Amex gift card loses some fees, retains others
Should you buy American Express gift cards now that the issuer has dropped its monthly inactivity
fee?
You may be asking yourself
that question in light of the issuer’s recent announcement that it was
dropping the $2 monthly fee it had charged on its gifts cards, beginning a year
after purchase. The decision, which took effect September 30, applies to new
Amex cards and, incredibly, to existing ones, too. The issuer already had ditched
the $5.95 fee it charged to replace a lost or stolen card.
“This is the [response to]
feedback from customers, that having fees was a frustration for them,” American
Express spokeswoman Marina Norville said. “We do hope other issuers will follow
suit. It is the right thing to do for customers.”
So-called gift card dormancy, or inactivity, fees are infamous because they gradually can zap a card’s value while it’s sitting in your wallet or drawer, perhaps forgotten. Some states limit such fees, and in August 2010 the new Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility, and Disclosure (CARD) Act of 2009 will begin prohibit charging those fees for gift cards that are less than one year old (something Amex wasn’t doing anyway).
The American Express decision is welcome news, especially for those already carrying an Amex gift card. But don’t think the elimination of post-purchase fees means Amex gift cards now are free of downsides.
For one, the dormancy fee may be gone, but not the $3.95 to $6.95 fee to buy the card in the first place. That’s a lot more than the cost of writing a check or giving cash.
And Amex gift cards still come with fine-print gotchas. Want to convert the balance to cash? That used to cost $10; now you can’t do it at all. Want to it use the card on a cruise line, in a casino, at an ATM, or on an international airline? Forget it.
These kinds of fees, and others, make us wary in general of gift cards–Amex and otherwise. Still, if a bank-issued gift card is a must, the Amex card may be the one to get, at least for now.–Anthony Giorgianni

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Posted by: Roger L. Sovde | Oct 10, 2009 10:14:07 AM
I ordered a spray nozzle that was advertised on tv.
Before I received the item, I got a charge on my credit card from Savings2Go, located in Plano, Texas, for $14.85. In checking this out I learned that the seller of the nozzle had given that company my credit card information without my authorization and I would be billed $14.95 monthly. In researching Savings2Go on the internet, I was astonished by the large number of complaints against it for unauthorized use of people's credit and debit cards. Savings2Go is a scam.
You might want to check this out yourselves and warn your subscribers.