United Airlines raised their credit card fees, added some coupons, and removed a benefit. This is their fix for a credit card relationship that lags all competitors?
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United Airlines Adjusts Its Credit Card Offering
United Airlines has adjusted its credit card offering for all of its co-brand Chase credit cards. Here’s a guide to each of those changes:
United Gateway Card
Benefit | Change | Value ($) |
Special Award Pricing | Requires $10k spend to unlock discounted award pricing (was automatic) | $ (50) |
Free Checked Bags | Added: 1st & 2nd bag free after $10k spend (previously none) | $140 |
United Explorer Card
Benefit | Change | Value ($) |
Annual Fee | Increased from $95 to $150 | $ (55) |
United Club Passes Use | Now must accompany guest (no longer giftable) | $ (50) |
Premier Upgrades on Awards | Removed for award tickets | $ (200) |
United Hotels Credits | Added $100 in hotel credits | $ 100 |
Ride-Hailing Credits | $5/month added ($60/year) | $ 60 |
Rental Car TravelBank Credit | $25 x 2 added per year | $ 50 |
JSX Flight Credit | $100/year JSX credit added | $ 100 |
Instacart Credits | $10/month added + 3mo Instacart+ | $ 120 |
$100 TravelBank Bonus | Earned after $10k spend | $ 100 |
10k Mile Award Discount | Earned after $20k spend | $ 130 |
United Quest Card
Benefit | Change | Value ($) |
Annual Fee | Increased from $250 to $350 | $ (100) |
United Travel Credit | Increased from $125 to $200 TravelBank credit | $ 75 |
Award Flight Discounts | Changed from two 5k awards to one 10k, with bonus 10k at $20k spend | $ 130 |
PQP Boost | Added 1,000 PQP annually | $ 100 |
PQP Earning Cap Increase | Raised cap from 9k to 18k PQPs | $ 200 |
Luxury Hotel Credit | Added $150 annual credit | $ 150 |
Ride-Hailing Credits | $8/month + $4 December = $100/year | $ 100 |
Rental Car TravelBank Credit | $40 x 2 = $80/year | $ 80 |
JSX Flight Credit | Added $150/year credit | $ 150 |
Instacart Credits | $15/month + 3-month Instacart+ | $ 180 |
Spend $40k – Upgrade Certificates | Earn 2 Global Economy Plus upgrades | $ 200 |
Matthew outlined the biggest change which was that it’s now possible to charge your way to Premier 1K status by racking up $420,000 in charges. The largest benefit of reaching the top with any of the three network flag carriers is in their upgrades from coach to business class for the best flight experiences. Assuming that it’s equally difficult to clear long haul systemwide upgrades on Delta, American, and United, equivalent spending is just $250,000 on American and Delta.
United Credit Cards Shift To Coupon Earning
American Express, regrettably, paved the way for making credit card fee increases the norm and offsetting them with asterisked benefits. Chase and United are following the script with an attempt to increase revenue and sign-ups through headline value but caveat substance.
For example, a JSX credit of $150 could be truly worth every penny but only for those that are already flying JSX from it’s fewer than 20 airports. I have never flown JSX despite working in Texas for a couple of years, how could I possibly consider that value above zero?
Credits for the travel bank (something I use) require renting Avis rental cars (I do not.) Value = zero. United Club passes were something I liked to give away to friends and family that might get stuck in O’Hare, for example, but when I fly United for long haul trips, I am usually in Polaris so taking this benefit away removes all value of the passes for me.
For the lower tier cards, especially like the Gateway card, requiring $10k in annual spend to receive any benefits at all is a true stretch for those who are targeted for the card.
Some of the benefits have a more dynamic value structure. For example, when I am in cities like New York for a weekend, I am inclined to use ridesharing, but when I am at home and have my car, I really have no use for a $5-8 credit. Does this actually return some value to cardholder like me, sure, but it’s nowhere near the full amount and every month I don’t use it, it feels like I threw money away.
Peer Credit Cards Return More Revenue
Delta Air Lines is on a path to $10bn in annual revenue from its American Express co-brand relationship though it’s about $6.8bn in full year 2023, last year’s numbers are not yet in. American Airlines is on its way too with its new co-brand deal with Citi valued at considerably less, but still a few billion dollars annually with 10% annual increases. United, now the world’s largest airline by fleet and offering more trans-Atlantic traffic than Delta earns less than half what Delta earns.
“[In 2023], Delta Air Lines received $6.8 billion in revenue from American Express on its co-branded Delta Amex card. American Airlines reported revenue of $5.2 billion from co-branded cards and other partnerships. United reported a mere $3.2 billion on its other operating line that came primarily on payments to its frequent flyer program.” – CNN
When considering that United should stand shoulder-to-shoulder with its flag carrier peers, it doesn’t. The cards haven’t been compelling, they haven’t driven revenue or incremental growth and loyalty programs are so important to the bottom line of major carriers. In terms of overall revenue, in 2024 the carriers earned:
•Delta Air Lines: $61.6 billion
• United Airlines Holdings: $57.1 billion
• American Airlines Group: $54.2 billion
For that, Delta’s credit card revenue was 11% of its overall revenue, American was at 10.3%, but United lagged far behind at half with just 5.6% of total revenue stemming from its card partnership.
