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Review: the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

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This is our review of the new-ish (launched 2022) free Barclaycard Avios 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 Mastercard application form

Review free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

Key facts: No annual fee

The representative APR 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.

About the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

The Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card is issued directly by Barclaycard. This analysis is focused on the free version of the card – I review the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card here.

You are 100% OK to apply for this card if you already have a British Airways American Express credit 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 Mastercard sign-up bonus?

You receive 5,000 Avios when you spend £1,000 within three months.

You should note that the premium card – the Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard – comes with a far larger bonus of 25,000 Avios if you spend £3,000 within three months

Even if you want the free card, we strongly suggest that you apply for the Plus card and then downgrade once you have triggered the 25,000 Avios sign-up bonus. This assumes that you can hit the spending target on the Plus card of £3,000 within three months.

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’.

Review free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

Any other benefits with the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard?

When you spend £20,000 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. It is generally the best option on long haul redemptions.

You can take 7,000 Avios instead of the voucher

It is 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 have the option of taking a lump sum instead.

What is the annual fee?

The basic Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card is free.

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

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

This is the same rate as you receive with the free British Airways 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.

Review free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

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.

Can you swap between the two Barclaycard Avios credit cards?

If you have the free Barclaycard Avios credit card, you can upgrade to the Plus fee-paying version at any time via the Barclaycard app. However, you will not receive another sign-up bonus.

More importantly, 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 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.

It is possible to earn more than one upgrade voucher in a year if you upgrade or downgrade your card, since the spend counter resets at that point.

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

As Barclaycard adds a 2.99% 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.

Review free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card

Is this card ‘better’ than the free British Airways American Express card?

Yes. For most people, the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard is a better choice than the free British Airways American Express credit card.

Let’s start with the obvious reason first.

If you get the free British Airways American Express card, you will still need to get a Barclaycard Avios Mastercard to use in places where American Express is not accepted. Why not just get the free Barclaycard Avios card and use that exclusively?

Whilst the free BA Amex credit card comes with a 2-4-1 companion voucher when you spend £15,000 per year, the voucher is heavily restricted. It is only valid for Economy flights and is only valid for one year.

If you are interested in the 2-4-1 Companion Voucher, you should have the paid-for British Airways Premium Plus American Express credit card instead. This comes with a 2-4-1 voucher which is valid in ALL travel classes – not just Economy – and is valid for two years, not one year. It also requires an annual spend of £15,000 to trigger.

In summary:

  • if you’re not interested in the British Airways American Express 2-4-1 Companion Voucher, perhaps because you are a low spender, you should forget the free British Airways American Express card and focus solely on using the free ‘accepted everywhere’ Barclaycard Avios Mastercard
  • if you ARE interested in the British Airways American Express 2-4-1 Companion Voucher, you should forget the free BA Amex and get the British Airways American Express Premium Plus credit card instead, because of the two year expiry date and the ability to use it in all travel classes

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 Credit Card

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

The The Platinum Card from American Express offers 50,000 Membership Rewards points for signing up. These convert to 50,000 Avios points. It has a £650 fee, refunded pro-rata if you cancel.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

Conclusion

5,000 Avios for getting the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card is a good bonus for a free credit card.

Before you apply, you should seriously consider whether the paid-for version of the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard – Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard – is a better deal, at least in the short term, given the 25,000 Avios sign-up bonus.

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

The application form for the £20 per month Avios Plus Mastercard, which we believe is a better deal due to the 25,000 Avios bonus if you are happy to downgrade later, 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 (50)

  • Linda says:

    The article says you can select the voucher or Avios in the app but I can’t find any mention of this anywhere in the app. Can someone help?

    • ianwardz says:

      Select ‘View your Avios’, then scroll down to ‘Explore Bonus Rewards’, below where you a see your current spending target.
      On this page you can select your reward.

      • Linda says:

        I can’t find a link that says view your Avios anywhere on my app. Where does it appear for you please?

        • ianwardz says:

          Click on your current balance and then it is on the next page about half way down.

