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The Lloyds Avios Rewards credit cards are finally closing – what should you do?

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Lloyds Bank has announced that the Lloyds Avios Rewards credit cards are finally closing for good.

Anyone who still has one of these cards will be switched to a cashback credit card on 1st June.

In this article I want to look back at the history of the Lloyds / Avios relationship and look at potential alternative cards you could get.

Lloyds Bank Cashback credit card review

Here is the history of Lloyds Bank and its Avios credit cards

If you’re not familiar with the Lloyds Avios Rewards credit cards, this is what you missed:

  • Lloyds TSB (as it was then) was given the contract to issue credit cards for the Avios Travel Rewards Programme, in the days when British Airways Executive Club and Avios were separate
  • The cards were issued as a double-pack of an American Express and Mastercard. As well as earning points, you received an annual British Airways upgrade voucher for hitting a spend target. Another attraction was 0% foreign exchange fees.
  • When Lloyds Bank sold TSB, TSB issued its own Avios-branded credit cards for a short period before closing them to new applicants in 2016
  • In early 2018, Lloyds Bank closed the Avios Rewards cards to new applicants
  • In late 2018, the Lloyds Avios Rewards card became a standalone Mastercard. This was triggered by American Express removing the ability of other UK banks to issue their own Amex cards.

What did you earn with the Lloyds Avios Rewards Mastercard?

From 2018, when the American Express element was removed, the Lloyds card became a fairly decent Avios card – at least by comparison with other Visa and Mastercard options.

You earned:

  • 0.4 Avios per £1 you spent in the UK
  • 0.8 Avios per £1 you spent outside the UK
  • 0.4 Avios per £1 transferred on a balance transfer

…. with an extra 25% bonus for Club Lloyds current account holders.

The annual upgrade voucher was removed when the American Express element was closed. The ‘no FX fees’ benefit was also removed at this point.

What is happening to the Lloyds Avios Rewards card now?

This is the letter that was sent to Lloyd Avios Rewards Mastercard holders yesterday:

“On 1 June 2021 we’re changing the rewards you can earn with your Avios Rewards Mastercard from Avios to a new cashback rewards scheme. This is because our agreement with Avios Group (AGL) Limited is ending.

Any Avios you’ve already collected aren’t affected – you’ll still be able to use them.

Every time you make a purchase you’ll earn cashback:

You’ll earn 0.25% cashback on any purchases you make, up to and including £4,000
• You’ll earn 0.50% on any purchases you make over £4,000
• You’ll earn cashback on all the purchases you make in a year – there’s no limit. This year you can earn cashback from June to December.
• Cashback will automatically be paid into your account every January.”

I reproduce this line without comment ….

“If you earn Avios on a purchase made before 1 June 2021 and then receive a refund after this date, you’ll still be able to use the Avios you collected from that purchase but we’ll deduct any cashback you would have earned. This cashback will be deducted at the rate you’re earning cashback at the time, so 0.25% or 0.50%.”

Is the new cashback card worth keeping?

You know what …. it’s not bad by cashback standards.

0.25% is poor, but frankly it is no worse than the other free cashback or pseudo-cashback cards currently on the market.

If you would spend over £4,000 per year on the card, and so trigger the 0.5% rate, you will be doing substantially better than any other cashback card.

I recommend you have a look at this article from last week which ran through the best cashback credit cards in the UK.

Would I be better off with a miles and points Visa or Mastercard?

Yes. Whilst the best cashback Visa and Mastercard products are now very weak, there are some miles and points options which knock the new Lloyds cashback card into a hat.

You’ve got:

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard 

This free card offers 0.75 Virgin Flying Club miles per £1 spent. If you can get 1p per mile by redeeming smartly, you are getting a 0.75% return on your spending.  Even if you get a little less than this, you are still head and shoulders above most of the cashback cards.  

Our full Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard review is here and you can apply here.

IHG Rewards Mastercard 

This offers 1 IHG Rewards point per £1 spent.  These are generally worth around 0.4p when used for Holiday Inn / Crowne Plaza / InterContinental etc hotel rooms, and at peak dates you can do a lot better.  The card also gets you Gold status in IHG Rewards for as long as you hold it.  

Our full IHG Rewards Mastercard review is here and you can apply here.

HSBC Premier Mastercard  

This offers points which convert into 0.5 Avios, 0.5 Etihad Guest miles, 0.5 Asia Miles or 0.5 Singapore Airlines Krisflyer miles for every £1 you spent.  If you can get 1p per mile – and some of these schemes offer better value than Avios – then you are getting 0.5% back on your spending and potentially more.  

Our full HSBC Premier Mastercard review is here.  Note that you need to be a HSBC Premier customer to get this card. 

I have only looked at free cards here because it is easier to compare the rewards.  

That said, as there is no sign-up bonus on the free Virgin Atlantic credit card, it makes more sense, in Year 1, to pay £160 for the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card which comes with 15,000 Virgin Points as a sign-up bonus.  This card earns a huge 1.5 miles per £1 spent and you can downgrade to the free card from Year 2.

