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Curve Card to add 1.5% fee for HMRC tax payments – unless you upgrade to Curve Metal

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SUNDAY EDIT: On Sunday evening, Curve put details of these changes back on its website, with two changes:

for new cardholders from Monday 25th November, these new policies apply immediately.  Existing cardholders will not switch to the new rules until 24th January (not 21st as originally stated)

the new policy will only apply to ‘we don’t accept credit cards’ merchants specifically listed by Curve, and initially only HMRC will be on that list.  You will NOT be surcharged for using Curve at any other merchant which only accepts debit cards.

MONDAY 6pm EDIT: Curve has added some additional exclusions to the website:

After an initial trial period with HMRC, other government payments such as National Savings & Investments, DVLA Vehicle Tax, and Student Loan Payments will be included as well.

Back to the original article ….

Curve Card briefly added a section to its website yesterday about new fees it is introducing for debit card payments which are recharged to a credit card.

The information disappeared from the website after pushback in Curve’s community forum, but it was detailed enough to assume that it is happening.

The main target here is HMRC tax payments.  It will also apply wherever you use Curve Card to make a debit card payment – at a merchant which does not accept credit cards – which you recharge to a credit card.

I’m not sure that many people have huge amounts of debit card payments apart from HMRC.  Most (not all) credit card companies are blocked by Curve using its get-out of ‘no financial services transactions’.  I think all debit card payments to mortgages, pensions or savings accounts are already blocked.

If you don’t know anything about Curve Card, you may want to read my introduction here before continuing.

Why do people use Curve Card to pay HMRC?

HMRC stopped accepting credit cards for tax payments last year, after the Government stopped merchants imposing fees for credit card use.

This was a serious blow for miles and points collectors who were not on PAYE, as it removed the ability to earn substantial sums of miles from paying VAT, NI, income tax etc.

Curve Card offered a way around this.  You could link a points-earning Mastercard or Visa credit card to your Curve Card and use it to pay HMRC.  Curve Card is treated as a debit card so it is accepted.

This was, essentially, free miles for people like myself.  I have used the bulk of my £50,000 Curve Card limit this year paying HMRC bills.  I recharged them to my Miles & More Global Traveller card, earning close to (50,000 x 1.25) 62,500 Lufthansa Miles & More miles for free.

It looks like this is coming to an end ….

This is what was posted on the Curve Card website for a period yesterday:

Can I use Curve to make payments to HMRC?

If you decide to use the Curve card with a credit card selected as your payment card, starting on the 21st of January 2020, you may be charged a fee. For Curve Blue (free) and Curve Black (including Curve Black Legacy users) customers you will be charged 1.5% of the amount of the transaction. There is no charge to Curve Metal customers.

Curve introducing fee for HMRC payments

Here is the full list of Q&A uploaded to and then removed from the site:

For which transactions will the Debit Fronted Credit fees apply?
Can I use Curve to make payments to HMRC?
Does Curve charge a fee to make payments to HMRC?
Are there spending limits to HMRC payments?
I got a decline after making a payment to HMRC. What happened?

It is pointless (sic) paying a 1.5% fee to pay HMRC via Curve Card.  There are very few scenarios where the underlying miles and points earned will be worth that.

The only exceptions may be if you have a Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard, earning 1.5 miles per £1, or the Miles & More Global Traveller card, earning 1.25 miles per £1.

Your miles would be costing you 1p and 1.2p respectively.  This is not a great deal but some people may find it acceptable.  I don’t.

It is worth noting that Curve Metal customers will not pay a fee.  This is intriguing.  Curve Metal costs £14.95 per month or £150 per year.  If you have substantial tax bills, the upgrade may be attractive.

Let’s run some numbers …..

GREAT DEAL – Pay £50k of tax on a Miles & More Mastercard (1.25 miles per £1) = 62,500 Miles & More miles for £150 Curve Metal fee

GREAT DEAL – Pay £40k of tax on a Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard (1.5 miles per £1) = 60,000 Virgin Flying Club miles for £150 Curve Metal fee

AVERAGE DEAL – Pay £30k of tax on an IHG Rewards Club Premium Mastercard (2 points per £1) = 60,000 status-qualifying IHG Rewards Club points (valued by me at £240) for £150 Curve Metal fee

BAD DEAL – Pay £20k of tax on a HSBC Premier Mastercard (0.5 Avios or other miles per £1) = 10,000 Avios for £150 Curve Metal fee

The bottom line is that:

if you pay enough to HMRC each year, and

you have a generous-enough points-earning Visa or Mastercard credit card linked to Curve

…. then Curve Card via Curve Metal is still an attractive way to pay the Inland Revenue or any other debit card bill which accepts Curve.

