Card payment sucharges banned in Australia from 2026

And go where?

The Big Four will move first with a further devaluation once the interchange reduction kicks in. We'll probably see even more of them drop their international transfer partners as well.

Amex merely needs to stay one step above them.
They won't necessarily go anywhere. They don't need a similar card. After a certain point the annual fee becomes less and less worth it as does using the card for transactions. If it was this easy for them to devalue in quick succession then we would've seen them devalue a lot more a long time ago.

The other cards don't really have much in the way of international transfer partners as it is. Also the nature of the devaluation depends on whether there's a carve out for premium cards as mooted above. If there is then we might not see much of one.

Michelle Bullock sounded very defiant a few months ago on this but now suddenly has been forced to delay things.
 
So from the UK where surcharges have been banned for a while, the UK Amex MR earn rate is 1 point per £1 spent (about 0.5 point per $1 AUD). So a lower earn rate than the AU cards, but the conversation rate is 1:1 from UK Amex points to Avios, QFF, Asia Miles, Etihad, Flying Blue, SAS, Virgin, etc. Whereas the AU Amex is a 2:1 conversion. So UK points are basically worth double AU points.

Interestingly AU Amex doesn't let you convert to QFF but UK Amex can.

The current UK signup offer is 40,000 bonus points (80,000 AU Amex points) for spending £5,000 in the first 6 months.

For the Amex Platinum Card, the UK version offers 75,000 bonus points (equivalent to 150,000 Australian Amex points, so the AU offer of 200,000 points is better). However the UK card has a slightly higher travel credit of £250 ($500) compared to $450 on the AU version, plus a £400 dining credit that’s not on the AU card. The UK’s annual fee (£650 / $1300) is also lower compared to $1450 on the AU card.
 
So from the UK where surcharges have been banned for a while, the UK Amex MR earn rate is 1 point per £1 spent (about 0.5 point per $1 AUD). So a lower earn rate than the AU cards, but the conversation rate is 1:1 from UK Amex points to Avios, QFF, Asia Miles, Etihad, Flying Blue, SAS, Virgin, etc. Whereas the AU Amex is a 2:1 conversion. So UK points are basically worth double AU points.

Interestingly AU Amex doesn't let you convert to QFF but UK Amex can.

The current UK signup offer is 40,000 bonus points (80,000 AU Amex points) for spending £5,000 in the first 6 months.

For the Amex Platinum Card, the UK version offers 75,000 bonus points (equivalent to 150,000 Australian Amex points, so the AU offer of 200,000 points is better). However the UK card has a slightly higher travel credit of £250 ($500) compared to $450 on the AU version, plus a £400 dining credit that’s not on the AU card. The UK’s annual fee (£650 / $1300) is also lower compared to $1450 on the AU card.

I have been investigating somehow getting the UK Amex Plat only today (as I've posted elsewhere on this site) and it's giving me an option of 95k Amex MR points (equivalent to 190k Australian MR). It says this is based on my cookies.

I still have an British address and can get a UK phone number so I'm going to investigate this further on Monday...
 
Whereas the AU Amex is a 2:1 conversion

....... plus a £400 dining credit that’s not on the AU card.
Soon to be 3:1 for most transfer partners, 4:1 for Emirates

There is a A$400 dining credit on the Au Platinum card (A$200 in Aus and A$200 abroad - think that's the same logic as the UK card)
 
I just don't understand why people are still chasing frequent flyer points in 2025.
There is a fantasy pushed on mums and dads by the banks and airlines that the average credit card spend is a gateway to premium world travel. It's not reality and it's not ethical.

I was a keen points chaser back 15-20 years ago, when points were at least triple the value they are now and easier to redeem.
Hard to comprehend now, but in 2009 I was earning uncapped 3 Krisflyer miles per dollar spent with the old Krisflyer Amex card. I could pay unlimited tax on the ATO portal and the surcharge was minimal and tax deductible.

As chasing frequent flyer points becomes less and less worthwhile, people seem more and more desperate to chase them. The credit card surcharge ban probably won't slow things down much.
These schemes are highly profitable and a borderline scam now.
Good luck to you guys, but for me It's just not worth the bother any more unless you can push serious business spend through a card, which I can't do.

As a high income earner (and probably less energetic than I used to be), I decided a few years ago to use the time I previously spent chasing reward seats to just work and earn the money to buy the J seats I want, when I want them.
 
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