.

However, because of the value of the annual 2-4-1 companion voucher, it is by far the most common card for HfP readers to keep for the long term. I doubt many people who read HfP cancel this card quickly.

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

Most HfP readers who have the Marriott Bonvoy American Express card will have it because of the 15 free elite night credits you receive. This is an annual benefit, and anyone who gets the card purely for the elite nights is probably in it for the long haul.

The 15 elite nights even count towards lifetime status.

What am I doing?

I am not looking to cancel anything before next Sunday.

My wife and I both have a British Airways American Express Premium Plus card. These generate 2 x 2-4-1 companion vouchers annually, which is ideal for our family of four. I treat these as ‘long term holds’.

I also have The Platinum Card. I have held this for many years and I still feel I make a ‘profit’ from the annual fee. The £300 annual dining credit and £100 of Harvey Nichols credit is money I would spend anyway, and I easily get value from the travel insurance, car hire insurance, Fine Hotels & Resorts hotel benefits etc. Nothing will change here.

My Marriott Bonvoy American Express card is also a keeper. I am only about five years short of Lifetime Platinum status in Marriott Bonvoy, and the 15 elite night credits I receive each year from holding the card is a key part of achieving that. The £75 fee is also easily justified by the semi-regular Marriott Bonvoy cashback offers (the new one is £100 back on £250 of Marriott spend) and the six points per £1 I earn for UK Marriott spend.

The only card we could drop is my wife’s Preferred Rewards Gold card. However, as this is the old charge card version, we will retain the right to cancel this at any point for a pro-rata refund so there’s no rush to act here. I also feel that we get value from this via the Deliveroo credit and the fact that Amex Gold seems to have FAR more cashback offers than any of our other cards.

No more pro-rata fee refunds for UK American Express cardholders

What should you think about before cancelling?

Here are the answers to a few common questions about card cancellations:

Preferred Rewards Gold / The Platinum Card:

  • your Membership Rewards account will be closed shortly after you have closed your last Membership Rewards-earning card – you will need to transfer your points out. This may impact your willingness to cancel.
  • your Priority Pass airport lounge card will be cancelled as soon as you cancel your card
  • for Platinum, you will retain your hotel status cards until the end of the year and potentially longer

British Airways Premium Plus:

  • if you downgrade to the free British Airways American Express, your card year remains the same and your ‘spend to date’ towards your next companion voucher is carried over
  • irrespective of what you may be told by Amex, any unused 2-4-1 companion vouchers should remain in your British Airways Executive Club account (the card T&C contradict this and say they will be removed but in reality this is what has always happened for the past 20 years – although of course you do this at your own risk, and have no recourse if they are removed now or in the future. The risk free option is to downgrade to the free BA card.)
  • you do not need a British Airways American Express card to pay the taxes when you redeem your 2-4-1 voucher (and the new T&C confirm this) but you will need AN American Express card of some sort. This does not necessarily need to be in your name as Amex does not do name verification as a security check.

Will this strategy work for Amex?

My gut feeling is that American Express will see an improvement in the ‘quality’ of cardholders who sign up for The Platinum Card and – for non-HfP readers who don’t understand the value of the 2-4-1 voucher – the British Airways Premium Plus American Express card.

The acceptance criteria for The Platinum Card has already been tightened up this year by bringing in a £35,000 minimum income criteria – presumably to meet new FCA rules on ensuring products are not missold – but this obviously goes further.

It remains to be seen if blocking British Airways Premium Plus refunds will make the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard more attractive for people looking for their first Avios credit card.

These changes probably won’t make much difference to the attractiveness of cards during special promotions. If Amex brought back the recent offer of ‘60,000 Membership Rewards points + £200’ which recently ran on The Platinum Card then it remains a no-brainer, especially with up to £750 of dining and Harvey Nichols credit thrown in during the first year, even at a sunk cost of £575.

What interests me is whether some people will still choose to cancel their cards quickly even when they don’t get a fee refund. This would make sense in some scenarios, since the quicker you cancel, the quicker the two year clock for reapplying comes around.

There is some upside too. It is possible that American Express will increase sign-up bonuses further on its paid cards because it knows that cardholders are committed to a full year. Let’s see what happens over the next few months.


earns points from credit cards

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

Get 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.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 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:

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up 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 Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

Capital on Tap Visa

NO annual fee, NO FX fees and points worth 1 Avios per £1 Read our full review

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

Comments (198)

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

  • Bob says:

    I have an Amex gold, which started in May this year, so plenty of time to decide. As we live in the country there seems no prospect that Deliveroo will have a presence anytime soon. I have written to Amex to ask them for two extra PP passes in lieu, without any expectation. I have also bought a few Dragon passes through Avios + at £18.50 before they go up.
    Does Deliveroo do mail order shopping deliveries?

    • James says:

      The nearest Deliveroo place to me is ~30 miles away, but if you change your address in the Deliveroo app you can usually find somewhere in any given city that offers charity donations or buy-a-coffee-for-someone schemes. I do this twice a month for 2x5pts freebies otherwise it would just go to waste.

  • m says:

    I usually keep the Platinum card for 7-10 months, and I know people who have done the same. I think, like me, people like to have the optionality and the ability to cancel at any time; however, they usually keep the card anyway because of the ongoing benefits like insurance and lounge access. Time will tell how this will play out for Amex.

