Thread: Question about Amex business cards
-
May 25th, 2009 06:52 PM
#1
Jr. Member

Question about Amex business cards
I applied for the Amex gold business card. Anyone know how long it takes for the 25k bonus points to post after you've spent the $1k (I spent that today.) Can I expect that in my next (first) statement, or does it take a few months to process?
Also, anyone have any experience with the no-fee Amex business cashback card? I'm thinking I might downgrade to this card next year once the "first-year-free" period on the gold card ends.
-
-
May 25th, 2009 06:56 PM
#2

Originally Posted by
PaterFamilias
I applied for the Amex gold business card. Anyone know how long it takes for the 25k bonus points to post after you've spent the $1k (I spent that today.) Can I expect that in my next (first) statement, or does it take a few months to process?
Right away after the statement when you reached $1K spending.
-
May 25th, 2009 06:59 PM
#3

Originally Posted by
PaterFamilias
I applied for the Amex gold business card. Anyone know how long it takes for the 25k bonus points to post after you've spent the $1k (I spent that today.) Can I expect that in my next (first) statement, or does it take a few months to process?
Also, anyone have any experience with the
no-fee Amex business cashback card? I'm thinking I might downgrade to this card next year once the "first-year-free" period on the gold card ends.
Should be your first statement, that's when most cc calculate your casbback/pt...
good idea about that. I never knew that. Now i dont have to cancel the card
-
May 25th, 2009 07:05 PM
#4
AMEX seems to be on top of points here, the 25,000 for me showed up within 2 days of hitting $1000.
-
May 25th, 2009 07:31 PM
#5
Can you even downgrade? no need to reapply? that would be great!
-
May 25th, 2009 09:39 PM
#6

Originally Posted by
PaterFamilias
Also, anyone have any experience with the
no-fee Amex business cashback card? I'm thinking I might downgrade to this card next year once the "first-year-free" period on the gold card ends.
That's a credit card, so they might not allow you to switch from a charge card to that without reapplying.
-
May 25th, 2009 09:41 PM
#7

Originally Posted by
mtlguyca
Can you even downgrade? no need to reapply? that would be great!
dont see why not, especially from one that has an annual fee to one that does not have an annual fee...
-
May 25th, 2009 10:27 PM
#8
No downgrade. AMEX only allows changes within the same product type. So you only other option is the Business Platinum
.
The same is true for AMEX Credit Cards, AirMiles ---> Airmiles Platinum is ok, but Costco Platinum --> Airmiles is NOT possible.
A new application is required to switch product types.
-
May 25th, 2009 10:34 PM
#9

Originally Posted by
tkyoshi
No downgrade. AMEX only allows changes within the same product type. So you only other option is the Business Platinum

.
The same is true for AMEX Credit Cards, AirMiles ---> Airmiles Platinum is ok, but Costco Platinum --> Airmiles is NOT possible.
A new application is required to switch product types.
From your example, wont it be possible to change the airmiles plat to just plain airmiles? The plain amex biz card should be a charge card and the same product type of the amex biz gold.
...or is the plain amex biz NOT a charge card?
Last edited by angel_wing0; May 25th, 2009 at 10:41 PM.
-
May 26th, 2009 12:05 AM
#10

Originally Posted by
angel_wing0
From your example, wont it be possible to change the airmiles plat to just plain airmiles? The plain amex biz card should be a charge card and the same product type of the amex biz gold.
...or is the plain amex biz NOT a charge card?

Yes you can go Airmiles Platinum to Vanilla as it's from the same family, so you can move up to Platinum and Down to Vanilla freely.
The plain AMEX Business card is a Credit Card. You can also get a good idea from the design. Notice how all the Aeroplan Family cards look similar, same with AirMiles and the Business Gold/Platinum Charge cards. The basic Business Credit Card has a totally different design. Another key indication is the Rewards Program.
Product Type means exactly that, not whether it's Charge/Credit (that is Card Type).
Another Example:
Charge Card: Aeroplan --> Aeroplan Gold OR Aeroplan Platinum (and in Reverse) = OK
Charge Card: Aeroplan Platinum ---> AMEX Platinum = NO!
It sucks but that's the way AMEX rolls, understandably I'm sure it's to prevent dilution of the product. Meaning apparently the Costco Platinum has more relaxed credit requirements. This is to prevent people from signing up for the Costco platinum then converting to a "higher" card.
-
May 26th, 2009 12:17 AM
#11

Originally Posted by
tkyoshi
(snip)
It sucks but that's the way AMEX rolls, understandably I'm sure it's to prevent dilution of the product. Meaning apparently the Costco Platinum has more relaxed credit requirements. This is to prevent people from signing up for the Costco platinum then converting to a "higher" card.
Pretty accurate assessment there. AMEX charge cards are supposedly on a "higher level" than your typical credit card. AMEX is one issuer that actually does adhere to its income requirement. The vanilla charge card has a minimum income of $35K while the Costco has $15K. Not to mention the charge cards supposedly have tighter credit requirements (although this is counter intuitive as they don't let you carry a balance).
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
Forum Rules