Upcoming Changes to HSBC & Bankwest Credit Cards

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HSBC and Bankwest have announced a range of changes to their Australian credit cards. These include changes to annual fees and earning rates on HSBC credit cards, and a cut to the Qantas points earn rate on one of Bankwest’s popular cards.

Here’s a summary of what’s changing…

HSBC credit card changes from 28 August 2023

On 28 August 2023, HSBC will increase the annual fees on its HSBC Platinum and HSBC Platinum Qantas credit cards. However, it will also increase the overall amount of points that cardholders can earn.

The annual fee on the HSBC Platinum Qantas credit card will increase from $99 to $299. However, the full earn rate of 1 Qantas point per dollar spent will no longer be limited to the first $1,000 of spend each month. The cap of 7,500 Qantas points per statement period will also be removed, in exchange for an annual earning limit of 120,000 Qantas points.

The HSBC Platinum credit card, which earns HSBC Rewards Plus points instead of Qantas points, will have its earning cap changed from 10,000 points per month to 120,000 points per year. The earn rate is currently 1 point per $1 on domestic transactions or 2 points per $1 on international transactions. This will change to a new earn rate of 1.5 points per $1 on all transactions. The annual fee will rise from $129 to $149.

The same change to earning rates and points caps will also apply from 28 August 2023 to the HSBC Premier World Mastercard, for customers opting to earn HSBC Rewards Plus points. On that card, the international transaction fee will also increase from 2% to 3%.

For customers with a HSBC Premier World Mastercard who choose to earn Qantas points, the increased international transaction fee will also apply. In addition, the points cap will change from 10,000 Qantas points per month to 120,000 points per year. But HSBC will remove the $99 annual fee.

Note that the HSBC Premier World Mastercard is only available to HSBC Premier customers.

See the HSBC website for a full summary of the upcoming changes.

Bankwest credit card changes as of 8 September 2023

From 8 September 2023, Bankwest will reduce the rate at which Qantas points are earned on the Bankwest Qantas Platinum Mastercard. Instead of 0.75 Qantas points per $1 on the first $2,500 spent each month, this earn rate will reduce to 0.6 Qantas points per $1. The earn rate on amounts spent over $2,500 each month remains 0.3 Qantas points per $1.

Bankwest is also making some changes to its cash advance fees. And from 31 December 2023, Bankwest will remove annual bonus points on its More Classic, Platinum and World Mastercard products.

See the Bankwest website for a summary of the changes.

The Bankwest website provides the following reason for these changes:

We’re making some changes to our credit card products as we simplify our banking. This includes considering a number of factors including the economic environment and increasing costs.

Other recent credit card changes

During the pandemic, Australian banks made relatively few changes to the fees, earn rates or redemption rates on their credit cards. But we’ve recently seen changes from a series of banks and loyalty programs.

For example, Westpac recently increased the annual fees on its Altitude Platinum and Black credit cards. St.George, Bank of Melbourne and Bank SA (which Westpac owns) also recently increased the yearly fees on their Amplify Rewards credit cards.

Commonwealth Bank also recently adjusted its credit card line-up. And the opt-in fee to earn Qantas points on CommBank Awards credit cards is increasing from $30 to $60 per year from 25 August 2023.

It comes as the St.George Amplify Rewards program recently devalued the rate at which points convert to Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer miles. Amex Membership Rewards will also decrease the value of KrisFlyer and Emirates Skywards redemptions in October 2023. However, Amex Membership Rewards is softening the blow by adding two new airline partners.

The editor of Australian Frequent Flyer, Matt's passion for travel has taken him to over 90 countries… with the help of frequent flyer points, of course!
Matt's favourite destinations (so far) are Germany, Brazil & Kazakhstan. His interests include aviation, economics & foreign languages, and he has a soft spot for good food and red wine.

You can connect with Matt by posting on the Australian Frequent Flyer community forum and tagging @AFF Editor.
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The great devaluation of credit card points earning continues.