          • Linda says:

            Thanks. I can see most of that page but an ad promoting lounge access is sitting on top of where I’d be able to select the reward and I can’t seem to close it down! Looks like I’ll have to call them.

    • Kieron says:

      Select your Barclaycard in the App and then click ‘view Avios’. The second menu item offers the option to select upgrade voucher or Avios.

  • Tom says:

    Any likelihood of an enhanced sign-up bonus on either the free or paid Barclaycard? Feels like it’s been a long time since the last bonus offer.

    • Lumma says:

      I think it’s been said before that the big sign up bonuses are a thing of the past as they weren’t driving the custom to other Barclays services and accounts that they expected

      • Rob says:

        Correct. There is almost certainly a negative correlation between the size of the bonus and the likelihood that a cardholder takes out other Barclays products. Remember that Barclays loses huge amounts of money on these cards, deliberately, to attract a younger wealthier demographic.

        • Gordon says:

          The last big one was applying for the Barclaycard Avios plus (when they were launched) and Barclays premier account for 100k Avios, considering I was already a Barclays customer, it was a no brainer, to upgrade my current account to premier.

        • Mikeact says:

          Please explain how Barclays loses ‘huge amounts’, thousands, millions ?

          • Rob says:

            Tell me how you think it makes money, assuming 0.3% interchange, 0.8p cost per Avios and no interest income as people like us don’t carry balances.

            Hilton, IHG etc can’t make the maths work even at 1 hotel point per £1, worth 60-70% less in reward cost and no voichers to fund.

          • Rich says:

            Millions Mike. Remember that fees charged to the retailer are capped at just 0.3% and Barclays have to buy the Avios they hand out for sign ups and ongoing spend, fund account management costs, bad debt etc. etc. The cards are intended as a loss leader.

  • Steve H says:

    If I were to sign up for the avios plus card at £20/ month, spend over £3k in the first month, trigger the 25k avios bonus, then downgrade to the free card, would the £3k spend count towards the £20k spend to get the upgrade voucher, or would I need to spend a further £20k? Does the voucher get awarded once the £20k spend is achieved and could the voucher b retained if the card was then cancelled ?

    • david says:

      The Plus card’s upgrade voucher is at £10,000 spend. When you downgrade to the free, itll reset spend back to 0 but it does allow to get another voucher with a spend of 20k. Voucher can be retained after cancellation of card as long voucher is in your BAEC.

      • Steve H says:

        Thanks David, so best to get the plus card, spend 10k, ( 25k avios and voucher ) wait till it’s deposited, downgrade to free card spend a further 20k, get a 2nd voucher then decide to ditch for 2 yrs or keep long term, presumably 1 voucher per annum for 20k spend ongoing.

    • Mikeact says:

      David is correct, for the voucher, Barclaycard Plus spend £10k, Barclaycard ‘free’ card, spend £20k.
      I downgraded after £10k, and went on to my wife’s Plus as a supplementary. At present, this means I have two and my wife one voucher.
      Only problem and a big one really , BA only ex UK and typical long haul availability.

  • Yona says:

    Will this card give tier point since the deal with Amex seems to be dead? 😛

  • PGR says:

    Still not on Google Pay and therefore a massive pain. Using Curve when I’d really rather not.

  • RobH says:

    Love these articles, however I still don’t understand why they all seem to recommend people apply for a Currensea card with an FX fee of 0.5% when there are several 0% FX cards out there (Halifax Clarity for one). You could argue that you are suggesting “surrendering” the equivalent of 0.5 Avios per pound spent by getting a Currensea card.

    For me this seems to undermine the credibility of the entire article – which is a real shame as the rest of the Credit Card articles are top notch.

    • Rob says:

      Because any other credit card sits on your credit file, takes up credit from your overall limit and generally reduces your chances of being accepted for points earning cards.

      You also need to understand how these cards work. Currensea is 0.5% off interbank. Halifax Clarity has 0% but off the Mastercard rate which is more than 0.5% off interbank. It is more expensive!

