meadowfield
Junior Member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2011
- Posts
- 11
Has anyone received a discount on the annual fee, or any other sweetener , given the current situation and the likely reduction of benefits next year?
rich people barely worries about this.Has anyone received a discount on the annual fee, or any other sweetener , given the current situation and the likely reduction of benefits next year?
rich people barely worries about this.
5k is nothing and only temporaryI can understand why anybody would be hesitant to pay $5,000/year for a product they're receiving very little benefit from. IMHO it's a legitimate question.
5k is nothing and only temporary
It always was excessive and I don't think the benefits ever really lined up to the fee (especially in Australia – but a few other locales also get ripped off). What you're really paying for is the prestige of holding the card and occasionally handing it to a shopkeeper or someone in a McDonald's who looks at it, and you, in awe. And that value will always be there, even if you can't travel.I was in London and wasn't told of the shopping bonus. In fairness they have taken the $700 off my statement but are not budging on the annual fee. Given we are not likely to be able to use travel insurance and travel benefits next year it seems an excessive amount to pay.
It always was excessive and I don't think the benefits ever really lined up to the fee (especially in Australia – but a few other locales also get ripped off). What you're really paying for is the prestige of holding the card and occasionally handing it to a shopkeeper or someone in a McDonald's who looks at it, and you, in awe. And that value will always be there, even if you can't travel.
I am an elderly woman. I am looking for tangible benefits not bling. Most years I make full use of the Shangri-La Diamond status, the Hilton Diamond status, the St Regis US $200 extra benefit, the Avis and Hertz upgrades, the travel insurance. I have no interest in people looking at me " in awe".
There is a level of spend (from the MR earning rate) that justifies Centurion when you add in the benefits.If you are trying to justify the Centurion card based on its benefits, you are probably not in the target market Amex has for Centurion.
They will likely offer additional incentives as well one progresses devoid of travel, but history shows they’re unlikely to offer a discount straight up.Going back to my original point I am happy with the benefits in a " normal" year when I travel extensively but next year will be different, how can Amex justify a $5,000 fee for a card with fewer than normal benefits?
nothing..they aint obligated to justify it for you. its your decision.Going back to my original point I am happy with the benefits in a " normal" year when I travel extensively but next year will be different, how can Amex justify a $5,000 fee for a card with fewer than normal benefits?
It always was excessive and I don't think the benefits ever really lined up to the fee (especially in Australia – but a few other locales also get ripped off). What you're really paying for is the prestige of holding the card and occasionally handing it to a shopkeeper or someone in a McDonald's who looks at it, and you, in awe. And that value will always be there, even if you can't travel.
Ask for a serving of bonus points as a compromise. I've seen reports in an Amex promos FB group of Centurion holders receiving a once-off 100-200k points when threatening to drop back to a Plat Charge.