If you've got a charity credit card, ditch it now! This isn’t being miserly, its because there’s a better way; you can donate TEN TIMES more, without spending an extra penny. Most charities would only receive a paltry £45 if you spent £16,000 on their branded credit card; yet instead there’s a way to get your plastic to give £450!
How charity credit cards work
Charity cards are a hideous scam, selling us poor value credit cards on the pretence we're doing some good. In reality, it just means more profits for the banks. When you get a charity card, the charity automatically receives between £5 and £25. yet after that most charity cards donate a paltry 0.25% of everything you spend. That's just 25p per £100 spent.
Admittedly a very few charity cards do pay a little more; for example Amex Red gives 1% of everything you spend to the Global Fund to help fight AIDS in Africa. Yet even so, by taking two simple steps, one of which bizarrely uses another of Amex's cards, you can supercharge your charity giving.
How to massively boost the gain
If you use a charity card, ditch it and replace it with the following technique and your chosen charity could be much, much, much better off.
- Step One. Get a top cashback credit card
Cashback credit cards are very similar beasts to charity cards; yet rather than paying the charity, they pay you a small percentage of every spend made. However the big difference is that the best cashback cards pay you substantially more than charity cards give your chosen good cause; this can be up to £5 per £100 spent. So switch to one of these (see the Top cards section later) and you get more and can then donate it.
- Step Two. Donate the money via Gift Aid so the charity can reclaim the tax.
If you donate money to a UK charity, provided you're a taxpayer, then tick the 'Gift Aid box' on the donation form, and the charity can claim back the tax you paid on that money when it was earned. This means for every £1 a basic rate taxpayer gives, the charity actually receives £1.28.
Compare this to what happens with the charity cards. There the donation doesn't qualify for Gift Aid tax relief; so for every £1 that goes to charity, the charity only gets the £1, nothing more. Thus the bottom line is that for every £1 you donate it gets £1.28 and it doesn't cost or impact you in any way (read the full charity giving article).
For higher rate taxpayers it works even better. Declare the donations made on your self-assessment tax return, and you can claim back the rest of your tax too. This is an extra 23p per £1.00 you've donated; meaning donate this too and in total your charity receives over 50% more than it would have done without any Gift Aid relief.
Any cashback card paying 1% cashback or more will beat even the very best charity cards. The current top picks are:
- The overall winner: Amex Platinum 5% for 3 months and up to 1.5% after
The American Express Platinum* card pays new cardholders a massive 5% cashback, which is 5p per pound spent, on up to £4,000 spending during the first three months. Once this intro offer expires, its rates are tiered paying a maximum 1.5% cashback.
It’s worth being aware though that Amex cards are less accepted than Visa or Mastercard and thus you won’t be able to use it everywhere (especially small restaturants & independent retailers - read Who does & doesn't take Amex? discussion. So best practice is to have another cashback card as a reserve.
Intro Cashback. 5% for 3 months on up to £4,000. Standard Cashback. 0.5% on up to £3,500/year, 1% on £3,500 to £10k/year and 1.5% above that. Min. Salary Requirement: £20,000
- The best alternatives: 1% cashback on everything you spend
If you earn under £20,000, or want a non-Amex card, the next best is the Egg Money card (don't confuse with the standard Egg card). It simply pays 1% cashback on everything you buy, though is capped at £200 annually (so you'd have to spend over £20,000 before it's an issue).
For more options see the full best cashback credit cards article
How to make the most of cashback cards
Once you've picked a cashback card, there's a couple of things you should do to make the very most out of it. Sticking to these will ensure your donation is as big as possible, while costing you the minimum it can.
- Always repay it in full.
If you remember one thing about cashback cards, and for that matter charity credit cards too, the ensure its the 'Golden Rule'. Only use one of these cards if you never pay a penny of interest, meaning you pay the card off in full every month. Fail to do this and the interest cost massively dwarves the cashback earned, negating any benefit to you or the charity. In that case you'd be far better off with the top 0% card for spending and donating some of the interest you save.
It's simple to get around this; set up with a Direct Debit to pay it off IN FULL. Sadly some card providers deliberately miss this option off their DD forms, as it's highly unprofitable for them. If so, just write in ‘pay off in full' and send it in; they should honour it, though call up after a week or so and check it's in place.
- Use it for as much spending as possible
Those who do pay off in full each month should maximise spending on the card even replacing debit card, cheque and cash transactions. After all as there's no interest cost you've effectively turned your credit card into a debit card, just one that pays you when you spend on it. This way you maximise the returns and your charity is effectively getting paid whenever you spend. Most cashback cards tend to pay out once a year, so at that point you can do the donation in one go.
Are there any advantages to charity cards?
Maybe a small one, but it won't work for everyone. If you apply for multiple cards that offer a bonus donation when you open them, then the charities can get cash without it costing you a penny. yet this will only work if you have a good credit score.
The more 'credit searches' on your file, the less likely you are to get decent new credit in future, especially with the omnipresent Credit Crunch looming large. If you are likely to need credit to make debts cheaper, be very careful about how many applications you make for the sake of a few quid to charity. It's probably best just to donate the money yourself.
This is actually avery similar system to the one I talk about in the Credit Card Freebies article, so if you are interested in doing it, it's worth reading my explanation on the impact on your credit score there.
This method does take more discipline than a charity card, but discipline pays substantially. For example use MBNA's Breakthrough Breast Cancer card for £16,000 spending a year (not unreasonable if it replaces debit card and cash transactions) and the charity receives £45, including £5 the sign-up fee.
Instead, spend on Amex Platinum* and you'll receive £350 cashback. Donate this and the charity can reclaim £98 on top. Plus, higher rate taxpayers can reclaim the tax, if they choose to donate that too it's a further £80. Overall it means it's earning £530 compared to the charity cards paltry £45.
|
Spending of £16,000/year | ||||
|
Cashback/Charity Payment |
Amount the charity receives |
The Charity Gains | ||
| Basic Rate | Higher Rate (1) | |||
| MBNA Breast Cancer card | £45 | £45 | £45 | - |
| Amex Platinum | £350 | £440 | £530 | £485 |
| (1) Assumes tax reclaimable is gifted to charity as well (2) £5 sign up fee and 0.25% of transaction | ||||
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