Conclusion

It’s time to finally close the door on the Lloyds and Avios relationship.

I have particular fondness for these cards, because I managed to earn 1.1 million Avios via a particularly generous sign-up offer it ran back in 2012. You can read that story here.

If you still have the Lloyds Avios Rewards Mastercard, you won’t find a better free cashback card on the market.

Your choice is either to stick with the cashback card, or switch to one of the Virgin Atlantic or IHG credit cards – more details below.

If you want Avios, your only option is HSBC Premier if you meet their strict income or savings requirement.

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

Bonus: 3,000 points

Read our full review

Other information:

  • Get a reward voucher worth 75,000 or 150,000 Virgin Points when you spend £20,000 in a year
  • Use it towards a companion ticket when you buy a cash or reward flight
  • Solo travellers can use it to upgrade a cash or reward flight by one cabin
  • Vouchers are valid for two years
  • Annual fee: Free

Representative 26.9% APR variable

See if you qualify for the 3,000 points sign-up bonus +

You receive a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points after your first purchase, however small.

You may want to consider applying for the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard instead for its higher bonus.  This comes with a £160 annual fee but has a sign-up bonus of 18,000 Virgin Points.  You also receive a higher earning rate of 1.5 miles per £1 spent.

You cannot apply if you have had the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card in the previous six months.  You are free to apply if you have any other Virgin Money credit card or the paid-for Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.

Learn more about the card benefits +

When you spend £20,000 per year on the Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard, you will receive a reward voucher.

The voucher is worth:

75,000 Virgin Points if you have no status in Virgin Flying Club on the date you book

150,000 Virgin Points if you have Silver or Gold status in Virgin Flying Club on the date you book

The voucher is valid for two years and will get you:

A discount on a companion flight when you book a cash or reward flight at full price for yourself (taxes and charges need to be paid on the companion ticket)

A discount on a one category upgrade for yourself when you book a cash or reward flight

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

Bonus: 18,000 points

Read our full review

Other information:

  • Get a reward voucher worth 75,000 or 150,000 Virgin Points when you spend £10,000 in a year
  • Use it towards a companion ticket when you buy a cash or reward flight
  • Solo travellers can use it to upgrade a cash or reward flight by one cabin
  • Vouchers are valid for two years
  • Annual fee: £160

Representative 69.7% APR variable based on an assumed £1,200 credit limit and £160 annual fee.  Interest rate on purchases 26.9% APR variable.

See if you qualify for the 18,000 points sign-up bonus +

You receive a bonus of 18,000 Virgin Points after your first purchase, however small.

There are no restrictions on earning the bonus if you are accepted.

You cannot apply if you have had a Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card in the previous six months.  You are free to apply if you have any other Virgin Money credit card or the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card.

Learn more about the card benefits +

When you spend £10,000 per year on the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard, you will receive a reward voucher.

The voucher is worth:

75,000 Virgin Points if you have no status in Virgin Flying Club on the date you book

150,000 Virgin Points if you have Silver or Gold status in Virgin Flying Club on the date you book

The voucher is valid for two years and will get you:

A discount on a companion flight when you book a cash or reward flight at full price for yourself (taxes and charges need to be paid on the companion ticket)

A discount on a one category upgrade for yourself when you book a cash or reward flight

Sainsbury's Nectar credit card

IHG Rewards Mastercard

Bonus: 10,000 points

Read our full review

Other information:

  • Receive Gold Elite status in IHG Rewards
  • Points from spend count towards elite status
  • Annual fee: Free

Representative 22.9% APR variable

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

You receive 10,000 IHG Rewards points as a sign-up bonus when you spend £200 within 90 days.

There are no restrictions on receiving the bonus if you have previously held this card or the (no longer available) IHG Rewards Premium Mastercard.

Learn more about the card benefits +

All IHG Rewards cardholders receive Gold Elite status in IHG Rewards for as long as they hold the card.

This is the only UK travel card where the points you earn from spending count towards elite status.  The 10,000 points you receive as a sign-up bonus do not count towards elite status, however.

HSBC Premier Mastercard

Bonus: None

Read our full review

Other information:

  • Only available to HSBC Premier account holders
  • Annual fee: Free

Representative 23.9% APR variable

See if you qualify for the sign-up bonus +

There is no sign-up bonus on the HSBC Premier Mastercard.

There is a bonus on the HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard.  This is worth 40,000 HSBC points (worth 20,000 Avios or other airline or hotel points) for spending £2,000 within three months.  The annual fee is £290.

Learn more about the card benefits +

The points earned with the HSBC Premier Mastercard can be transferred to various airline and hotel loyalty schemes – Asia Miles, British Airways Club / Avios, Emirates Skywards, Etihad Guest, Finnair Plus, Flying Blue (Air France KLM), Qantas Frequent Flyer, Qatar Airways Privilege Club, Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer, TAP Miles&Go and Wyndham Rewards.

