When it comes to using credit cards to pay for travel, earning points is the easy part. Booking award travel is where the process gets complicated. This post is about a specific situation that I imagine more than a few people have found themselves in. It involves transferring American Express Membership Rewards points to an airline frequent flyer program to make an award booking.
Using flexible points in this manner is the best way to get oversized value for your points. It’s how people can use points to fly in Business and First class seats to locations all around the globe. For this example, I’ll use the flights I booked with ANA for my dad and his wife to fly to Bali. Oh, and just as an FYI, without them knowing, I booked them on the EVA Airways Hello Kitty plane 🙂
They each needed 136,000 miles in their ANA accounts to book these Business Class flights. AMEX Membership Rewards transfer to ANA at a 1:1 ratio, and they each were a few thousand AMEX points short of having enough miles for the flights.
I was willing to let them have some of my AMEX points to make the reservation, but American Express only lets you transfer points to your frequent flyer accounts. You’re also not allowed to transfer points between Membership Rewards accounts, so I couldn’t just send the points to them.
I found one workaround that is totally legal and doesn’t even cost extra. American Express will let you transfer points to another person if (s)he is an authorized user on one of your accounts for at least 90 days. In practice, you can transfer Membership Rewards to anyone you want, as long as you’re willing to add them to your account as an authorized user. American Express Rewards Abuse Team put this measure in place to make it difficult for people to abuse this avenue of redeeming points.
I’ve already mentioned that I’m not crazy about adding authorized users. The most bothersome thing is the account will show up on that person’s credit report. This may affect their ability to get new cards since some banks, like Chase and Citi, will only let you sign up for so many cards in a certain period. I wanted my dad to be able to sign up for additional cards, so adding him to my AMEX card wasn’t a great option.
The second workaround? I added my dad and his wife as authorized users on my AMEX business account. If you have an AMEX Business Platinum or Business Gold card, you can get additional cards with the same benefits as the cardholder. The problem is that these cards cost money. If you have an AMEX Business Platinum, adding an additional Platinum cardholder costs $350. However, you can add a cardholder and give them a Green AMEX for free. The same goes for an AMEX Business Gold card and even a Business Green card, which allows additional cardholders for free.
Because I added them to my business card, the account will not appear on their credit report. I’m not worried about them charging a bunch of things to my account, so there’s no risk in providing them cards, which they’ll probably never use.
The process was straightforward. I logged into my American Express Business card account and clicked the Employee Controls tab.
From there, I just had to click on the Add Employee Cards:
I’d imagine this screen will be different depending on which AMEX Business card you have. Because I was logged into my Gold card account, I was given a choice to add an additional Gold card for a fee or a Green card for free.
If the only reason you’re adding someone is to transfer Membership Rewards to their frequent flyer accounts, there’s no reason to pay for a card. Go Green!
It’s the same process to add authorized users to the AMEX Blue Business Plus card, which has no annual fee and allows you to add 99 additional cardholders at no cost.
Just be sure you’re adding them to an AMEX that earns Membership Rewards, as I’m not sure the process will work if the person is an authorized user on a co-brand card (like Delta or Marriott AMEX).
You don’t have to use a business card for this to work; you can add the person as an authorized user to any Membership Rewards earning account like the Everyday Preferred. However, doing this would mean the account will show up on the other person’s credit report; thus adding someone to a business account is preferred.
Problems like this pop up when you’re trying to redeem points for award travel. Instead of giving up, you need to look to see what options are available. It may involve jumping through a few hoops, but the reward is worth it.
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10 comments
Does the 90 day waiting period to transfer points also apply to the business cards?
Interesting question. I would think so because it’s a Membership Rewards rule.
so how exactly do you then transfer points to an AU? I’m an AU on my wife’s green card, and I have my own MR point account where I’d like to accumulate all the points into, so i’m all set to qualify under this process to move her points to my account..but I don’t see how to actually do the move? maybe i’m just missing it, but thanks!
…there is no way (at least online) to transfer points between accounts AU or not
This is great, thank you! I understand Chase’s 5/24 rule pretty well but just wanted to clarify that adding on an employee card / authorized user to a business card would not count correct? I realize the Amex biz cards don’t count but I have read mixed reports about whether an employee card would count or not. I wouldn’t think so since the account is a business account but I had to ask. Thank you!
On any Amex card you can also set a very low spending limit or freeze the card if you’re concerned about spending on that casual Authorized User’s account.
Plat cardholder can add few Gold AU for free.
If I add authorized users to my Blue business Amex, after $2k in spend I get 5k MR.
Don’t forget it’s also possible to book the ticket for a friend or relative on your account. For example, I transfer Amex MR to my AirFeance account and then book the ticket for my daughter or friend; they aren’t authorized users on any of my Amex cards
thanks for reposting this – useful info that I was not aware of