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Amex Centurion card: do the UK benefits justify the £3,400 annual fee?

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What is the American Express Centurion card? What does it cost and what are the benefits in the UK?

We very rarely write about the UK American Express Centurion card, or ‘The Black Card’ as many people call it. This isn’t unreasonable, since it is ‘by invitation only’ but we thought you might be interested in a look behind the veil of secrecy.

The Centurion Card was relaunched in 2022 with “a renewed focus on the art of living” (and a £1,200 hike in the annual fee). Here is 3-minute promo video for the new benefits which manages to say absolutely nothing …..

American Express Centurion Card UK review

We have put this article together with the help of some UK Amex Centurion-holding HfP readers. If you have the card and notice any errors, leave a comment and we will update it.

What does Amex Centurion cost?

There is a £3,400 joining fee and a £3,400 annual fee. Unsurprisingly, the annual fee is NOT waived in the first year.

The costs have jumped up sharply since the card was launched. Anecdotally, Amex Centurion also seems to have tightened up on the type, rather than quantum, of spending they are looking for. We know some cardholders offered the card at launch who were only spending relatively modest sums with Amex, almost all of which was B2B purchasing. This is unlikely to get you across the line now.

What are the invitation criteria for the Amex Centurion card?

The American Express Centurion Card is by invitation only.

Whilst American Express does not publish its criteria (and there may not even be any fixed criteria) there are a range of behaviours that are likely to improve your chances of invitation.

Having a strong Amex history is key. Anecdotal evidence suggests that high spend is particularly effective on cards such as The Platinum Card (review here).

You are likely to be spending at least £25,000 per month, if not considerably higher, before you are on Amex’s radar. Spending on travel, luxury goods and other personal expenses is likely to be viewed more favourably than pushing high figures through for Google Adwords or Facebook advertising.

You may undergo a credit check during the application process. It is not clear if there is an income requirement.

Amex knows the calibre of individuals it wants to invite and offers are likely made on a case-by-case basis. In theory there is little opportunity to game the system if you don’t lead the sort of lifestyle American Express wants.

In 2023, slightly oddly, Amex launched a limited time ‘refer a friend’ promotion for The Centurion Card. You had to email a specific address to express your interest. Rob did so, in the name of research, received an automated reply and did not hear a word afterwards …..

Do I still earn Membership Rewards with The Centurion Card?

Yes, although only at the same rate as the majority of Amex cards.

You earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your Centurion card, or 2 per £1 spent on Amex Travel services.

Rather like The Platinum Card, it is likely that Centurion cardholders will put the majority of their spending onto other, more lucrative, cards.

For example, a small business owner will earn double the return – 2 points per £1 – on £120,000-worth of spending per year on American Express Business Platinum. If you value the points at 1p each, this is an extra £1,200 you would earn by moving spend to that card instead of your Centurion.

Supplementary Centurion cards

The main card holder gets one titanium card.

You also get one free supplementary titanium Centurion card as well four additional supplementary cards as standard, for a total of five free additional cards. You can choose from Platinum, Gold or Green American Express cards.

You can also pay for additional supplementary titanium Centurion cards for £1,700 each per year, as well as other Amex consumer cards.

Additional cards for your own spending count as part of your supplementary card allowance.

What benefits does the American Express Centurion Card come with?

The Centurion Card comes with substantial benefits, as you would expect from Amex’s most premium card.

Top tier status with airlines and hotels

The Centurion Card bestows top tier status in a variety of loyalty programs.

The UK Centurion Card gives you Virgin Atlantic Flying Club Gold status. It is the only UK credit or charge card to offer free airline status. Your supplementary Centurion cardholder will also receive the status.

Note that Emirates Skywards Gold status was dropped in June 2024. This is no longer a benefit.

You also get status with six major hotel groups:

  • Hilton Honors Diamond
  • IHG One Rewards Platinum Elite
  • Marriott Bonvoy Gold Elite
  • MeliaRewards Platinum
  • Radisson Rewards Premium
  • Jumeirah One Gold

This is a slightly eclectic list. Hilton Honors Diamond and MeliaRewards Platinum are top tier and so worth having.

However, Marriott Bonvoy Gold Elite and IHG One Platinum Elite have virtually no benefits and are not top-tier. Marriott Bonvoy Gold isn’t even ‘second to top tier’ – it is trumped by Ambassador, Titanium and Platinum.