      • Myriad says:

        I recall you mentioning Barclays is having an IT upgrade to alllow for two cards, which would let you have both the Barclaycard Reward and Avios. Is this still going ahead/on track for this year?

        • Rob says:

          Still happening but I think they are up there with BA in terms of actual completion …..

          • Mikeact says:

            So, after 3 years or so, Barclaycard are apparently losing millions £10, 20+ etc, and these cards are therefore not having the desired effect of attracting enough new business from the ‘younger, wealthier demographic’, not my words. In my mind this makes these cards totally unsustainable and are likely to be withdrawn or heavily restricted re Avios.
            After many years, I have numerous dead cards in my possession, all dead for one reason or other. These cards will undoubtedly join the collection, unless Barclays are happy to continue throwing good money at them for the foreseeable future. A real ‘loss leader.’

          • Rob says:

            I think there’s a view that Avios is working better selling Barclays Premier current accounts than Barclaycard credit cards, but the two feed off each other.

            You probably still have a NatWest pig at home which you got from opening your first bank account https://www.natwestgroup.com/heritage/history-100/objects-by-theme/serving-our-customers/piggy-bank-1984.html and I suspect 90% of kids who did that still bank with NatWest today. It’s a hugely sticky market, the current account.

      • kevin86 says:

        Chase doesn’t sit on your credit file

        • Rob says:

          Feel free to open an entirely separate current account to push a couple of thousand quid of FX spend through each year if you really have so little to do 🙂

          Let’s assume you spend £4k in FX per year and let’s ignore the interbank vs Mastercard / Visa FX rate issue. Currensea charges you £20 (£100 saving on what Amex would charge before factoring in interbank rate savings) and it comes out of your bank account with no bovver. Job done. How much effort are you really willing to go to, to save another £20?

        • lftbeach says:

          No NatWest pig for me..a National Provincial customer. The kids did…sold them on Ebay, and now more interested in switching banks for the £ incentives.

      • RobH says:

        Thanks for taking the time to reply Rob. Not 100% sure that is accurate about the matching rates, just doing a quick look at GBP to Euro.

        On the Currensea site:
        https://www.currensea.com/pricing/exchange-rates
        1 GBP to 1.1744 EURO
        (Essential plan, as comparing with Halifax that has no monthly charge)

        Then Mastercard:
        https://www.mastercard.co.uk/en-gb/personal/get-support/convert-currency.html
        1 GBP to 1.1823126 EURO

        So at the time of writing – Mastercard is actually better.

        • Delbert says:

          1.174 on Currensea – agreed, but 1.173 on Mastercard at present.

        • RobH says:

          Just to follow up further, if looks like only the Currensea Pro version for £39.95 a year has the interbank rate. The Standard version is worse – as listed above. The Currensea Pro rate on that link above is pretty similar to the Mastercard rate. HOWEVER, lets assume that Currensea is 0.5% better than Mastrercard, then you would need to spend £8,000 on it before you break even (and that assumes the rate is really that different – that the links above shows is not always the case).

          As the the “Not applying for another credit card because of the credit file” – well that argument can be used for anything to do with credit cards – users with low credit scores might not even be able to get 1 or 2 of these to have the AMEX and Barclaycard. I’ve not had an issue with AMEX, Barclaycard, Virgin and Halifax all at the same time (as I currently have) to support spending to get Avios (AMEX + Barc) and FX spending (Virgin + Halifax)

          Would really be interested in your view, as I feel I’m missing something here as the constant promoting of Currensea makes me feel that someone is missing something here (with the likelihood of it being me – but I just can’t see it – but hoping that it’s the fact tha tCurrensea has changed since you last looked at it and the Free card in fact has a worse rate so you need to factor in the annual fee)

          • Rob says:

            Ignore Pro. Currensea Free is 0.5% above interbank which should match any card advertising 0% on the MC / Visa rate. It’s then just a case of whether you want a credit card for occasional FX spend or just wash it through a debit card. Note that Currensea works well for ATM withdrawals too.

            Currensea does pay us but very little (well under 1% of our revenue).