Curve introducing fees for paying Inland Revenue

Don’t forget that Curve Metal has other benefits too

On top of the ability to pay unlimited sums to HMRC – subject to your Curve Card limits, which for most people are £50,000 of charges per year – your £150 annual Curve Metal fee comes with other benefits:

This page of the Curve website compares the three different types of Curve Card.  With regards to Curve Metal:

Card: You get a funky 18g brushed metal card in red, blue or rose gold.  I have been trialling the blue one and it is a bit boring to be honest so I’d recommend one of the others!

Foreign exchange fees:  Unlimited transactions with no fee (0.5% fee $ or € and 1.5% fee for other currencies applies to transactions made on a Saturday or Sunday)

ATM withdrawals: Overseas: £600 per 30-day period for free, 2% thereafter / UK: £200 per 30-day period fair use cap

These are the key benefits.  There are other benefits which I do not value highly but which some readers may find useful:

Travel insurance underwritten by AXA

Gadget insurance (maximum value £800 with a £50 excess)

Car rental CDW waiver coverage  (I have this via Amex Platinum but if you do hire cars and don’t have a standalone policy this will be worth something to you – the car must be worth under £25,000 however)

Airport lounge access via LoungeKey (this is NOT free access, you will need to pay a fee of £20 per visit)

1% cashback from six premium retailers.  This is on top of the rewards you will earn from your underlying card.

You won’t necessarily get £150 of annual benefit from this package, but you will get something.  And, of course, you will be retaining the ability to make substantial payments to HMRC via Curve Card.

Final thoughts ….

There had been rumours that Curve Card was introducing fees for paying the Inland Revenue after it sent out a questionnaire recently seeking views on the topic.

What is new here is the addition of charges for ALL debit card payments made with a Curve Card which are recharged to a credit card.

If the structure above turns out to be correct then many of our SME readers will still be OK.  They will have £50,000-worth of HMRC charges per year across VAT, PAYE, income tax etc and the upgrade to Curve Metal can be justified if you have a generous Visa or Mastercard credit card linked.

The losers are likely to be those with under £10,000 or so of HMRC or other non-financial debit card payments.  If this is you, it won’t be worth paying £150 per year for Curve Metal and it won’t be worth paying a 1.5% fee to use Curve Blue or Curve Black.

Let’s see if anything changes between now and the proposed launch date of 21st January.

PS …

If you have read this article without knowing anything at all about Curve Card, read my introductory article here.

Curve will pay you £10 for trying it out if you use our link.


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Comments (586)

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

  • Roger says:

    Personally if Curve allowed free lounge access for card holder and even upped the metal fees I would take that card.

    • Roger says:

      And dump Amex Platinum

    • Riccatti says:

      All they need is to negotiate lounge visit down to 10quid — rather than making money off it, which 20quid price suggests.

      UK airport lounges on that list are not worth 20quid.

  • Richard G says:

    Well, rather than push me towards metal I’m now thinking that I’ll probably just dump Curve full stop. Sure as hell wouldn’t be getting the value out of metal to make this worthwhile.

    Oh well, back to paying my tax bill with my debit card I guess.

  • Graham Walsh says:

    The only reason for keeping Curve against my IHG is that it has an app compared to the non existent Creation App.

  • Anna says:

    I might consider getting Curve metal if they expanded the benefits and made it so that you could pick, say 3 or 4 from a larger number. I don’t need the travel insurance but would use car hire insurance and probably gadget cover. The paid lounge offering doesn’t tempt me but possibly some sort of commission paid in Curve points on certain purchases might be attractive. It’s simply not worth it for me in it’s current form, however.

  • Freddy says:

    Guess the pay Brighton party is over, bummer

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      Brighton can see that you are using Curve, I really wouldn’t risk the relationship frankly…

      • Spaghetti Town says:

        if brighton cared they’d probably of blocked it by now

        • Rob says:

          Why would they care? Same fee as any other debit card.

          • Chrisasaurus says:

            Same reason as credit card companies dont like business spend- risk

            What does paying off a charge card with a credit card suggest to you, net of MS?

            Remember that Barclaycard cared and blocked it…

  • Reader M says:

    Can I use a Tesco debit card to pay Amex/ cc bills and earn Clubcard points?

  • Sussex bantam says:

    So now it’s a pay to use debit card.. sounds like a winner to me

  • Miguel says:

    Doesn’t this defeat the main purpose of using Curve, which is to only carry one card in your wallet that can replace all your Visa+Mastercard cards? In practice I carry my current account’s debit card for ATM withdrawals, one Amex, one Mastercard credit card (in case I need to leave a pre-autorisation on a real, non-Amex credit card somewhere) and the Curve card so I can switch through all my other cards as appropriate, but if I can’t know ahead of time if a particular store terminal refuses credit cards and will charge me 1.5%, won’t everyone just stop using Curve for day-to-day transactions, which seems like the opposite of what they want? Or is there something I’m missing here?