These benefits are also available to your supplementary Centurion cardholder.

Top tier status with car rental companies

Centurion cardholders are also bestowed with top-tier status at Avis and Hertz.

As a Hertz Gold Plus Rewards President’s Circle member you get:

  • a free additional driver
  • guaranteed vehicle availability
  • guaranteed one-car-class upgrades with every rental
  • 50% bonus points on all Hertz rentals

Whilst Avis Preferred President’s Club members get:

  • a free additional driver
  • guaranteed one-class upgrade
  • double upgrade upon availability at weekends

Airport lounge access

The Centurion card has virtually identical lounge benefits to The Platinum Card.

This includes a free Priority Pass membership that gets you and a guest free entry into any of the 1,400 airport lounges in the Priority Pass network.

You also get access to Amex’s own Centurion airport lounges, including the Heathrow Centurion lounge in Terminal 3 which we reviewed here. Whilst Platinum cardholders can take up to two guests, if you have Centurion you can take your entire immediate family.

Centurion cardholders also get a complimentary glass of champagne or top-shelf whisky at Centurion lounges. There is also generally a table reserved for Centurion cardholders which can be useful given how busy the lounges can get.

Amex Centurion also gets you into Plaza Premium lounges, as well as the Eurostar Business Premier lounges, Delta Sky Club lounges and various Lufthansa lounges.

Additional benefits at top-end hotels

Centurion cardmembers get additional benefits at the smaller luxury hotel chains – Aman, Auberge Resorts Collection, Mandarin Oriental, Oetker Collection, The Peninsula Hotels, Rosewood Hotels & Resorts, St. Regis and selected Waldorf Astoria properties – when booking through the Amex Fine Hotels & Resorts programme.

You receive:

  • a room upgrade at time of reservation (if available)
  • an additional $200 food, beverage or spa credit with a minimum two night stay.

These bookings must be made by telephone, unlike standard Fine Hotels & Resorts bookings.

International limousine and Meet & Greet service

When you book a business class or first class flight through the Centurion Travel service you get a free limousine service from the airport to any destination within 20km of the city centre.

The service is available in the following cities: Bangkok, Chicago, Dubai, Frankfurt, Geneva, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Johannesburg, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Madrid, Miami, New York JFK and LGA, Orlando, Paris, Rome, San Francisco, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo, Toronto.

Some destinations offer an International Meet & Greet service, where you and your guests can be met at the aircraft door on arrival and escorted through immigration and luggage collection.

These include: Bangkok, Dubai, Frankfurt, Geneva, Istanbul, Johannesburg, Madrid, Paris, Rome, Shanghai, Singapore, Sydney.

Domestic airport transfers

In addition to the international limo service you can also get up to eight UK round trip airport limo transfers per year. Your return flights must be booked via Centurion Travel. Any class of travel is acceptable.

The range limit is 40 miles and there’s a 48 hour notice period for bookings, although in practice this doesn’t seem to be strictly enforced. Those who live further away can still use the service but with fewer free trips (eg 4 x 80 miles per year instead of 8 x 40 miles).

You can see the airports serviced here. The service is provided by Blacklane.

Airport Fast Track

You can use Heathrow’s Fast Track security lanes simply by flashing your Amex Centurion card and a valid boarding pass. Both you and your supplementary card holder can take one guest each, so the benefit covers a family of four.

This service also operates at Manchester, Stansted and East Midlands airports.

Choose your own card design

Part of the Centurion refresh was the launch of several new ‘art cards’. You can either choose the standard plain metal card or one of two cards designed by architect Rem Koolhaas and artist Kehinde Wiley:

Amex Centurion by Rem Koolhaas

You can also opt into the Prada Centurion Wearable, a leather bracelet with an embedded chip for contactless payments. Feedback on this is mixed, to put it politely.

£1,000 cashback annually at Harvey Nichols and Clos19

Similarly to the Platinum Card, Amex has introduced regular cashback offers at Harvey Nichols and upmarket wine and champagne retailer Clos19.

£125 is available quarterly, per retailer, for a total of £1,000 per year. You need to opt-in to the cashback via Amex offers.

Events, restaurants and concert venues

Having a Centurion card also gets you access to a variety of American Express events and private suites.