            Perhaps I’m just getting lazy. I pulled out my Currensea card on Wed as I was off to Paris. I took out some Euro via an ATM. I pay minimal fees on that and it comes straight out of my usual bank account except I save £10 vs using my HSBC debit card. Card now back in the box at home. Job done. I get on with my life.

        • Rob says:

          Not sure where the last one came from. A live read done just now is 1.1731 for MC and 1.1740 for Currensea (Essential) or 1.1799 (Pro). The Essential rate (which includes 0.5% fee) is better than MC rate which nominally has no fee.

          • RobH says:

            Thanks for Replying Rob – I just entered the figures on the Mastercard link, most probably fat fingers! However sounds like there is a little fluctuation for when Mastercard anchors their rate – but I think we can safely say they seem about equal.

            In which case I think I’d do the Halifax credit card every time. Mainly for
            1) Section 75 protection – guarantees refund if they go out of business (Mastercard Chargeback that Currensea provides does not, they try, but if they can’t get the money from the companies accounts, then they do not refund and they are not liable like a credit card)
            2) Credit cards you normally pay for weeks later than the purchase – so can do something else with the money – but I admit – interest is not massive! (But it does give you time to move money around AFTER booking everything or returning from Holiday)

            Yes ATM withdrawals are great on both cards – I’d done that a few times on Halifax (so much easier than getting cash in advance). Although after withdrawing the cash from Halifax you do need to login into the App and make a payment to avoid interest payments on it. (Something you wouldn’t need to do on Currensea)

            One note that looking at the FX section in the article it states that the Virgin card is 0% FX fees (and that also uses the Mastercard rate I believe) – so it’s a tad confusing on what you mean when you say 0% FX fees.

            (If Currensea is paying for that section to be added – might be open to declare it – even with an asterisk and note in the footer – I’ve zero issues with sponsorship etc, but do like/appreciate how open the site is normally about that)

          • RobH says:

            Re: Currensea payment – please ignore my comment in brackets if it is just an affiliate link – as I see those differently and pretty much all sites have those now – got to fund things somehow!!!

    • Delbert says:

      By applying for a Currensea Essential card through the HfP link, one can profit to the tune of £4.30 (£10.00 minus £4.95 postage less £150 * 0.5% withdrawal fee) by spending equivalent of £150 in foreign currency within 6 months of receiving the card.

      Nothing in the T&Cs to suggest that ATM withdrawals are excluded so handy if landing in AMS, for example, and withdrawing £150 of euros at the airport from an ABN Amro ATM (no card withdrawal fees).

  • Peter says:

    Whilst Rob generally sings the praises of the Barclays Avios card products, in the interests of balance, my experience has been that Barclays has trouble dealing with anything slightly out of the ordinary (like checking income in a joint account) and in such situations, it is near impossible to contact anyone to resolve the matter: ‘The computer says no’! I ended up closing my account because the frustrations exceeded the benefits.

    • Rich says:

      I’ve had an instance of fraud with my Barclaycard at least annually and yet have never had it with Amex in 26 years with them, never with Virgin Money etc.

      Coincidence?

      • JDB says:

        Yes, I think it’s probably just a coincidence/bad luck. I have had fraud once on my old Tesco Platinum card, never on Barclaycard (albeit the Avios card is only ? three years old) and in recent times twice on BAPP (once I noticed and once they reported to me) and twice on Amex Gold, both notified to me by Amex without any obvious sign.

    • Delbert says:

      The only fraud I’ve identified was two years ago on my Halifax Clarity card. Overnight the card was debited with two verbatim transactions equivalent to £14 (obviously to minimise fraud detection), though subsequently reimbursed by Halifax.

      However, since discovering the fraud, I’ve changed tactics. I now use Starling and Revolut disposable cards for foreign online transactions where I feel my credit cards shouldn’t be exposed – just in case. It’s not a perfect remedy but makes me feel better and I never have more than a few quid on my Starling or Revolut accounts anyway.

  • P4D says:

    I have tried to apply twice in the last few months, hits a system issue for the pre approval, then when I actually put the application through I get no response. They just say I will get something in the post, but nothing has come through…

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