It’s not even close, United under performs for its size and market position.
Will Extreme Couponing Grow Credit Card Revenue For United?
Though I despise the coupon model, it does work. I maintain my American Express Platinum cards in part because those benefits are significant and represent real value to me. However, my business American Express Platinum pays for itself much quicker and easier than the the consumer version I had before I started my business. That card will be cancelled this year without a doubt and so too will my United Explorer card.
The real question is how many will be asleep at the wheel and not notice the annual fee changes and the lost benefits. How many will look behind the headline of $60/year in rideshare credits and realize what’s required to achieve them? I don’t think this is a lasting plan simply because the benefits are too caveated to glean true value.
A valid counterpoint would be that United’s current model is failing exceptionally when compared to the rest of the market so any change should be more beneficial. Delta, from a credit card standpoint, is clearly the leader and they have a similar coupon style approach, but when they cut benefits and increased status requirements last year customers came out with pitchforks and Delta had to walk those changes back.
However, Delta has more of a fortress hub model in many of their focus cities. It competes somewhat with Southwest in Atlanta but Delta owns 70% of traffic into the busiest airport in the world compared with less than 10% of Southwest. In Salt Lake City, and Detroit Delta owns most of the traffic and all of the premium traffic. United splits Chicago with American and Southwest, Houston with Southwest, Newark they own but as a share of New York metro traffic it’s at 28.9%. It owns San Francisco but LAX is split by everyone. United is the largest carrier at Denver with 47% seems strong but Southwest holds 31% and another 10% with Frontier.
Even though the thought: something new has to be better than what wasn’t working before, I believe that this will be a case of a limited short term upside and then a plateau if not drop off. Even if United is able to grow its credit card revenue by 10%, Delta and United are growing by that already with larger numbers. That means United continues to fall behind.
Conclusion
The United Explorer credit card, which is likely to be the broadest segment for its annual fee position, increases its annual fee by 57.8% but adds caveats and qualifiers to its principal benefits and removes others replacing them with conditional, limited value perks. The Gateway card adds an annual spend requirement that some won’t be able to achieve eliminating all value from the card. It also seems unlikely that American Express Platinum and Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders will drop their cards to pick up the Quest. Ultimately, I intend to downgrade my own United card to a free version and I can’t see this repositioning effort delivering growth.
What do you think?

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@ Kyle — I think that extreme couponing does NOT work in the long run. At first, it may have seemed great to game the AMEX Platinum card, but people have grown tired of this nonsense. They have learned that their time is more valuable than these supposed benefits. I think Chase is late to the party and that this will backfire.
Coupon book-ing is annoying. It’s like posting a sponsored review of a second tier bag and not allowing comments.
I wonder how many people actually use some of these coupons, especially those that are very market limited (JSX?) or (as some of noticed) require you to buy a service (like car rental or hotel reservations) via a portal in which the prices are magically higher by the amount of the coupon vs other sites? If nothing, these changes have prompted me to significantly and seriously re-evaluate what is in my wallet….hint: less and less
I canceled my last United card 2 days ago. I used to carry 3 United cards and had 1K status for many years. No more.
Couponing on one or two cards is manageable but Amex Business Platinum already occupies my attention as does maximizing bonus categories. On top of that, United FF program and award program are not that attractive anymore. Sorry United – loyalty goes both ways.
Cancelling my United card over this.
I have canceled an old MileagePlus Select card (20 years old) and a Quest card in the past few days. My United Club card renewed last month, so in before the fee hike. I’ll have to do some thinking before it renews again.
One of the big problems before was that you could not earn status with pure cc spend like AA and Delta. They fixed that problem but trying to get someone to charge $420k is a little nuts. $250k already seems crazy but a business with high spend could make it happen. People have to feel like they have a chance if they just put all their spend on the card otherwise there’s no incentive. They have devalued their miles yet we get nothing in return. I don’t even remember the last time I transferred Chase UR to UA to make a redemption. Delta miles are worth even less but at least the experience is good.
I love my Amex Equinox credit!
/s
You’re not supposed to charge $420k to reach 1k, you’re supposed to fly most of it and then top up.
That said, maybe I’d charge $60k to get the last 25 percent to top tier on DK or AA, but I’m not charging $105k to do it on US.
Canceling the Explorer card as making the lounge passes non-transferable makes them worthless to me as I also used them for friends who got stuck on long layovers
Is it United or Chase increase the credit card fees?
It is difficult to tell whether the airlines/hotels or the banks run the affiliated credit card programs.
Not worth it!!!
Your chart cuts off the value column for the gateway card in both browsers I tried it in at any zoom level.
Nice summary; I didn’t appreciate before this how much I was getting hosed with the United Explorer Card with the new changes.
The question I’d like to pose to Chase/United is what compensation is on offer when I’m denied entry to the United lounge in EWR yet again for being at capacity and prioritizing those with membership?! I fly Utd 1-2x a year so with this change that I can’t even gift my passes i will be cancelling my card unless compelling compensation and/or retention is on offer