American Aviator Blue Card

When I posted my series of comparisons of the major US airlines’ credit cards, I mentioned only two Barclays American Airlines cards: the Aviator Red and the Aviator Silver. There are actually two more versions of the Aviator card: the Aviator Blue and simply the Aviator. The focus of this post will be the Aviator Blue card, which like the Silver is not available to new applicants. I’m going to be upfront with this: I don’t really find any of Barclay’s card offerings to be particularly compelling, but I do want to cover this $49 card for completeness.

Unlike Delta and United, all American Airlines credit cards earn points toward status at the same $1 = 1 loyalty point (LP) rate with no limits, so the only incentive to select this card over the others is from the perks and reward miles earnings.

I provide the information here just to give readers a vague idea if the rewards offered by the card might make sense for them to consider the card.  The information on this page has been collected independently, and all information should be confirmed with the card company before applying.

Welcome Offer

The Aviator Blue Card is not available to new applications. You can only upgrade to it from the Aviator Blue Card after having an account for at least one year. At the time of posting, the Aviator Red Card has a 60 000 bonus miles offer. The best part of this bonus is that you get it after making your first purchase and paying the annual fee on the card within the first 90 days, which is awesome. In general, I’ve been able to get good value out of AA miles and so value them at 1.5 ¢/pt.  That makes this current welcome offer worth at least $900.

Earnings

The Aviator Blue Card’s only bonus category (like the Aviator Red) is 2x miles/$ on American Airlines purchases. Everything else earns just 1x mile/$. It also earns 1 loyalty point/$ spent (in all categories).

Benefits

For its $49 annual fee, this card provides only a single benefit: 25% on food and beverage. That’s it. So if you don’t buy food/drinks on board, this card offers you nothing. Not even a free checked bag.

How to use the points

The main use for American Airlines miles is to redeem them for American Airlines, Oneworld, and other partners’ flights.  American Airlines has dynamic pricing for its own flights but still uses an award chart for its partners. American Airlines is not current a transfer partner of any bank. They used to be a transfer partner of Bilt (and briefly of Citi), but not any longer at the time of posting.

The other type of point earned, Loyalty Points, is used for American status: you need 40 000 LP for Gold (Oneworld Ruby), 75 000 LP for Platinum (Oneworld Sapphire), 125 000 LP for Platinum Pro (Oneworld Emerald), and 200 000 LP for Executive Platinum (Oneworld Emerald). 

Examples of using the card

These examples assume you spend all your airfare budget on American Airlines.

Spend per month

 Example A Example B Example C Example D 
Groceries (1x)$300300$200200$600600$400400
Gas (1x)$00$100100$200200$100100
Airfare (2x)$7001 400$200400$00$400800
Hotels (1x)$1 0001 000$200200$00$300300
Gen Travel (1x)$400400$00$300300$100100
Dining (1x)$600600$300300$300300$00
General (1x)$1 0001 000$500500$500500$400400
Total$4 0004 700$1 5001 700$1 7001 700$1 7002 100
Average points/$ 1.18 1.13 1.0 1.24

The weak earning structure means that the average points earned has a small, low range of 1 – 1.24 points/$, which is worth 1.5 – 1.86 ¢/$.  That’s not a great return, even for an airline co-branded credit card. But given that American miles are otherwise harder to come by, this earn rate is not too bad.

Specific examples

CardAmerican Airlines Economy class ($750)  (% return)Marriott Hotel night ($230/night)Points values (American/Hotel)
No rewards card3 500 AM (7.0%)2 200 MP (7.3%)$52.50 / $11.00
General 2% cashback card ($0)3 500 + $15.00 (9.0%)2 200 MP + $4.60 (9.3%)$67.50 / $15.60
Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95)3 500 + 1 500 UR (10.0%)2 200 MP + 460 UR (10.3%)$75.00 / $17.90
Amex Green Card ($150)3 500 + 2 250 MR (11.2%)2 200 MP + 690 MR (11.5%)$84.00 / $21.35
Aviator Blue Card ($49)5 000 AM (10%)2 200 MP + 230 AM (8.7%)$75.00 / $14.45

Is this credit card right for you?

I really don’t see any value to this card given its annual fee. The free AA MileUp card from Citi offers the same benefits and better spend earnings.

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started