For example, Amex is a sponsor of the National Theatre. In addition to the ticket access, Amex Centurion cardholders are invited to exclusive pre-show champagne receptions with cast and crew.

Other regular events include the London Film Festival, Harvey Nichols launches and more.

American Express also holds a suite at the O2 that is available for booking. This is similar to the suites held by other companies such as the Marriott Bonvoy suite.

Other benefits include Centurion Spa & Fitness (extra benefits at selected leading spas) and special privileges at the Bicester Village shopping centre.

Centurion cardholders also get improved access to top restaurants. This is supposed to include last-minute reservations but in practice is more likely to be improved tables etc.

Travel insurance

Like The Platinum Card, the UK Centurion Card comes with comprehensive insurance cover.

The policy is fundamentally the same as the Platinum travel insurance here (pdf), but it does have slightly higher payouts and covers you up to 80 vs 70 for Platinum.

For example, you receive £5,000,000 for necessary medical costs during your trip rather than £2,000,000 on the Platinum card. You can claim up to £12,500 for cancellation and postponement (up from £7,500) and up to £5,000 per trip from lost or stolen belongings (£2,000 on the Platinum card.)

Will I still have to pay foreign transaction fees?

Oddly, yes. You would think Amex would waive FX fees for a card with such a high annual fee and premium proposition, but it doesn’t. You still have to pay the 2.99% fee on all foreign transactions.

Is the UK Amex Centurion card worth it?

For the vast majority of people, spending £3,400 per year on a card fee may seem ludicrous. For some, however, it clearly makes sense.

The headline benefits of the black Amex Centurion card are likely not its biggest appeal.

The cardholders I spoke to valued access to exclusive events and experiences more highly than the published card benefits. That said, many complain that the events fill up quickly.

Unlike The Platinum Card, where a high-end traveller can relatively easily make a case for getting £650 of value from the card benefits – especially given the £300 annual dining creditit is very difficult to justify £3,400 of value from The Centurion Card. This is especially true if you look at the difference between the Centurion and Platinum packages, which is not huge given the 6x fee differential.

The cardholders I spoke to also suggested that the customer service was a step above, with requests and queries simply sorted out rather than resorting to a scripted response. Things just get done. On the other hand, this Flyertalk thread contains numerous complaints from those who find the travel and concierge staff to be poor.

Here’s a January 2024 comment from the Flyertalk thread:

I joined in November and I’m already thinking of cancelling, to get as much of the annual fee back as possible. The joining fee is a painful write-off. I feel quite the fool for joining. The concierge has never come through with dinner reservations, the flights/holidays they’ve quoted have been much more than BA and I don’t need the card as a status symbol.

If you just want hotel and airline status there are likely easier (and cheaper) ways. Most people don’t need status with six hotel chains – a focus on achieving one via the ‘traditional’ avenue may actually be better. Equally, taking out The Platinum Card can be a cheaper way of achieving mid-tier status at a number of chains.

If the American Express Centurion Card still appeals, however, you should get yourself the Platinum version and start putting substantial sums of money through it …..


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Comments (144)

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

  • dst87 says:

    Why does that exclusive art card look like a Windows screensaver from the 90s?

    • Davidl says:

      I always said the card displayed in the add looked like the kids had ruined it with a crayon. The Green Leaf one is much nicer.

  • His Holyness says:

    What happened to Hertz Platinum? PC is total rubbish.

  • JM says:

    As a UK Centurion card holder. I can tell you it’s just about worth it.
    The 8 return trips to the airport are worth to me £2500
    The restaurant perks are worth an easy £1000.
    The concierge is excellent and there’s some decent perks there as well
    The biggest let down has been the fabled Centurion events. They are so over subscribed that they sell out in seconds and any free events, private jet returns to lunches in the south of France etc are given to the biggest spenders (not that unsurprisingly).
    Events were one of the big selling points of the card previously But there’s been a big increase of Centurion members in the UK in the last year. And the event availability go in seconds.
    The UK benefits vs USA are very poor in comparison.
    But overall. I can just about justify the cost.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      £150 for a 40 mile trip?

      I could order an exec Uber to Heathrow right now for £195 and it’s a 100 mile trip

      I paid £220 for an S class via AL not so long ago (pre booked of course)

    • Omar says:

      Exactly this. I’ve had mine since it was released, I’m going to guess around 99. It does have some brilliant uses and I always liked the Fast track. I booked tickets for the suite at the O2 recently and had the whole place to the four of us!

