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SME? Capital on Tap cuts its Avios earn rate but remains a good deal

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If you have a Limited Company or LLP, you have access to a great financial product – the Capital on Tap Visa credit card.

This card is FREE for life and is the only credit card indirectly earning Avios which has NO FX FEES.

Unfortunately, Capital on Tap is reducing the Avios rate on its free card from today. You will now receive points worth 0.8 Avios per £1 spent rather than 1 Avios per £1.

Capital on Tap credit card earns Avios

Whilst this is disappointing, Capital on Tap remains a good option if you have a Limited Company. It is also worth remembering that, until January 2025, the card had a £99 annual fee which has now gone.

For most people, earning points which convert to 0.8 Avios per £1 on a free card is better than earning 1 Avios per £1 on a £99 card, although of course you don’t have a choice!

Even if you have an American Express Business card, you will still need a Visa or Mastercard back-up given the level of Amex acceptance in the B2B sector.

You can apply here. This page shows two cards – the free card and the £299 Pro card – so make sure you select the free one. As of last night it had not been adjusted to reflect the new lower Avios rate.

The £299 Capital on Tap Pro card retains 1 Avios per £1

The Capita on Tap Pro Visa card has kept an earn rate of 1 Avios per £1, if you choose to transfer your Capital on Tap points to Avios. You can increase this even further, to 1.25 Avios per £1, if you pre-load your card before you spend.

It’s arguable whether the Pro card justifies the £299 fee unless your card spend is substantial, although there is a bonus worth 10,500 Avios for signing up. Radisson Rewards VIP status is the only extra benefit of note.

10,500 points is an exclusive Pro sign-up bonus for HfP readers.

What is the Capital on Tap Visa card?

We haven’t looked at Capital on Tap since the £99 fee on the basic card was scrapped in January so it is worth running over it again.

Capital on Tap runs the only small business Visa credit card which can earn you Avios points.

Whilst the name may not be familiar to you, it has over 200,000 cardholders in the UK and is one of the few fintech ‘unicorns’ (start-up companies worth over £1 billion) in the country.

How does the Capital on Tap Visa card work?

The Capital on Tap Visa card is the only way to indirectly earn Avios via a small business Visa or Mastercard credit card. 

You earn 1 Capital on Tap point (worth 0.8 Avios or 1p of cashback) per £1 you spend.

There is no sign-up bonus, but of course there is no annual fee either.

Capital on Tap free credit card earns Avios

As an added benefit, this is the ONLY Avios-earning credit card in the UK which does not charge foreign exchange fees when used abroad.

Avios transfers from Capital on Tap are INSTANTANEOUS.  Log in to Capital on Tap, request a transfer of some or all of your available Capital on Tap points to Avios, log in to your British Airways Club account and they will be there.

You can find full details on their website here.

Are there any other benefits?

On top of your 1 Capital on Tap point per £1 spent (worth 0.8 Avios or 1p of cashback), there are some other good benefits too:

  • unlimited free supplementary cards for your staff
  • a credit limit of up to £250,000
  • up to 42 days to pay before interest is incurred
  • auto-syncs to Sage, Xero, QuickBooks, FreeAgent and more
  • no FX fees and no ATM fees 

Capital on Tap also allows you to preload your card if you want to make substantial purchases in excess of your credit limit. You can transfer money onto your card and then make your payment, earning points on the purchase. You still earn points when you spend pre-loaded funds.

Capital On Tap Business Rewards credit card

Who can apply?

The Capital on Tap card is aimed at SMEs. You must have a Limited Company or LLP with a turnover of £24,000+ to apply.

Partnerships and sole traders are not accepted, unfortunately.

Is it worth getting the Capital on Tap Visa card?

If you have any sort of small business which would allow you to qualify for the card, I think you need to have a serious look at Capital on Tap.

Whilst the Avios earn rate has been cut, it remains a strong package and, frankly, the alternatives for an SME Visa or Mastercard are not very impressive.

What do you have to lose? After all:

  • the card is free for life
  • you get points worth 0.8 Avios (or 1p of cashback) for every £1 spent
  • the card has no FX fees
  • you get far better acceptance than with an American Express card

Your interest rate is based on your business profile and can be as low as 14.95% APR variable.

But don’t forget ….

Capital on Tap points can be converted into cashback as well as Avios.  You can choose to take 1p of cash instead of 0.8 Avios.

If you don’t value Avios at more than 1.25p then take your Capital on Tap points as cashback instead. The cashback option also gives you a fallback in case Avios devalues or your travel plans change. 

However, if you took cashback it would be taxable as business income.  Points and miles have no cash or taxable value – this is a long-held HMRC rule.

How to apply

If the Capital on Tap Visa card sounds interesting for your business, you can find out more and apply on their website here.

The application page shows two cards – the free card and the £299 Pro card – so make sure you select the free one. If you do decide to go with the Pro card, there is an exclusive higher bonus for HfP readers of 10,500 points, worth 10,500 Avios.

