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How can ‘Plan It™’ Instalment Plans from Amex help spread the cost of your purchases?

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This article is sponsored by American Express

If you have an American Express® Credit Card – as opposed to a Charge Card – you may have seen Plan It™ appear in the App or in your Online Account for a feature – Instalment Plans from American Express

This is a way of spreading the cost of an item over 3, 6 or 12 month instalments, with the monthly instalment plan amount added to your ‘minimum due’ you are required to pay on each statement.

I want to look at it in more detail today, with particular reference to how it impacts spending towards sign-up bonuses or annual vouchers.

American Express Plan It

Plan It can be used with any purchase of £100+ which has appeared on your current statement or posted to your Account but not yet appearing on a statement, and has not yet been paid off.

You don’t need to apply to use Plan It – it is on your Account if you’re eligible – and no additional credit checks will be undertaken if you choose to use it.

Suitable transactions will have a small ‘Plan It’ logo in your Amex® App on your eligible transactions. Here is one of the HfP team taking advantage of The Wine Flyer’s generous bonus Avios promotion last month:

Plan It Instalment Plans

How does Plan It Instalment Plans work?

Click on an eligible transaction of £100 or more and it will give you the option to split your payment into three, six or twelve equal monthly instalments.

Each monthly payment will appear on a future statement as part of the minimum monthly payment due.

There is no interest to pay but there is a monthly flat fee added.

In the example below, the transaction above can be split into*:

  • 3 monthly payments of £45.44 (total £136.31)
  • 6 monthly payments of £23.44 (total £140.64)
  • 12 monthly payments of £12.44 (total £149.28)
Plan It' Instalment Plans

You can decide which eligible purchases you want to put into an instalment plan and select your choice of instalment period – 3, 6, 12 months for that purchase

How does this differ from paying interest and rolling over the charge?

In a word, certainty.

Many people are, understandably, wary of only making the minimum monthly payment on their credit cards and rolling over the balance. It is easy to lose control of what you owe.

With Plan It, you have full transparency – you know exactly how much you need to pay back, in your monthly instalments and fee. They are added to the minimum amount you have to repay each month. If you want to ensure that you clear your balance within a certain period, this is the way to do it.

There is an illustrative calculator on the Amex website which shows you the costs compared to a 30% purchases APR.

How does Plan It impact my spending towards sign-up bonus and annual vouchers?

Many HfP readers will be spending towards a sign-up bonus on a new American Express® Card or towards an annual voucher or reward, such as the British Airways American Express companion voucher.

It is important to understand how Plan It works in this scenario.

Basically, using Plan It has no impact on the effective date of a card transaction when it comes to qualifying for a sign-up bonus or annual voucher.

This has both good and bad sides. For example:

  • if you need to spend another £500 within a month to trigger a sign-up bonus and you make a £500 purchase but decide to split it over three months with Plan It, your sign-up bonus is still triggered
  • if you only need to spend £100 in the next month to trigger your British Airways American Express companion voucher, you cannot use Plan It to ‘push’ part of a large purchase into your next card year – the full transaction value will still count in the current card year

Conclusion

The best course of action with any credit card purchase is always to settle the bill immediately to avoid interest payments.

However, if you do find that you want to defer payment of a £100+ purchase whilst being committed to paying it off within a set period, Plan It is now there as an option.

You can find out more about Plan It on this page of the American Express website.


*For the purposes of this example, we have used an interest rate of 30% per annum. This may not be your personal rate and your actual rate may be more or less. The example assumes the monthly repayment is being made on the payment due date, and there are no other transactions on the Account. The total Plan It fee is based on the plan being created the day before the statement is generated and applied for each month of the duration of the plan.

Comments (99)

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

  • Jasdev says:

    I wish I could opt-out of seeing the feature, I never intend to use it and worry about accidentally clicking on it somehow (though I imagine there are further steps to go through before actually agreeing to staged payments).

    To me this feature is contrary to the American Express brand, which is supposed to cater to higher earners, unless those days are long gone?

    • Erico1875 says:

      I did that recently. Accidently paid for a purchase with MR points

      • Rob says:

        You can turn that off – we did an article on how.

      • Sussex Bantam says:

        AMEX will reverse the MR if you ask them to – or at least they did when my wife paid with points because “it seemed like a good deal”….

  • Lumma says:

    I feel they’ve missed a trick with this by not allowing at least one option to be interest free. Spreading an occasional large purchase over three months but still receiving points and working towards a spend target could’ve been interesting for someone who might otherwise use something like Klarna or PayPal pay in 3 (or even PayPal credit 4 months 0% on purchases over £99).

    It’s probably not for the majority of Amex customers however

  • yorkshireRich says:

    Was going to comment on this at 5am.

    I was going to put “is this similar to buying a car on that pcp?”
    It’s not the type of thing I was brought up on.

    Thanks but no thanks

    • TGLoyalty says:

      This is very different to PCP. This is just HP at high interest.

      If you’re buying a brand new car that you absolutely won’t keep past 3/4 years a PCP can often be a good idea.

  • RG says:

    I wish they had variable terms for certain purchases. I’d love to put a rail season ticket on a payment plan for example and pay for it monthly as opposed to a giant obscene amount of money annually. It’s easy to go ‘well just put that amount into savings’ but then you’re paying for it twice over. Only once you stop needing it do you get the payback, which could be 30 years time!

    As it stands, the equivalent APR rate doesn’t make sense, vs just paying for a monthly season ticket, in terms of the unlocked discount.

    • John says:

      It’s the same thing already – pay interest to Amex or pay interest to the government (who collect all revenue from the train operators and pay them a contracted fee to run the service).

      You know you can buy monthly tickets for exact numbers of days between 1 month and 10 months 13 days? 1 month is 3.84x the weekly price and annual is 40x the weekly price (=10m13d).

      If you can do the calculations most people would benefit from buying several season tickets over the course of a year, that cover their exact periods of commuting. This avoids paying for some weekends/annual leave/bank holidays when they wouldn’t be using the ticket.

  • Shaun says:

    Honestly I find this to be a lot more straightforward than a standard credit card if you need to spread a payment (some people need to) and quickly work out what you’ll be paying, I don’t see the problem with it?

    To work out what your payments on Amex will be it is the cost of the purchase x 1.1%
    That 1.1% gives you the ‘fee’ which will be added to your monthly payments.

    So £600 split over 6 months would be £106.60 per month for 6 months (£100 payment and £6.60 fee).
    Working that out with a credit card interest calculator is doable but not easy to work out if you’re out and about.

    This also has the benefit some mention of being a fixed plan, with an end, and no danger of just letting the debt spiral as on a standard credit card it can.

    • John says:

      The world seems to be making money off people who can’t work things out while they are “out and about”.

      If you can’t afford to pay for the thing you buy a month later (since credit cards already give you interest free for around a month), maybe you shouldn’t be making impulse purchases without calculating the interest costs.

  • memesweeper says:

    Having thought this through, if you find yourself unable to cover the whole of a credit card bill, cherry picking some items to put onto “Plan It” and repaying everything else in full would potentially be much smarter than just paying some of the bill and racking up interest across the board.

    • CamFlyer says:

      I entirely agree. I can see how this competes both with payment plans from other merchants (eg, insurance, or a new kitchen) or the retail point of sale credit providers, or if for example one has some short term cash flow issues.

  • Manya says:

    Plan it doesn’t let you clear the balance early so you are fixed paying the borrowed sum + fees for the life of the Plan. Plan It may provide certainty like a mortgage plan but it doesn’t give you option to make overpayments like a mortgage can do.

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

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