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It's funny - I read it and I thought this is positive so didn't understand.

However, the AF is goodgiven the cap is 10k p/m. This are other cards with 1:1 spend:
Qantas Premier Platinum $399 10k p/m
NAB Qantas Rewards Signature $395 15k p/m
BOQ Qantas Signature $400 10k p/m
ANZ Frequent Flyer Black $425 7.5k p/m

Better to cancel the card and churn one of the above with a nice bonus

Reply 2 Likes

The great devaluation of credit card points earning continues.

We (churners) are to blame 🥲
or perhaps it’s plain old greed on their end. I’m not sure how much they lose on our use

Reply 1 Like

My annual fee was charged in march 2023, im assuming to avoid getting charged the new fee, i would have to cancel in Feb 2024, and not aug 2023?

Reply Like

It's funny - I read it and I thought this is positive so didn't understand.

However, the AF is goodgiven the cap is 10k p/m. This are other cards with 1:1 spend:
Qantas Premier Platinum $399 10k p/m
NAB Qantas Rewards Signature $395 15k p/m
BOQ Qantas Signature $400 10k p/m
ANZ Frequent Flyer Black $425 7.5k p/m

Better to cancel the card and churn one of the above with a nice bonus

plus consider this.

CBA Ultimate $0 10k pm. the points earn will probably be average 0.65 per dollar, and thats low, but without a $400 annual fee. If you are spending less than 10k pm you will be better off.

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So, if I'm reading this right, the HSBC Platinum Qantas card annual fee will increase from $99 to $299. With that, the monthly points-earning cap will be replaced with an annual limit of 120,000 points. You still earn 1 Qantas point per dollar on everyday spend.

Meanwhile, the HSBC Premier World Mastercard (with Qantas Rewards) will go from $99/year to $0/year. This card also earns 1 Qantas point per dollar, up to 120,000 per year.

Why would anyone still use the HSBC Platinum Qantas card - am I missing something?

Reply 2 Likes

click to expand...

So, if I'm reading this right, the HSBC Platinum Qantas card annual fee will increase from $99 to $299. With that, the monthly points-earning cap will be replaced with an annual limit of 120,000 points. You still earn 1 Qantas point per dollar on everyday spend.

Meanwhile, the HSBC Premier World Mastercard (with Qantas Rewards) will go from $99/year to $0/year. This card also earns 1 Qantas point per dollar, up to 120,000 per year.

Why would anyone still use the HSBC Platinum Qantas card - am I missing something?

The main issue withe the HSBC Premier cards is that you need to be an HSBC Premier customer. So, your'e either depositing at least $9,000 per month, or have $150,000 balance in an acoount with them. If you can do that, it's obviously a better deal.

Reply 3 Likes

click to expand...

So, if I'm reading this right, the HSBC Platinum Qantas card annual fee will increase from $99 to $299. With that, the monthly points-earning cap will be replaced with an annual limit of 120,000 points. You still earn 1 Qantas point per dollar on everyday spend.

Meanwhile, the HSBC Premier World Mastercard (with Qantas Rewards) will go from $99/year to $0/year. This card also earns 1 Qantas point per dollar, up to 120,000 per year.

Why would anyone still use the HSBC Platinum Qantas card - am I missing something?

Says there is a $99 hsbc qantas fee,
So assuming the link is correct, if youre redeeming to qff, the $99 is inevitible

Reply Like

click to expand...

Says there is a $99 hsbc qantas fee,
So assuming the link is correct, if youre redeeming to qff, the $99 is inevitible

Currently there is a $99 Qantas fee, yes, but that seems to be disappearing later this month according to the HSBC PDF that I linked above.

Reply 1 Like

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The great devaluation of credit card points earning continues.

Very interesting, reinforces the theory from other threads that Qantas has increased the cost to buy points / offer licensed products, probably with an annual and per-point component.

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