Citibank, Diners Club, Virgin Money overhaul credit card points

By Chris C., April 4 2017
Citibank, Diners Club, Virgin Money overhaul credit card points
Disclaimer

Executive Traveller may receive a commission when you apply for these credit cards via our links.

The information provided on this page is purely factual and general in nature. You should seek independent advice and consider your own personal circumstances before applying for any financial product.

The number of frequent flyer points earned per dollar spent on Citibank credit cards is about to change as the world’s largest credit card issuer readies itself for the Reserve Bank of Australia’s cuts to credit card ‘interchange fees’ in July.

Read: How the interchange cap will affect credit card frequent flyer points

Also being overhauled are Bank of Queensland, Card Services and Virgin Money credit cards, plus Diners Club charge cards – all of which are issued by Citibank – with changes across all cards taking effect from June 15 2017, just ahead of the RBA deadline.

They're a real mixed bag with both upsides and downsides for spenders: so whichever card you have, here’s what you need to know.

Using your Bank of Queensland, Card Services, Citibank, Diners Club or Virgin Money card to pay a government body or a government-related entity won’t attract points come June 15, and while most Citibank cards already award no points on payments to the Tax Office, this is broadened to include charges at Australia Post and payments for council rates and vehicle registration.

Council-operated parking metres and stations, road tolling accounts, public transport fares, fines and court-related costs will also earn no points, although you’ll still earn points on the GST component of ‘everyday’ transactions where the business you’re paying isn’t a government entity.

For instance, spend $200 at a restaurant including $18.18 in GST and you’d earn points on the full $200 spend, or top-up your public transport card at retailers like 7-Eleven to earn full points also. It’s only payments direct to the government and to government-related entities that attract no points.

New frequent flyer conversion rates from Citi, Diners Club

Converting your hard-earned credit card points into airline frequent flyer points and hotel loyalty points will follow new transfer rates from June 15 as below, so savvy spenders would be wise to convert any existing points prior to this date at the current, more favourable rates.

Citi Rewards Platinum: 3 Citibank Rewards will equal one Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer mile for Platinum cardholders, compared to the 2.5:1 conversion rate currently in place.

Citi Signature: Converting points to KrisFlyer sees the current 2:1 exchange rate increased to 2.5:1 (rather than 3:1 as with Citi Platinum), as Citibank offers more favourable conversion rates to its higher-tier credit card customers.

CitiBusiness Rewards: Converting Citibank points into KrisFlyer miles also moves from a 2:1 to a 2.5:1 ratio, while manual points transfers to Qantas Frequent Flyer switch from a 2:1 to a 3:1 conversion rate.

Citi Prestige: Transfers to KrisFlyer also switch from a 2:1 to a 2.5:1 conversion rate, as do transfers to Cathay Pacific Asia Miles. Conversions to Air France Flying Blue, Etihad Guest, GarudaMiles, Malaysia Airlines Enrich, Qatar Airways Privilege Club and Thai Airways Royal Orchid instead move from a 2:1 to a 3:1 conversion rate.

Similarly, transfers from Citibank Rewards to the Club Carlson and Hilton Honors hotel loyalty programs change from a 1:1 to a 2:1 rate for Citi Prestige cardholders, while shipping your Citibank Rewards points over to IHG Rewards Club points is amended from a 1.5:1 to a 2.5:1 rate.

Diners Club Rewards: You’ll need 2.5 Diners Club Rewards points per 1 American Airlines AAdvantage mile or Starwood Preferred Guest (SPG) Starpoint, compared to the 2:1 conversion used at present.

There’s no change to the conversion rates from Citibank Rewards or Diners Club Rewards beyond those listed above, such as from both programs to Virgin Australia Velocity, or from Diners Club Rewards to Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer.

Changes to points earned per dollar spent

The number of Citibank Rewards and Diners Club Rewards points earned per dollar spent is changing across most cards, as is the number of Qantas Frequent Flyer points awarded on direct-earning cards from Citi and Diners, and the number of Velocity points delivered by Virgin Money.

Here’s how many points you’ll earn per dollar spent from June 15, and how that compares to the current earn rate on a card-by-card basis:

Citi Signature with Citibank Rewards: Points will no longer be capped at $20,000/month on spends within Australia – now, points are uncapped and the earn rate on spends at restaurants, hotels and airlines will pleasingly increase from 1.5 Citi points per dollar to 2 Citi points per dollar.

The same is true on international transactions which also climb from 1.5/$1 to 2/$1, while transactions at petrol stations, supermarkets and national retailers continue to earn 1.5 Citibank Rewards points per dollar spent. Elsewhere, however, the earn rate lowers from 1.5/$1 to 1/$1.

Citi Qantas Signature: Citibank is ditching its tiered earn rates based on spending volume in favour of new earning categories, with one Qantas Point awarded per $1 at hotels, restaurants, airlines and on all overseas spend (uncapped), and 0.75 Qantas Points given per $1 at petrol stations, supermarkets and national retailers, also uncapped.