    • Secret Squirrel says:

      Could do the same in Apple wallet.

      • Andrew L says:

        …..and Google Pay.

      • Alex Sm says:

        Except you can’t add Curve to Apple Pay wallet

        • Secret Squirrel says:

          What we meant was you can add your MC / Visa CC’s to mobile wallets so you can have with you all your cards on your phone which us what Curve does.

        • Mike says:

          You can on Google Pay, though

      • Riccatti says:

        Apple Wallet has nasty property in the UK — all touch transactions are limited to £25-£30 even if they go via Apple Pay.

        Tesco is one example.

        • Symon says:

          Don’t forget you can also use Apple Pay online and via apps like BA, Argos etc.

        • Owen Rudge says:

          Some retailers may impose a low limit on Apple Pay etc, but it’s certainly not universal. I’ve used my Amex via Apple Pay for >£50 at Costco and Morrisons for instance without any issues.

          • Harry T says:

            You can put hundreds of pounds in a single transaction through an Amex Card in Apple Pay. I’ve done that abroad too.

          • Riccatti says:

            Unfortunately not in the UK.

            You CANNOT put hundreds of pounds in one transaction via ApplePay (touch) at places like Tesco and M&S.

          • Lumma says:

            If the card terminal shows the contactless sign and the payment is over £30, there’s no limit on Apple/Google/Samsung pay. There’s a few retailers which take contactless payments and have the £30 limit no matter how you pay, but these are becoming less common

          • Alex Sm says:

            I managed to pay a £43 bill in a London resto yesterday with Amex via Apple Pay without PIN and it felt odd that transaction went through without a prompt for additional verification

        • First Last says:

          No. Thats a Tesco policy where limits are set

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      You are missing something.

      This is partly speculation but the pattern in fintech startups is first to drive mass adoption using whatever model you can – usually unprofitable and mostly at odds with regulation that govern their legacy equivalent
      Then you come to the mass market as Curve are doing now (vis. Tube adverts and crowdfunding stunts) at which times you ditch those problematic early adopters like us lot and focus on the customer base that wont get you shut down.

      It’s the same with every business, look at how PayPal got off the ground and then got to where it is now, and every other fintech thst was carving out its own market from zero

      • Shoestring says:

        so what is Curve’s winning model? can you name 3 USPs? they don’t have to be totally unique, just 3 good things about Curve that make a difference vs other cards?

        • Rob says:

          There are no direct comparators though.

        • Andrew L says:

          Use where only debit cards are accepted….1.5% charge coming, Go Back in Time….will probably incur a charge soon. There’s two that they are ruining but no, I can’t think of a 3rd at the moment apart from the very minor benefit of Curve Cash.

          • Alex Sm says:

            What about the ability to pay with almost any CC abroad without incurring charges? And to churn out some miles/hotels points through 200-300 pounds monthly cash withdrawals from CC? For me these are the most important reasons to use Curve at all.

        • Chrisasaurus says:

          The original one – all your cards in one

          The PayPal but in a physical card thing has a lot of merit, I have way too many cards to carry around so Curve solves that problem.

          Go back in time is useful too (partly for accidentally using wrong wiring linked card which is of course a curve created problem but also for manipulating which statement cycle a txn hits)

          Um.. the rest is things like atm withdrawal, use of credit cards (and amex for a week every two years so far) in disguise as debit cards and those are all clearly headed for the door, per the above point, in order to meet the mass market and not alienate credit card companies.

          Given the large size and the risk of business tax payments being snuck onto personal credit cards, I can see why credit card firms would have insisted on this…

          You can of course make us all feel better by clicking my name and supporting charity, and they accept Amex for good measure

        • Riccatti says:

          As above, touch transactions have limit even if they go via Apple Pay.
          Plus those suspicious cashiers when you try to purchase £100-200 gift card on touch.

          You need a physical card.

          Plus hotels, car rentals, gas — when you cannot use Apple Pay. Tesco will not accept above touch pay limit either, which is £30 or so.

      • Miguel says:

        My point is that I don’t understand their “mass market” use case. I’m not talking about the loopholes that obviously will get plugged as they can as they’re capable of, as long as they think they can do it without alienating too much of their user base. Their vision seems to be “all your cards in one”, but if there’s a random 1.5% fee if your merchant doesn’t accept credit cards, then I don’t really see anyone risking paying with a Curve card at your local shop.

        The only two things I can think of is if Curve changing their vision to “all your debit cards in one” (seems silly, not too many people have multiple debit cards) or this 1.5% restriction applying only to well-known “blacklisted” merchants such as HMRC.

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