  • Edward says:

    If I downgrade my BAPP before triggering the voucher presumably the threshold will increase from £10k to £12k and the voucher will not be a BAPP voucher I.e 1 year validity and only valid for a redemption in WT?

  • Andy says:

    Just so I’m clear, if I cancel my BAPP do I definitely still get to keep the two 2-4-1 vouchers I’ve earned over the last two years?

    • Rhys says:

      Yes

      • David says:

        There’s been comments on the forum of people’s 241 disappearing when they’ve cancelled BAPP outright. As per new T&C’s its only downgrading from BAPP to Blue that saves the 241.

        • Tim Mon says:

          FWIW, having qualified for the 241 on the BAPP, I took the “chicken” option a couple of months ago and downgraded to the free card.

      • JDB says:

        @Rhys it feels wrong to be quite so definitive.

        It’s against the terms not to be eligible for the BA CV promotion at the time of travel. Amex staff, formally instructed by management, advise cancellers they may lose the voucher. This term was notably not changed when they were redrafted to allow payment with any Amex. Thus you, on behalf of HfP an FCA regulated business, are giving advice directly contrary to that given by the actual provider of the product. There is also some evidence that vouchers have been removed and it’s easily done. The simple fact is that a huge amount has changed at Amex in the last 12 months, mostly making the rules stricter. What has happened in the past on this topic is not a good guide to the future as alluded to in the article itself.

        I think any advice you offer should be more nuanced as the article is.

        • Compliance Geek says:

          I think you mean “guidance” rather than “advice”. Nevertheless, your point stands.

        • Scott says:

          Re: “It’s against the terms not to be eligible for the BA CV promotion at the time of travel”
          I agree there is wording the this effect in the latest iteration of the T&Cs, however I’m not clear how you have inferred from this that it means a BA branded Amex must be held. How does holding only a, say, Gold Amex, contravene this ‘eligibility’ term?

      • Rob says:

        Nothing is ever definite – always some risk.

    • DTR says:

      When I cancelled my BAPP last week via chat, I got the following: “All Taxes, Fees, and Charges to make a Companion Voucher booking must be paid for using any UK issued American Express Card.”

  • Super B says:

    I want to cancel my BAPP as I have too many 2-4-1 vouchers and not enough opportunities to use them. Is there a free AMEX card I can apply for now that won’t stop me recieving the welcome bonus again in 2 years if I decided to reapply for a BAPP?

    • Rob says:

      Amex Rewards Credit Card

      But arguably better to go full cold turkey so you could get a Plat and BAPP bonus in 2 years.

      • Freddy says:

        Is it still worth going cold turkey and go for bonuses in 2 years since the card fee will be non-refundable now

        • Rob says:

          If you think 60,000 MR points and a £200 travel credit (assuming this years offer returns) plus £600 of dining credit, £150 of Harvey Nichols credit, travel insurance, 2 Priority Pass etc etc isn’t worth £575 for one year of Plat then you’re probably on the wrong site.

          Same with 60-70k Avios for £250 on a BAPP.

    • David says:

      No

  • Nav says:

    Isn’t another option to ‘downgrade’ to Amex blue and keep your MR points – instead of transferring them out this week?

  • polly says:

    Need to clarify something pls, and l should know the answer! OH going to apply for the BAEC BAPP avios 60k offer this week, no BA card for 3 years. But there are 2 x t and c to read, 1 and 2 which seem contradict each other. Holds Bonvoy and Gold cards.

    1. Says no personal Amex, in last 2 yrs which l know anyway, but
    2. Says no BA Amex card in last 2 yrs.
    no 2 is the one they have itemised to refer to.
    As it’s the BAPP we want, can we ignore the holding a personal Amex bit? The 60k bonus would be handy, and we will use the 241 of course.
    Thanks

    • Rob says:

      Rule is no BA card for 2 years.

      • polly says:

        Tnx, thought so.. it looked a bit confusing….

      • S says:

        I thought was no Amex card at all – I asked Amex if I had nectar Amex could I get bonus and they said no…

        • Rob says:

          Why are you asking the Amex call centre for advice?!

          BAPP rule is ‘no BA card for 2 years’. This is, to be fair, stated very clear on the website and the application form.

  • G says:

    Offered no retention offer on my BAPP. Left as I’d already earned the voucher. Will resign up after 6 months so saved £40 at no loss to my avios earning; I already have a barclaycard i intend to use!

    • G says:

      Can Rob/Rhys confirm

      BA Blue/BAPP sign up bonus – no ba card within past 24 months. Amex personal cards are fine.

      Platinum sign up bonus – No amex personal (green, arrc, gold or platinum) cards within past 24 months is fine?

    • NorthernLass says:

      Let us know if your 241 voucher disappears from your BAEC account!

      • Vit says:

        Yes, G please take one for the team! I am sure Rob / Rhys are more than happy to issue honourary badge. 😉

        • G says:

          Can confirm I still have my baec voucher as of today. My voucher was Issued 10 September. Card cancelled 13 sept.

          • JDB says:

            @G it doesn’t really matter whether the 241 is in your account today or tomorrow. It needs to be in your account when you book and also, per the terms, you need a BA Amex at the time of travel. Give us an update then.

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.