Using your card anywhere else within Australia will instead reel in 0.5 Qantas Points per dollar up to $20,000 per month, and no points thereafter. This threshold only applies to transactions not covered by the categories above, so if you use your card at a hotel, for instance, you’ll always earn points.

CitiBusiness Rewards: The card’s annual cap of 250,000 points is replaced by a monthly cap, with no points awarded on spends exceeding $10,000 per statement period. Spends of $1-$10,000 per month will attract 0.75 Citibank points per dollar spent, down from 1.25/$1 at present.

Citi Prestige with Citibank Rewards: There’s still no limit to the number of points you can earn via this card. Charges at restaurants, hotels and airlines are climbing from 2 to 3 Citibank Rewards points per $1, while international charges lower from 5 to 3 Citibank Rewards points per Aussie dollar.

Cardholders will continue to earn 2 Citibank Rewards points per dollar at supermarkets, petrol stations and major national retailers, although all other spend in Australia drops from 2 to 1 Citibank Rewards point per dollar.

Citi Prestige with Qantas Points: International travellers will pocket a solid 1.5 Qantas Points per dollar spent abroad – a 50% boost to the current 1/$1 earning rate – and will continue earning 1 Qantas Point per dollar at major retailers, supermarkets and petrol outlets.

Using your card anywhere else within Australia will attract a lower 0.5 Qantas Points per dollar spent (down from 1/$1), although no points capping or tiering applies, either at home or abroad.

Diners Club personal charge card with World MasterCard: Everyday spend lowers from 3 to 2 Diners Club Rewards points per dollar when whipping out your Diners Club card and from 1.25 to 0.75 Diners Club Rewards points per dollar when using the companion MasterCard.

Qantas Frequent Flyer Diners Club with World MasterCard: The current spending threshold of $60,000/year will be removed in favour of an uncapped earn rate of 1.25 Qantas Points per $1 via the Diners Club card and 0.5 Qantas Points per $1 when using the MasterCard.

Virgin Money Velocity Flyer Card: There's no change to the number of points earned per dollar on everyday spend, although bonus points will no longer be earned when using the card to book flights with Virgin Australia.

Virgin Money Velocity High Flyer: Cardholders can continue earning one Velocity point per dollar spent, but on charges of up to $8,000 per month rather than $10,000 as now. Once that $8,000 threshold has been reached, the earn rate reduces to 0.5/$1 until the next statement period begins. Bonus points will no longer be earned on spend with Virgin Australia.

Bank of Queensland (all cards): Any annual points caps which currently apply to these cards will be removed in favour of uncapped points, while the number of points earned per dollar spent won't change – resulting in an increase in total points for high spenders who may have previously exceeded the caps.

Card Services (Qantas Platinum credit cards): Customers will earn 0.5 Qantas Points per dollar spent up to $8,000 per statement period and no points thereafter. This replaces the current annual cap of 100,000 Qantas Points, delivered at the rate of one Qantas Point per dollar up to $1,500 per statement period and 0.5 Qantas Points thereafter.

Card Services Rewards (all cards): As with Bank of Queensland cards, existing points capping arrangements will be retired in favour of uncapped points at the same rates.

There’s no change to the per-dollar-spent earning rates on other Citibank-issued cards such as the Emirates Citi World MasterCard or on standalone Diners Club products sans the companion MasterCard, other than the blanket changes to earning points on government payments which apply across Citi’s entire portfolio.

Reduction in Diners Club annual fees

Have a Diners Club personal charge card with a World MasterCard attached?

You'll be pleased to learn that your annual fee will fall from $389 to $299 when next billed after June 15, while the supplementary cardholder fee will also decrease from $69 to $50 per person.

That one supplementary fee covers both a supplementary Diners Club and a supplementary World MasterCard for your additional cardholder: it’s not billed per card, nor is the $299 annual fee.

Disclaimer

Executive Traveller may receive a commission when you apply for these credit cards via our links.

The information provided on this page is purely factual and general in nature. You should seek independent advice and consider your own personal circumstances before applying for any financial product.

Chris C.

Chris is a a former contributor to Executive Traveller.

Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

06 Nov 2014

Total posts 357

This is really bad especially for prestige. A $700 card that earns 0.4 FFP/$! That's a joke!

11 Apr 2014

Total posts 14

So with this devaluation plus last year's, the Prestige card will have gone from earning 3.33 KF per $ on international spend to just 1.2. Time to switch to a card without forex fees

26 Jul 2013

Total posts 12

The bonus categories are useless... supermarkets, petrol stations ect are the places where you can use Amex and get 1.5pts/$ (at the moment anyway). All the other spend is where I used to use visa. Guess I'll be canceling prestige card now!

14 Nov 2015

Total posts 42

Definitely cancelling my Signature unless they give it to me for free!