    • JM says:

      Plus the £500 Harvey Nics and £500 Clos19 credit of course.
      In total. It’s easy to save £4000-5000 a year which pays for the fee.

    • MT says:

      Agree fully on the events, I am unsure they go to the biggest spenders or more the ones who are frieldly with the Events Team. I will say if you pick the good paid for ones they make incredible value and easily add value to the card.

      So while the fee seems high, its actually very easy to make money from it if you play it correctly. From offers alone I make my fee back and then add in the HN and Clos which would be spend I would make anyway and I am getting status and a few other freebies for nothing.

      Also for me the Emirates Status pairs with my Marriott Status for the extra points, a small thing but when spending a lot at Marriott each year they add up!

      If there ever is an issue they are good at resolving it, much better than standard Amex cards and they will happily throw points or gifts your way as an apology.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Anyone else just come for the comments? 🤣

    • SB says:

      +1
      ‘4 kitchens’ above wins so far. Money talks, wealth whispers…

      • The Savage Squirrel says:

        I vote for a watch with an “exclusive movement”.

        • BBbetter says:

          +1 for the ‘exclusive movement’. +0.5 for handbags go up in value.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            It’s the same with handbags buy a classic from the higher end fashion houses and they will hold their value if not increase.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          500k Rolex’s sold a year it’s deffo not exclusive but the fact remains if you buy the right Rolex its an investment.

          • Ken says:

            You think you just walk into Hermes and buy a Birkin bag ?

            You’ll be buying a whole load of stuff that won’t be going up in value to even get a sniff of one.

            Besides, everything goes up in value until it doesn’t.

            A handful of ultra rare stamps going for millions doesn’t help collectors who have collections that are really worth 10% of the catalogue price.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            I know you don’t but it’s not just Birkins that have second hand value. And ever occur the buyer just loves those other handbags and the quality / look etc

            Your comment shows you don’t know the difference between collecting as a hobby / fun / to admire vs investing in rare collectibles.

      • HampshireHog says:

        Wasn’t it Ed Milliband who got into trouble for having two kitchens? Four, how the other half live!

    • Michael says:

      Popcorn gif incoming in 3…2…1

  • Phil says:

    Not that I’d even remotely qualify, but why would I put 25k+ a month onto Amex in the first place? I’d want to spread it around different cards to get the benefits. That said, if I had 25k a month to burn I’d probably not care about a few free flights

    • Chris W says:

      Why would anyone spending £300k a year care about loyalty points? Jumping through hoops with transferring points and availability restrictions? Wouldn’t they just instruct their assistant to pay cash??

      • MT says:

        Simple, for the fun of it and actyually those points come in very handy for Emirates First Class tickets, which soon add up if you want flexibility. Its also possible that the reason these people speanding 300k a year are able to spend 300k a year do so because they are not silly with money and spend 10k on a First Class Return flight they can get for some points and £1.2k taxes!

    • Stu_N says:

      If you’re spending £25k a month that’s £300k a year – implies an income of at least £1-2m once you take other outgoings and tax into account.

      I doubt people in that bracket have the time or energy to care too much about rinsing every benefit out of card spending.

      • Rob says:

        They generally do, because those people are mainly finance types.

        • T says:

          See I don’t get this. If they can justify a salary of this magnitude, how do they have time (or the inclination) to work the system for a few free (not really because there is a cost and their time is (effectively) expensive) flights they could likely purchase for cash anyway.

          • Ken says:

            If they didn’t have the mindset to get an angle out of everything, they wouldn’t be earning that kind of money.

          • Rob says:

            You don’t get it. For a start, most people earning seven figures do fewer hours than you. I never worked a single weekend in all my years in private equity and I honestly can’t remember a single breakfast meeting or ever being there beyond 10pm. Most city traders are done by 4pm because the market is shut. Even now (and Rhys can confirm) I refuse all breakfast meetings and the HfP office is empty by 5.30pm.

            Secondly, let’s assume you earn £1m per year. This is £550k after tax. Buying 4 business class flights at £2,500 is still a decent whack out of your net income.

            More importantly – and this is they key bit – it’s a REAL saving. If you would never spend £10k on 4 business class flights, then getting them free for cAvios isn’t a real cash saving. For the wealthy, it is.