They can also be redeemed for other items including retailer gift cards.

Cardholders can access any airport lounge in the Priority Pass network for a fee of £24 per visit.

Comments (84)

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

  • Waribai says:

    “ I reproduce this line without comment …..”

    But this has always been the case with the Lloyds Avios cards. Essentially a glitch in the system meant that if you triggered a refund after your statement date, your avios had already been transferred so you kept them and there was no concept of a negative balance.
    One of the last few remaining glitches to my knowledge!

    • Wally1976 says:

      Never knew this!

    • TGLoyalty says:

      if you didn’t spend the next month?

      • Waribai says:

        Yes, I think you had to leave it for one month. We only did this “accidentally” a couple of times a year though….

    • Steve says:

      I only realised this a few weeks ago, but I’ve not been getting any Avios deduction for refunds at all, even if they occur same day, let alone same statement period. The refunds have all come from Curve’s Go Back in Time feature, so it could be a quirk of how that works, but the Avios total (at least on the last few months of statements I checked) has been 0.5 Avios per pound based on the total of all charges and ignoring all refunds. I haven’t abused it (yet) but often genuinely forgot to change the card in Curve and end up having to GBiT, so have netted a small chunk of extra Avios.

      • The Urbanite says:

        You can lose all of your Lloyds Banking Group accounts if they decide you’re playing foul. Not worth it in my opinion.

        • Rob says:

          It worked like this back in 2012 when I got my 1.1 million, although I thought is was down to the fact that they treated FX and £ transactions in separate buckets for Avios purposes – so refunding a Euro transaction in a month when you had no other FX meant nothing was deducted. Perhaps I was wrong all these years and Lloyds never made any deductions in any currency.

        • Steve says:

          I agree – my current account is with Lloyds, which is partly why I haven’t gone into fill-yer-boots mode with it. I’m also a bit more conservative than most on here – I’ll maximise opportunities where I can, but I don’t go in for manufactured spend / anything dodgy that might trigger KYC, etc.

        • Chrisasaurus says:

          Well as they’re closing the card anyway….

    • Wally1976 says:

      Ok, what’s the safest large transaction that can be refunded with no bother? Fully flex BA flight?

  • mzb says:

    Anyone remembers when was the last upgrade voucher issued after the 7k spend was reached? I no longer have that letter that was sent c. mid-2019, but I do recall something about having one additional voucher to be earned after the Amex/MC combo was replaced by MC. Anyone recalls?

    • Wally1976 says:

      I remember saying to my wife that an upgrade voucher we got (that we used in February 2020) would be our last but it wasn’t, we were able to earn an extra one. We were supposed to be using that in February 2021 but now rebooked for February 2022!

    • Nigel W says:

      I think the deadline for me was March 2020, but achieved getting the voucher in June/July 2019.

    • Sue says:

      My last one received was an e-mail dated 22/1/20 – it’s since been extended twice – first to 30/3/21 & now to 31/10/21. So still have a final upgrade to use👍

  • Neil says:

    The end of a brilliant card and a real shame it’s being completely closed! Despite the 0.4 earning rate, it was still perfectly adequate for topping up my Avios stash each month

    • Wally1976 says:

      +1

      And the extra 0.1 Avios/£ for having the Club Lloyds account (which is worth having in its own right) was a small but welcome bonus too.

    • AD says:

      Goodbye, bendy horses

    • TGLoyalty says:

      all isn’t lost! you can buy an avios for 1-1.1p whenever the bonus is run!

      0.5% back is the same as 1.2 IHG/Hilton, 0.45-50 Avios, etc etc

  • Paul465 says:

    If you already have the free Virgin card but want the Reward+ card is there a process for that or is it simply apply for the + card in the hope you get it, possibly with the bonus and then close the free card?

  • Phil says:

    Does it make clear that the £4000 is per purchase or accumulative. ?

    • Rob says:

      Cumulative per calendar year. It is badly worded though.

      • NeilP1234 says:

        But I think the first year is only going to run from June to December, so harder to spend above £4K to trigger the higher (and reasonably acceptable) cash back rate.

  • Wally1976 says:

    Oh no, didn’t know about this ☹️.

    RIP

    Guess I’ll be using my Hilton Barclaycard as my non-Amex now until that bites the dust too.

  • Keiths says:

    Bringing back very happy memories of that 25 Avios for overseas spend and 10 Avios per £ for domestic spend introductory bonus.
    I have never tried to spend as much money in my life and sure I never will again!

    • Polly says:

      Yes that was fabulous..2 x F return to Bah for daughter and l..then the upgrades to J when l travelled solo…so much extra future spending done then, advance bill paying etc.

  • Phil says:

    What about the Sainsbury’s Bank Nectar Reward card? Convert the points to Avios. Plus there is a bonus offer.

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