Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

When is it worth paying an annual fee for a miles and points credit card?

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I get numerous emails from Head for Points readers asking for advice on which miles and points credit card they should get.  These often come with the caveat “but I don’t want to pay a fee for a card”.

I don’t agree with this approach.  Let me explain why.

Most credit cards in the UK do not carry an annual fee.  It is very likely, before you became interested in miles and points, that you had never paid a fee for a credit card in your life.

When is it worth paying an annual fee for a miles and points credit card?

I can see why you wouldn’t want to:

  • you know that the card company gets a cut from the retailer every time you buy something
  • you know that the issuer adds a 3% foreign exchange fee whenever you spend abroad, and a fee whenever you end up withdrawing some cash on it (which, however much you try to avoid it, always happens once or twice)
  • you may accidentally miss a payment date occasionally, or your direct debit bounces, and you run up some interest

Paying for the privilege of generating this revenue for the credit card company may seem wrong.

I think you need to look at it differently.  Forget that you are paying for a credit card.  Look at it as simply paying for the benefits offered.

For want of a better way of looking at, assume that your credit card is a book of discount vouchers. What would you pay for it?

When is it worth paying an annual fee for a miles and points credit card?

Take the British Airways Premium Plus card as an example ….

Some people take one look at the £250 annual fee on the British Airways American Express Premium Plus credit card and are instantly put off.

Purely from the point of view of the sign-up bonus, being put off by the fee is a mistake.  The card is currently offering 25,000 Avios for signing up when you spend £3,000 within 90 days.  Many Head for Points readers would jump at the chance of buying 25,000 Avios for £250 which is basically what you are doing.

(The Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard has a similar deal. Sign up and get 25,000 Avos if you spend £3,000 within 90 days. Click here to learn more.)

The fee becomes even more realistic when you look at the benefits of the 2-4-1 companion voucher. You receive a voucher each year when you spend £10,000 on the card.

Would you pay £250 to buy a voucher which allowed you to get two Avios redemptions (British Airways, Iberia or Aer Lingus aircraft only) for the points of one?

Especially if you got access to extra reward seats in business class that non-cardholders can’t book? 

This would save you up to 220,000 Avios on two Club World tickets to Tokyo for example.

This is clearly a ‘no brainer’ for anyone who understands the value of Avios.  220,000 Avios are worth at least £2,200 if used sensibly.  More importantly, if you wouldn’t otherwise be able to earn enough Avios for two Club World tickets to Tokyo, it lets you undertake a trip that would otherwise be impossible.

The voucher also works well for a solo traveller – you save 50% on the Avios required for a ticket for one person if you travel alone. In our Tokyo example, you would save 110,000 Avios in Club World.

You need to spend £10,000 to trigger the voucher each year, of course, but you need to channel your credit card spend somewhere.

Compared to the free British Airways American Express card, the £250 fee also lets you earn 50% more Avios on every purchase and earn double Avios on British Airways and BA Holidays spend.

The Premium Plus card voucher also has two huge advantages over the voucher you get from the free card – it is valid for two years rather than one year and it is usable in ALL classes rather than just Economy.

When is it worth paying an annual fee for a miles and points credit card?

And some other examples ….

Here are some other examples where, if you treat the fee as paying for a benefits package, it makes sense:

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

Would you pay £160 per year for the right to upgrade two Virgin Atlantic tickets (cash OR redemptions – Virgin lets you ugprade cash tickets too) from economy to premium economy, or from premium economy to Upper Class? Or to get a 2-4-1 voucher for economy or premium economy cash or premium economy redemptions?  Especially if you also got 15,000 Virgin Points in the first year for signing up?

When you put it like that, the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard looks good value (you need to spend £10,000 to trigger the annual voucher).  This is before you factor in the excellent ‘1.5 miles per £1’ earning rate.

The Platinum Card from American Express

Would you pay £650 per year to get £300 of dining credit, £100 of Harvey Nichols credit, travel insurance for your family, car hire insurance, Hilton Honors Gold, Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium, Melia Rewards Gold, Eurostar lounge access, Delta Air Line lounge access, two Priority Pass cards each admitting two people for free to 1400 airport lounges and exclusive benefits at luxury hotels including guaranteed 4pm check-out?  Especially if you got 40,000 Avios or other miles as a bonus in your first year?

This is clearly more of a ‘heavy hitters’ package, but the American Express Platinum card will give you all of the above.

When is it worth paying an annual fee for a miles and points credit card?

Not all credit cards justify their fee ….

I don’t want to suggest that all fee-bearing miles and points cards justify the annual fee.

