New Amex statement credits

In regards to the United offer of 1000/200, it stipulates in the T&C that flights purchased must start in Australia. How does Amex know where the flights actually originate? Domestic flights are sold in AUD so could they tell the difference between this and an international flight from Aus?
AMEX gets the full itinerary - PNR, start and finish…

It’ll appear in your statement also.
 
Honestly had no idea. My previous charges with other airlines just has an amount - nothing about PNR or origin/destination. Good to know!
The app/online display will probably only be a summary.

I’m looking at my most recent AMEX PDF statement and there’s a QR and a QF booking. Sorry, no PNR but the following:
eTicket number
PAX name
Carrier
Booking Class
Routing: To/From

They’ve done that for as long as I can remember. So in short, they know!
 
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In regards to the United offer of 1000/200, it stipulates in the T&C that flights purchased must start in Australia. How does Amex know where the flights actually originate? Domestic flights are sold in AUD so could they tell the difference between this and an international flight from Aus?
Most flights I book direct from airlines, post to my amex account with the fare class, origin, destination and ticket number.

However, I reckon @tinkybelle is correct.
 
just booked Thai flights with a TA and waiting to see if the $250 appears as it stated must book on Thai.com.au
 
You just need to know how long to hold the purchase before refunding to avoid triggering a credit clawback.
In this case the $140+ refund due to price drop was preferable to the $10 credit but thought it would be helpful to others. Agree it probably doesn't help that the transaction amounts were identical
 
In this case the $140+ refund due to price drop was preferable to the $10 credit but thought it would be helpful to others. Agree it probably doesn't help that the transaction amounts were identical
So is the moral of the story - add a low value gift card to the transaction?
 
Some car and wine deals this morning.

One of my cards has Virgin Wine $150 / $50 which presumably means discounted VFF points purchase? (I’ve never used them - only QF Wine).
 
So is the moral of the story - add a low value gift card to the transaction?
Yes, choosing a refund via GC was an option, good idea (perhaps if the refund was under the spend threshold of the offer, the credit wouldn't be clawed back?)
 
Yes, choosing a refund via GC was an option, good idea (perhaps if the refund was under the spend threshold of the offer, the credit wouldn't be clawed back?)

I think the suggestion was to buy item + small gift card, get refund for item, then the refund would only be partial
 
Cartel-like behaviour? Laithwaites, Virgin Wines and The Australian Wine all 150 / 50 and expire 31 July!

The Australian Wine offers $50 discount off your first order so you can get $200 of wine for $100.
 
I think the suggestion was to buy item + small gift card, get refund for item, then the refund would only be partial
Nearly spot on but ever so slightly missing the intent. The pre-eGC spend > the spend hurdle required for the credit.

If there's a catch on losing the credit if you go for a refund of the exact same amount as the purchase transaction (when the purchase meets the qualifying spend) then adding a $20 or $25 eGC to the transaction (even if the eGC is excluded as a spend item under the promotion as they often are) MAY mean that if you subsequently need to return the item (for a valid reason not just gaming offers) the credit may NOT be reversed.

Guinea pig anyone?
 

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