Beware Of This Fee If You Transfer AMEX Membership Rewards To A U.S. Airline

by joeheg

When booking a recent trip to Texas, I needed to top up our Delta SkyMiles balance for the tickets. I earn flexible miles for the ability to transfer them where and when I need them. American Express is the only flexible currency that partners with Delta, so I went to the Membership Rewards website to transfer 48,000 points from Sharon’s AMEX account to Delta.

Delta_Skymiles_membership_card

After verifying information from the card, I was reminded of the hidden fee American Express adds if you want to transfer points to a U.S.-based airline.

To transfer the 48,000 points, I’d have to pay a $28.80 Excise Tax Offset Fee or an additional 5,760 Membership Rewards points.

I just have to say that’s a HORRIBLE use of Membership Rewards points since you’re only getting $0.005 (half a cent) per point. Redeeming points for purchases on Amazon.com even gets a better value, but it is also an awful use of your points. For reference, our tickets cost 24,200 points and $10.80 and would have cost $383 if we paid for them. That’s a value of 1.5 cents per point, or three times the value of redeeming them for the Excise Tax.

Secondly, what’s an Excise Tax Offset Fee? Here’s American Express’s explanation.

Every time you transfer points into a U.S. airline frequent flyer program, your Linked Card account will be charged an excise tax offset fee of $0.0006 per point (with maximum fee of $99). We charge this fee to offset the federal excise tax we must pay when you transfer points. We may offer you the option to use points to pay this fee. You will be able to review these details before completing the transfer.

Since the fee is only charged when transferring points to U.S. airline frequent flyer programs, here are the airline programs you’ll need to pay to transfer points to:

  • Delta SkyMiles
  • Hawaiian Airlines HawaiianMiles
  • JetBlue TrueBlue

I needed to transfer points to Delta, so I had no choice but to suck it up and pay the $29 to transfer the 48,000 miles. If you need to transfer a large number of miles, the maximum charge per transfer is $99, so there’s some advantage to transferring miles in bulk. However, you can avoid this fee by transferring points to a foreign airline. My dad and his wife were able to transfer 136,000 American Express Membership Rewards points into each of their ANA accounts with no added fees to book their trip from the U.S. to Bali and back from Thailand.

Here’s a list of the airline programs you can transfer Membership Rewards points into without having to pay any fees:

  • Are Lingus Aerclub
  • Aeromexico Club Premier
  • Air Canada Aeroplan
  • Air France / KLM Flying Blue
  • ANA Mileage Club
  • Cathay Pacific Asia Miles
  • Avianca LifeMiles
  • British Airways Executive Club
  • Emirates Skywards
  • Etihad Guest Miles
  • Iberia Plus Miles
  • Qantas Frequent Flyer
  • Singapore KrisFlyer Miles
  • Virgin Atlantic Flying Club

While you’ll need to evaluate the value of having points in each of these programs (Note: some of them are horrible to redeem points from), since they’re from airlines outside the U.S., American Express will not charge the Excise Tax Offset fee to transfer points into these programs. They also won’t charge any fees to transfer points to hotel partners.

The most interesting thing about these fees is other banks that offer transferrable points, such as Chase Ultimate Rewards and Citi ThankYou Points, don’t charge the same fee when transferring points to U.S. airlines. You’re able to transfer Ultimate Rewards to JetBlue, United, and Southwest or Citi ThankYou Points to JetBlue with no fees.

Unfortunately, if you want to transfer points into your Delta SkyMiles account, AMEX is your only option so be prepared to pay the fee they’ll charge as part of the cost of playing the game of miles and points.

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

3 comments

Malcolm December 16, 2019 - 10:00 am

So if you transfer to Jetblue you lose 20% since the transfer ratio is 5:4. Then you pay a tax on top of that. I am not a fam of MR points.

Reply
Billy Bob May 21, 2023 - 11:40 pm

Skymiles and Delta are dead to me.

Reply
Ms M May 22, 2023 - 6:47 am

Like everything else with US airlines, it may not be long before the others follow suit. We called that collusion back in the day but now it’s just business.

Reply

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