  • American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is harder to justify after the free first year.  You are paying £195 from Year 2, with the main benefit being four free airport lounge passes and 24 x £5 Deliveroo credits.  It might work if you spend enough to trigger the spending bonuses of up to 12,500 Membership Rewards points per year but otherwise I would consider it marginal.
  • The £240 annual fee for the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard is trickier to justify after the first year if you are a big spender. The annual upgrade voucher is identical on the free card and the £240 card – the only difference is that the paid card triggers it at £10,000 of spend and the free card at £20,000 of spend. If you can hit £20,000 easily then the extra 0.5 Avios per £1 earned on your spending doesn’t offset the fee.
  • The Marriott Bonvoy American Express card has a £95 fee.  For the first year it is worth it for the 20,000 Marriott Bonvoy points sign-up bonus.  Earning just 2 Marriott Bonvoy points per £1, you need to a big spender to justify £95 for Year 2+.  The real value here is the 15 elite night credits you get each year – most people treat it as a cheap way of getting a head start on status renewal – but if you’re not chasing Gold, Platinum or Titanium Marriott status then this isn’t relevant.

These three examples show that not all fee-based cards necessarily offer long-term value.  However, if you can get your head around the concept of paying an annual fee, you will find that many miles and points card do offer value for money.

Mariott Bonvoy American Express credit card

Learn more about the credit cards mentioned above

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 Platinum Card from American Express

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

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

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher 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

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

20,000 points sign-up bonus and 15 elite night credits each year Read our full review


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2024 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 February 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

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.

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

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 Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a 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:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

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

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus 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 Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 Read our full review

For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback on your spending.

Barclaycard Select Cashback Business Credit Card

1% cashback uncapped* on all your business spending (T&C apply) Read our full review

Comments (71)

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

  • Evan Davis says:

    I have the Halifax World Elite Mastercard.

    £180/year (charged as £15/month) for unlimited Priority Plus entries (beats the 4 per year from Amex) as well as free Fast Track at some airports via Mastercard Travel Experiences/Dragonpass

    • HampshireHog says:

      Is this not the Lloyds card which the missus has? Or are they issuing the same with Halifax branding?

  • Bob says:

    Yes I am almost certainly going to cancel my Amex Gold when it renews in May. The Deliveroo benefit is non existent in my area of Somerset so it’s discounted

    • Ian says:

      Most things are non-existent in Somerset 😂

    • paul says:

      Yep. We don’t have Uber in most of Somerset never mind Deliveroo. We don’t even have a bus after 6pm either.

    • Maples says:

      Even in London, I found the offerings to be poor where I live with not many great options other than deep fried food. KFC was the only one I was having due to allergies with a family member, and even that’s no longer on Deliveroo since you have to go on their app and it’s sent via a Deliveroo driver.

    • dougzz99 says:

      I create the Deliveroo experience by walking to the pizza place, then wandering randomly for 45 minutes, then leave the pizza for a further hour to make sure it’s properly cold. Occasionally I’ll knock on a random door and offer the pizza to them. All this without paying the admin or delivery fee.

      • Rob says:

        Just order £5 of groceries for collection at your local corner shop. Job done, no fees paid.

      • HampshireHog says:

        Oh Lovin it

      • Roy says:

        But waiting for the pizza to get properly cold by leaving it outside for an hour is quite time consuming. Deliveroo bikes seem to be fitted with special boxes that achieve the same effect much more time efficiently!

  • Bob says:

    Are there any whispers yet of another IHG card? The Creation years were great

    • Mark says:

      Or a Hilton product open to new members? Wish I had never cancelled my Hilton Barclaycard!

      • HampshireHog says:

        Yes still kicking myself for cancelling mine, however would have been in a dilemma with the Avios Barclaycard jamboree as Barclays can’t administer more than one card per person, though tbh they struggle to manage even that

        • Jonathan says:

          It’s weird that Barclaycard (or Barclays) have this policy, I was lucky I was able to obtain another one when they temporarily changed their rules

    • Jonathan says:

      Rob mentioned a while ago that this door is firmly shut, the closure of IHG Black to new customers was the signal in the way that they were looking at winding up their UK credit card portfolio

  • Josh B says:

    It’s very much about what works for you and the article rightly encourages people to think more widely about the overall proposition.
    I happily run a couple Amex cards and various Barclays products a year and for us these represent very good value. But talking to a friend yesterday who is an ardent traveller and she just won’t wrap her head around a £250 fee for one card as she prefers to go on loads of budget airline trips a year instead.

    • Qrfan says:

      My guess is that people who can’t wrap their head around return on a card fee are the same people who don’t really understand any form of return on investment, and would benefit from this analytical rigor across their personal finances.

      • NorthernLass says:

        I look at it as paying £250 for 100,000 (or more) avios, which is about the value I tend to get from the 241. But you have to know how to get good value from avios to understand what a great deal that is!

        But you can look at it as the people who can’t get their heads round it won’t be fighting you for CW seats to MLE or SIN at T-355 😂

        • HampshireHog says:

          This, I’m selfishly not an advocate of any more telling peeps how to fly J for Y. I’ve tried over the years to let close friends in on the secret when they ask how we always fly long haul in business and their eyes glaze over after 30 seconds. I know I’m a bit of a bore but hey ho

      • Ken says:

        There seems to be no end of people investing significant amounts of time in collecting points (and that’s fine, it’s a harmless hobby), who seem ignorant about pensions and investments. Each to their own.

        All these cards work in the first year with sufficient SUBs.

        After that, the vast majority will struggle to get value out of the Platinum, Gold or Marriott card.
        People delude themselves. The better offers IME were on the gold card not the platinum.

