Amex Makes It Easier To Donate To Your Favorite Charity

by joeheg

American Express isn’t the bank to make anything easier to do. They have a once-per-lifetime rule for sign-up bonuses and their Rewards Abuse Team finds any reason possible to claw back miles, even if their system initially allows it.

Imagine my surprise when AMEX sent an email saying they have a program that makes it easy to donate to charity with your purchases. Don’t be misled. AMEX isn’t paying a cent of the money to charity. However, they’re activating a program that has successfully raised money at retail POS for some time.

The Round-Up. Amex has partnered with Philanthropi to make it easy to donate to charity when using your AMEX cards.

The partnership started in September 2022 and is still by invitation only. We received an invitation so I decided to check out the sign-up process. I had to use the link from the email but once there, I could enroll both of our AMEX accounts.

AMEX describes the process like this.

a blue number with a dollar sign

a close up of a card

a screenshot of a website

a screenshot of a phone

When I enrolled, it looks that only personal cards are eligible, but you can use an AMEX branded or a co-brand card.

a close-up of a card

You can select which spending categories you’d want to round up or you can select all eligible expenses.

a screenshot of a list

Next, you pick how much you want to round up. You can pick the nearest dollar, $5 or $10. You can pick different amounts for each category.

a screenshot of a computer

You’re done setting up how much to donate. The last step is to set up a Philanthropi account.

a screenshot of a phone

Once complete, you will have access to your Impact Account. This is where all your round-up money goes. Once you have $25 in your account, you can choose a non-profit (on Philanthropi’s list) to give your money to.

a screenshot of a computer

If you’re concerned about taxes, the money is a tax-deductible contribution and Philanthropi provides a tax form for your donations.

If you change your mind, a link is provided to the AMEX website to manage your donations or to disconnect your AMEX from Philanthropi.

a white rectangular object with a black line

I set up a card for donations to see how the process works. One downside is that you are limited to the non-profits that work with Philanthropi. I looked for several local charities I support, but none were listed. I looked at Philanthropi’s website and can’t find information on how a non-profit can join.

Sure, it’s great to donate without having to think about it. I’ll round up my purchase at the drugstore to fund cancer research or homelessness. But if I’m going to make a larger donation, I’d rather support my local homeless shelter, animal rescue or arts organization instead of picking from whatever charities are affiliated with a website.

Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved.

Want to sponsor a post, write something for Your Mileage May Vary, or put ads on our site? Click here for more info.

Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and sign up to get emailed notifications of when we post.

Whether you’ve read our articles before or this is the first time you’re stopping by, we’re really glad you’re here and hope you come back to visit again!

This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

1 comment

DaninMCI March 16, 2023 - 1:09 pm

Their website clearly has a place where 501(c)3 orgs can sign-up but it seems subject to a vetting process unless other programs like the Amazon Smile project that is ending. It is also difficult to see what orgs they do support. I think this is a hard pass unless they improve the transparency with this company.

Reply

Leave a Comment