Comments (66)

  • Talay says:

    So breakeven is 299/(.01-.008)=£149,500 you need to put on the Pro card if you value your Avios at 1p.

    Given the Avios Barclaycard at £240 gives you 1.5 Avios it is hard to see where this market is.

    I understand some folks are queezy about personal and business cards but in reality it doesn’t matter a jot. You can simply use a personal card for business expenses and claim the cost back.

    • Lumma says:

      The paid card comes with a Priority Pass too, which I can’t see mentioned above. Status recognition with Radisson VIP is excellent, just read the post in the forum about people’s upgrades

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        Radisson VIP is excellent so far but they’re giving the card away too easily and it’s going to be impossible to deliver the benefits in a decent way in the more popular hotels. It’s like when they started making Hilton Diamond too easy to get (some American credit cards give that status, plus status matches, occasional double nights promos, etc) has meant most Hiltons now give crap upgrades and suffer lounge overcrowding

        • Rob says:

          Not really – all the Avolta people will drop out soon, albeit replaced by Avanti top tier members!

    • Rob says:

      Until your card company closes you down.

      Not saying that I don’t do the same, but Amex in particular is getting quite picky.

      • William Avery says:

        Off topic but recently got rejected for a Barclaycard. I’m company director but wife is employed. Identical credit file to my wife and Experian top score. Did tick the “interested in balance transfer” box for hers. Is it that simple?

        • Rob says:

          They don’t like the self employed.

          • William Avery says:

            So write this one off as an option then?

          • Rob says:

            I think they are no longer strictly banned (they were banned on Day 1) but it appears to be very hard.

  • Domo1915 says:

    Now I’ve been downgraded plan to build up the points and upgrade and transfer only if absolutely necessary. I’d be more interested upgrading if they had other airline schemes coukd transfer to.
    Also get feeling an avios devaluation is imminent given 30% transfer bonus for US Amex and Iberia recently devaluing.

    • Sharka says:

      The US transfer bonus is not unusual (there is also one on Hilton) and the economics for issuers much more attractive: interline fees are around 3% in the US.

  • Arran says:

    You’ve omitted the Pro card also has Priority Pass membership in the £299 fee, those that don’t have it elsewhere can take advantage of this with Cap on Tap

    • Rob says:

      True, but of course many readers have this benefit elsewhere – Radisson is real novelty.

  • david says:

    You could in theory receive the 1p cashback and buy Avios at 0.92p.

    • Sharka says:

      An effective corporation tax rate is likely to be around 20%, so you would pay 0.2p on the cashback and hence only receive 0.8p net (the actual results depends on the company’s specific situation).

  • Matt says:

    There is another option – you can redeem for gift vouchers (eg Amazon) at 1p=1p, which is what I will probably do given the Avios rate cut.

    • Anthony says:

      Amazon vouchers are showing the same 0.8p conversion rate 1250 points = £10. Only redeem to balance and redeem to registered bank account appears to be 1p

      • Carl says:

        It’s showing as 1000 points for £10 on all gift cards within my account.

        • Anthony says:

          Strange, mine shows 1250 = £10 for Amazon and most of the other ones. Airbnb does show at 1000. Very odd

  • danimal says:

    Shouldn’t the article read “CoT introduces Avios worth 0.8 / £1 on its free card” rather than “Capital on Tap is reducing the Avios rate on its free card from today” – there was no option to earn Avios on the free card until now, so this is a new, and welcome change.

    • Rob says:

      No, because new customers have received Avios on the free card for some time. It’s only existing cardholders who don’t get it, but hopefully will soon.

      • Carl says:

        Existing card members get it now, got the email from COT yesterday and transfers are now active within our account.

  • C F Frost says:

    The current and best SME news piece is possibly the new Amex Business Plat referral deal (Business to business): 35k MR for the referrer and 80k MR for the new card holder upon a 6k 3/12 spend.

  • VinZ says:

    I was already annoyed with CoT as I had started to push more spending through it but I have a ridiculous credit limit of £50k. Business turnover is £10m+ a year and they refused an increase.
    I’d already told them that I would revert spending on my BA corporate card (300k credit limit) and now it’s become a no brainer. I will use CoT only when I can’t use Amex.

    • The real Swiss Tony says:

      Genuine question – Why would historic turnover be a reflection of future credit worthiness? You can pre-load the CoT card but your point suggests you don’t have the capital reserve to do that so need a risk partner for the cashflow.

      • VinZ says:

        Isn’t that what all CC companies base their assessment on? The company has been going on for 11 years and our coffers are full, it’s a healthy limited company. Nobody knows what the future holds, but isn’t that the same principle with non-companies eg. people?

    • Rob says:

      CoT is a start-up. If they give you a £200k limit, they need to go out and raise that £200k from someone. It’s that simple.

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