04 May 2015

Total posts 262

Given that Diners Club isn't even affected by the RBA interchange cuts I'm pretty disappointed to see those points being changed.
I currently earn 3 DC points per $1 on my Diners, which is equal to 1.5 AA or SPG points, and 1.25 DC per $1 on the Mastercard, worth 0.625 AA/SPG points.
Drop the earn rate to 2 DC per $1 on Diners and change the transfer rate to AA/SPG and I'll soon be earning 0.8 AA/SPG per $1 spent on Diners and a miserable 0.3 AA/SPG per $1 on Mastercard, or around 50% less points on both cards than today.
Meanwhile the annual fee is only being dropped by 25%, Diners continues to earn the same revenue from every transaction and will stop awarding points at the Post Office among other places... why bother any more when AMEX seems to be accepted in more places than Diners and I can get 1 SPG point per $1 via Explorer, plus some points on government charges (even though it's not many)?
The only place I've found Diners accepted in Australia where AMEX wasn't has been a few regional airlines, plus the whole Discover thing in the US (but where AMEX acceptance is pretty good anyway).

Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards

16 Dec 2015

Total posts 41

As Citi issue both cards, there may be a technicality here whereby the Diners Club card is considered a "companion" card.


That said, it is very disappointing. 

AT
AT

Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

14 Sep 2012

Total posts 381

My suggestion is wait till all the banks announce their changes and then make a decision. I fear with lot's of heavy card promotions at the moment to get people switching and signed up, then comes the bomb shell email from them! 

Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards

16 Dec 2015

Total posts 41

Earn rate reductions are only going to continue due to this completely unjustifiable RBA move. 


The basis of these moves is presented as providing more transparency to consumers on the cost of payment methods whilst reducing costs to merchants and, subsequently, consumers through lower surcharges and pricing.

There's no way that the reduced earn rate will be offset by reduced prices. The moves by the RBA are clearly designed to protect EFTPOS Australia and promote the upcoming NPP.

22 Apr 2012

Total posts 5

Hi Chris - thanks for the update. Do you know of any changes in redemption rates from Citi points to Velocity? Presumably they will change in line with KF? 


24 Apr 2012

Total posts 2441

Hi trundle1, to quote the above: "There’s no change to the conversion rates from Citibank Rewards or Diners Club Rewards beyond those listed above, such as from both programs to Virgin Australia Velocity", so if you usually convert your points over to Velocity, no need to rush as that particular rate isn't changing on any Citi, Diners, BOQ or Card Services card. :)

(You'd just need to look at the new earning rates that apply to your card on any spend from mid-June, however, but your existing balance is safe at its current value.)

08 Nov 2014

Total posts 19

ouchhhhhhhhhhhhhh. is the game dead? is churning also going to die?

24 Apr 2012

Total posts 2441

Certainly not dead, but there are new rules to play by thanks to the RBA's cuts.

Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer

23 Dec 2015

Total posts 26

I've always topped up my Opal via the government's app but now I'm wondering if I can pay for it using Amex which is accepted at 7-Eleven? If so, that will be a great way to earn extra points again after Sydney Trains stopped accepting Amex after the Opal system came in.

As for the Citibank card itself, it no longer has any appeal aside from the odd free bottle of wine and access to the Food & Wine Show. Glad they offered it to me fee-free for the life of the card.

24 Apr 2012

Total posts 2441

Peter: Yes, you can and I've done it myself - you usually just need to insert AMEX at 7-Eleven rather than tap it as they tend to have older terminals, but there's usually no surcharge.

Some Woolworths stores also do Opal top-ups (there's even a special Woolworths counter at Town Hall Station for this), so if you have a card that gives bonus points at supermarkets it's a nice little earner.

(You can use AMEX at 7-Eleven to top-up Go Cards in Queensland too and for Myki in Melbourne.)

15 Apr 2017

Total posts 1

Looks like my KrisFlyer earn rate on Citi Prestige will drop about 60% taking onboard all the new changes. Talk about devaluation!


Will be cancelling in favour of something a little more rewarding for sure. Just hope there's something out there uncapped with similar current earn rates!

Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards

13 Jan 2015

Total posts 584

I know this is a late reply but have you considered the St George Amplify Signature rewards card?

20 Dec 2017

Total posts 1

Very disappointing over all I have been dealing with manila & india call centers waiting min 20 mins at a time passed around like a yoyo. in the end another call made as the call was mysteriously cut off, specifically asked to be transferred to an Australian call center as these experiences get frustrating TBA there is no such thing, unable to connect & unable to speak with any one here.

GO CITIBANK CHEAP LABOUR, NO SERVICE, NO CLUE , HIGH INT, HIGH $700 PA FEES REDUCED POINT SYSTEM.
I agree with every one who has posted. I inquired about points transfer was told cannot help will forfeit if transferred to another program basically BAD LUCK. flights were ridiculous amount in cash+ use points. made other arrangements in the end.
(2)card blocked automatically over the weekend. purchased accommodation OS on card despite verifying via txt msg "YES I MADE THIS PURCHASE" embarrassing went to 3 outlets card declined. was advised by 3 different call centers over the last 3 days cant do anything while overseas for 5 weeks if CC is blocked. I need to pay for roaming costs so CITIBANK CAN CONFIRM EVERY PURCHASE I MAKE from as little as $5.00 on CC.
Checked other major banks have got confirmation they don't practice the regime of blocking customers card.
At a lose so close to travel with Christmas looming will not get another card on time. Definitely considering ditching Citibank
:(
reena


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