            I know one guy, worth hundreds of millions, who uses his Avios for a Gold ‘double Avios’ reward to take his family to the Maldives for Christmas every year in business. He’s very happy with the value there (unsurprising given the cash fares then).

            (If I was recruiting traders and one came in for interview and I found all the cards in his wallet had no rewards, he wouldn’t be getting the job. They clearly wouldn’t be focused enough on money.)

          • David says:

            As Rob explains but someone on this kind of money does not do 355t 1am calls.

        • Omar says:

          The criteria for invitation has definitely changed. When I got mine, there was no invitation, the original plastic card just arrived in a black wooden box in about 99, I think. I was previously Gold.

        • Stu_N says:

          People in this bracket I know are c-suite and law/accounting partners – they have different working patterns to those Rob describes.

          • Chris W says:

            If you’re a partner/director sure, you can call the shots and nobody will question if you aren’t in the office at 6pm each day.

            But for grads, junior managers, senior associates etc they are going to be pulling long hours to get ahead. Ever watched the show Industry? They regularly work till midnight.

            Wasn’t Rob saying during the pandemic that remote work was career suicide for juniors because they needed to show their face in the office as much as possible?

            Also Rob, you say you dont work weekends, but replying to readers comments about your work on a weekend sure feels like work….

          • Rob says:

            I don’t see it as work. If I thought it was work I’d pay someone to do it.

          • Ken says:

            And they come from a culture of charging for every hour or 12 minute block from the day they join as a graduate & start climbing the greasy pole.
            Not remotely like traders.

      • Hbommie says:

        Taxes? Oh no no no, we don’t pay those.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        I don’t think you know your average HNWI

        Inherited wealth might piss it away but if you’ve worked hard for what you’ve got it’s not from being frivolous

        • Geoff says:

          “Inherited wealth might piss it away but if you’ve worked hard for what you’ve got it’s not from being frivolous”

          Apart from 7 grand in fees for a credit card in year one obvs

          • TGLoyalty says:

            Pissing away for you as you don’t see value.

            They may live a different life and see value. Plus the joining free and annual fee was 50% lower a couple years ago .. it could be £7k to join few years with greater benefits?

            They’re obviously doing their own value vs cost analysis. I can actually see the FHR benefit working well for well heeled traveller

    • Jonathan says:

      You’d probably be putting through enough on say VS plus credit card within a month to trigger the companion voucher, assuming you get a decent credit limit !

      • David says:

        Be funny if Barclays gave a £200 credit limit to one of these high rollers on application.

        • Jonathan says:

          People who get those sort limits are people who don’t fill out application forms properly, Rob said about this the other day

        • Luca M says:

          I know it was meant as a general joke, but in case you may not know, the profile of customer discussed here should have a Barclays Wealth or Barclays Private bank account and they will simply get their Barclaycard Avios (if they so wish) by asking directly their Private Banker about it, over the phone or on one of their appointment at the customer chosen location (they come to you). Additionally, Barclays Wealth/Private have an existing relationship with Amex (they. An get you a Platinum Card), so I would guess they directly refer to Amex the right type of client that may not have had an Amex card at all before not have had to put through any “qualifiable” spend

    • Chris says:

      There was an article on LL this week about a reader sitting on a pile of 31M MR points, generating ~500k a month. It just brought into focus that some people’s spending habits are incomprehensible to mere mortals

  • George K says:

    I seem to recall that there was talk of an intermediate card between Platinum and Centurion. I wonder if that’s still on the cards (pun intended)

    Looking at the list of benefits, it’s very hard to justify the fees. I think a quick win would be to extend the airport limousine and meet and greet services to bookings outside Centurion Travel.

  • AJA says:

    My OH was offered one of these about 15 years ago and it was obviously due to the insane amount of money going through Amex at the time combined with weekly trips to Chicago and San Diego but turned it down on the basis that none of the benefits offered mattered that much.

  • Boon says:

    As with all things luxury, the value includes the intangible benefits, not just the tangible.

    • The Savage Squirrel says:

      Which are….?

      • BBbetter says:

        If you have to ask…

      • Ken says:

        Exclusive events…that get booked up in minutes.

        Private jet lunches to France to remind you that you are rich but not rich enough to get invited on them.

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