        The fine hotels offer can normally be matched by a Virtuoso agent – in fact it can often be bettered simply by calling a hotel and asking for a deal.
        The priority pass is useless in the UK and has been for 6 years.

        The BA card works but you still need to collect enough points, travel long haul ideally just as a couple , be prepared to book 355 days out for some destinations or be flexible.

        Even then I think it’s worth gaming the system with player 1 and 2

        • J says:

          Agree sticking with one card the whole lifecycle is not really worth it unless you do a lot of travelling. But done right there is a lot of value there- it’s possible to do it alongside a pension!

          I’ve spent around £1.2k on card/account fees to gain 500k points over the last 3 years – which are worth as much as £10k if used on certain flights, but at least £6-7k used on more common BC/F flights. That’s a pretty good return, better than a pension even with tax saving. But agree pension is a bigger priority- seeing it as a hobby is the best way!

      • Josh B says:

        @Qrfan – That is likely true for some – in this case not at all true given she runs a not inconsequential portfolio of investment assets in addition to her professional career. It’s about personal priorities and perceived value.

  • Kuestrian says:

    Likewise, the Premier Reward Black account offers additional benefits like worldwide travel insurance, DragonPass+, mobile/car insurance, concierge, etc, all for £21pm with the first year practically free when switching any account in (inc. challengers).

    I wonder if Rob would be interested in doing an article to see how the various packaged accounts stack up against these cards?

    • Tracey says:

      Same. And had a travel insurance claim that was handled well and 2 blocked drains cleared for free and a wasp nest removal. I think the concierge has stopped.

    • J says:

      I don’t think they are really like for like – this site’s purpose is to review any ways of getting points (miles, hotel points etc)- those other cards don’t offer that so he would be veering off topic 🙂

      • HampshireHog says:

        HSBC similarly sotto voce

        • Rob says:

          We do huge amounts of HSBC coverage, given that you can’t even get it without a current account. HSBC even came to the awards dinner in January.

          We ignore NatWest because it is worse than other products with the same outcome. We’ve stopped covering Tesco cards for the same reason.

      • J says:

        Yes that it is true, he does review the Amex cash back cards as well! Probably would be worth comparing all the package cards to see what they offer!

  • J says:

    I would say a very big spender with Barclaycard avios plus and premier (meaning £180 a year cost) is worth it. Eg spend £50k a year, get 75k miles- meaning those extra 25k points are 0.72p per Avios, pretty good value. Esp if you put everything on it (council tax, bills, gas and electricity, buy your car on it).

    Agree if you’re just spending £20k it’s not worth it, standard card worth it.

    Amex premium has better main reward but if you’re not able to fly for a few years then the flexibility of BC plus is better given it’s cheaper, plus you get the 7k bonus for each year

    The way I look at the chargeable cards is that they are like a savings account for Avios, esp when you consider the bonuses

    • Tariq says:

      The problem with Barclays is the oft complained about ridiculously low credit limits which limits utilisation.

      • Rob says:

        That is untrue. People who fail to provide the proof of ID or income requested get a £200 limit because it is administratively easier than closing them down. That’s it.

        • J says:

          Agree on this- my credit limit is £20k without really asking for it which is absolutely plenty

    • Roy says:

      £20k spend a year split between two paid cards (either Amex + Barclays or one of those + Virgin) can certainly be worthwhile if you can make good use of two vouchers per year.

  • Matt says:

    Most people don’t realise that product fees are a win-win for banks and customers.

    For banks, free products result in a proportion of customers taking out products but never them, which costs the bank a lot of money in marketing commissions and maintaining dormant accounts.

    Hardly anyone takes out a paid product and doesn’t use it, so banks are generally very willing to give you outsize value for your account fees with a view that they will make this back when you transact using the product.

  • jj says:

    I’ve long promised myself that I’ll cancel my Platinum card if I ever fail to earn more than the fee in benefits over the course of a year. I still have the card.

    Last month, for example, I saved more than £500 on a hotel bill through a FHR special available.only to Platinum card holders. I was booking the hotel anyway, so the savings was real. Emyr couldn’t match it; the hotel couldn’t match it, and the online agents were far more expensive.

    • meta says:

      Same here. I will cancel Platinum card when I stop earning at least three times the annual fee back in various offers (I don’t count the dinning credits, HN credits or lounge access in that). I usually save between £2-2.5k a year in offers.

      • Maples says:

        Which type of offers are these?

        I don’t think I see much that allow you to save that much, but perhaps I’ve never been targeted for the higher ones. Highest I see are £100 off or percentage based ones.

        • meta says:

          Depends on how much you spend per year. 3x a year on Marriott/Hilton/Hyatt/IHG with anything from £50 to £100 off each time so avg say £75x 12 a year. FHR 100 usd credit that’s another £75 avg x 12. That alone brings you close to £2k. Then Luxury Escapes etc. £200 and so on. It quickly adds up.

          I also got £175 off £300 stay on a recent stay during November promo and in addition $100 credits with FHR rate.

          The hotel offers have dried up, so we’ll see how I feel at the end of the year.

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