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Thinking of cancelling your American Express Gold or Platinum card? Get the Amex Rewards Credit Card

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This article looks at The American Express Rewards Credit Card. This is a little known member of the Amex family which, in one scenario, can prove incredibly useful.

One of the downsides of cancelling the American Express Preferred Rewards Gold Credit Card or The Platinum Card is that you are required to empty out your Membership Rewards points account. If you don’t, your points will be lost.

However …. is there a free way to keep your Membership Rewards points alive when cancelling a Preferred Rewards Gold or Platinum card?

Yes.  (OK, you probably guessed I was going to say that!)

Thinking of cancelling your American Express Gold or Platinum card?

You shouldn’t transfer Membership Rewards points until you are about to book

Having to close your Membership Rewards points account can lead to a dilemma over when to cancel your Preferred Rewards Gold or Platinum card.  

You will be paying £16 per month after the free first year to keep an American Express Preferred Rewards Gold Credit Card active and £54 for The Platinum Card.  However, this allows you to keep your Membership Rewards points where they are.  If you are forced to transfer them because you close your card, you may regret it later.

Because American Express Membership Rewards points can be transferred to many different airline and hotel partners, they are more valuable than airline or hotel points.  You shouldn’t convert them until you need them.

Can you keep your Membership Rewards points when cancelling an American Express card?

There is a solution that:

  • lets you keep your Membership Rewards points account open, and
  • allows you to stop paying an annual fee for either the Gold or Platinum credit cards

This card is the answer:

Thinking of cancelling your American Express Gold or Platinum card?

You can apply for the little-known American Express Rewards Credit CardFull details are on the American Express website here.

This card has NO ANNUAL FEE and lets you collect Membership Rewards points.

For simplicity, I will occasionally refer to this card as ARCC because ‘The American Express Rewards Credit Card’ is a mouthful.

What is The American Express Rewards Credit Card?

ARCC is a standard Amex-branded credit card. Here is the current interest rate information:

The American Express Rewards Credit Card

Bonus: 10,000 points

Read our full review

Other information:

  • Your best choice if you want a ‘free for life’ card which earns Membership Rewards points
  • A good choice if you want to close a Gold or Platinum card but keep your points intact
  • Annual fee: Free

Representative 30.0% APR variable

See if you qualify for the 10,000 points sign-up bonus +

You will receive 10,000 American Express Membership Rewards points as a sign-up bonus on The American Express Rewards Credit Card if you spend £2,000 within three months of signing up.

Membership Rewards points are hugely flexible. You can transfer them into Avios, Virgin Flying Club or other airlines (at 1:1) or into various hotels schemes, into Club Eurostar or use them for shopping vouchers.

To qualify for the bonus, you must NOT, currently or in the previous 24 months, have held any other personal American Express card.

You are OK if you had a supplementary card on someone else’s American Express account.

You are OK if, currently or in the previous 24 months, you have held a Business American Express card.

For clarity, you can still apply for The American Express Rewards Credit Card ard even if you do not qualify for the bonus.  You may want to do this if you are thinking of swapping your American Express Preferred Rewards Gold card or The Platinum Card for a free alternative, and would prefer to keep your existing Membership Rewards points balance alive.

Learn more about the card benefits +

The American Express Rewards Credit Card is the only ‘free for life’ American Express card which lets you collect Membership Rewards points.

We do NOT recommend this card if you would also qualify for the sign-up bonus on American Express Preferred Rewards Gold.  Preferred Rewards Gold is free for the first year, comes with four free airport lounge passes and £120 of Deliveroo credit and has a higher sign-up bonus of 20,000 points.

The best reason to get The American Express Rewards Credit Card is if you are coming to the end of your free first year with American Express Preferred Rewards Gold, or no longer want to pay the fee on The Platinum Card, but want to keep your Membership Rewards points intact.

You need a minimum personal income of £15,000 to apply for the card.

It has no annual fee and no substantial benefits, except for the ability to collect Membership Rewards points at 1 point per £1 spent.

It is unlikely that many Head for Points readers will qualify for the 10,000 points sign-up bonus because you cannot have held any Membership Rewards cards in the previous 24 months.  That will exclude anyone who has, or has recently had, a Gold or Platinum Amex card.

Don’t worry about that.  You may still want to get this card even though you won’t get a bonus.

Get the ARCC card if you are planning to cancel Amex Gold or Platinum

If you currently have an Amex Green, Gold or Platinum card and want to cancel it but do not want to cash in your Membership Rewards points, this card is your answer.

Apply for The American Express Rewards Credit Card.  Once it is active, you can cancel your Preferred Rewards Gold card or The Platinum Card safe in the knowledge that your Membership Rewards points are safe.

The only ‘snag’ is that you will not have reset the 24 month clock on being able to reapply for a new Gold or Platinum card and receive another sign-up bonus.  In order to do that you need to close down your Membership Rewards account entirely.

For a lot of people, though, being able to keep your existing Membership Rewards balance alive will be more important.

You can apply for the FREE American Express Rewards Credit Card 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 (35)

  • BJ says:

    Given the generally increasing difficulty of earning meaningful amounts of miles and points coupled with occasionally exceptional SUB from amex itself on Bonvoy, BAPP and Platinum I would argue that the 2y break strategy is now more compelling than it has ever been. Especially so for couples who can stagger the break period so that they are not without an amex.

    OT cards: I got an email yesterday from Halifax that there will be no FX fees on my devit card starting next month. If this extends to all LBG debit cards then presumably Clarity will become redundant unless favoured for other reasons such as S75.

  • Mitesh says:

    I’m about to cancel both my personal and business platinum cards after triggering my bonuses. I still have the Amex gold business. I assume the points earned via the platinums will still remain actives by virtue of me holding the business gold card?

    • Rob says:

      IF and only if they go into the same MR account.

      • BJ says:

        They wont unless @Mitesh already combined the MR accounts. IME amex have never done this by default.

        • Mark says:

          Yes I spotted this weekend that I had two separate MR accounts, one on Plat and one on Green. I have asked Amex to merge them and they said it will take 7-10 days.

          • Harrier25 says:

            You can merge them yourself just by unlinking one and then linking it to the other, if you get what I’m trying to say.

          • BJ says:

            @Harrier25, how do you do that?

          • Harrier25 says:

            If you have two accounts unlink the card from the account you don’t want it linked to, you can then relink the card in the account where you want it linked by clicking on the Account tab and selecting the ‘Active and Add Card to Your Account’ option in the app or on website. Worked for me a few years ago.

          • Harrier25 says:

            Remember to unlink the card from the account you don’t want it link to first. To do this, click on the Account tab and choose the ‘Remove a Card’ option. It will then show all cards linked to that account, asking you to choose the card you wish to remove from that online account.

  • Chada says:

    Having gone through the process two days ago, it’s not possible to do a straight “downgrade” from a gold/platinum to this card, as this is not a charge card.

    This card would need a new application and activation, after which the gold/platinum can be cancelled so do budget the extra time for this.

    One alternative if you prefer a straight downgrade is asking for the Amex Green Charge card which comes with a £60 annual fee but retains MR points and earnings (plus provides some travel cover)

  • TeesTraveller says:

    I have this card after downgrading from platinum to gold and from gold to ARCC. If you have taken all the bonus points on offer and still want to keep your Amex, this is the card for you. The bonus offers are mainstream and similar to what I had when gold (and not those upmarket Chelsea based olive oil merchants that appeared on my platinum card).

    Only exception is if you put a ludicrous amount of flight spend on your gold card for the double points; and/or can use (& justify) the “free” lounge entry passes that come with Amex gold.

  • Marc Bamber says:

    If you call Amex they’ll convert your Gold Rewards account to the standard charge card.

  • Aston100 says:

    We took this card when player 2 needed to cancel their Amex and retain their MR. Exactly the scenario in the article.
    Was meant to be a temporary thing but we’ve had and used so many offers that we’ve kept this card and a supplementary for me in lieu of gold and platinum for player 2 for the past two years.
    Just the Hertz offers alone have saved a few hundred pounds.

  • Dmm says:

    @Rob, the bit of advice missing from the article is to check that the original points balance also appears on the ARCC. If it doesnt then Amex have set it up with a different MR account, and you will need to contact then to combine it which also takes a few days. This has happened to us at least twice. Otherwise you may think you’ve kept your points alive but havent! (Although I am curious to see if having a different MR balance means that Amex think its a fresh application and you receive a SUB)

    • Rob says:

      When I got the HfP Amex Bus Plat I set it up with a different email address (and so got a fresh MR account) and got the SUB even though I did not qualify for it ….

      • davidn says:

        Ummm… this sounds like quite a revelation?! Is that all it takes to fool the system and get a SUB?! Or perhaps you used both a different email address plus your office WeWork address, rather than original email and home address? Sounds very risky, and not sure I’d have the metal (if you’ll excuse the pun) to do it, but still…

  • TravellerSeko says:

    I have BAPP, Platinum, Cashback, business gold. I was extremely busy last year and I could not use platinum properly. I’m thinking about keeping BAPP and downgrade platinum to gold (if they don’t offer retention bonus). Can we keep Amex rewards when downgrading from platinum personal to gold personal?

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