Key Points

  • Membership Rewards is the most international-leaning transferable currency in the U.S. market, with 20+ airline and hotel partners and standout sweet spots through Virgin Atlantic, Air France-KLM, and Aeroplan.
  • The earning lineup in April 2026 covers nearly every spending category through the Platinum, Gold, Green, and business cards, and points pool automatically across every Amex card you hold.
  • Stop redeeming for statement credits and Amazon checkout. Transfer-partner award flights deliver 1.8 to 2.5 cents per point on premium cabins, while fixed-value redemptions cap out around 1.1 cents.

TL;DR

Membership Rewards points pool across every earning Amex card and transfer to 20+ partners, hitting 1.8 to 2.5 cents on premium cabin awards. Skip statement credits, learn three sweet spots, and treat MR as flexible international currency.

Introduction

I have been moving Amex points around since long before "transferable currency" was a phrase the marketing team owned, and Membership Rewards is still the most underrated tool in my points stack. Not because it is the flashiest. Chase gets the headlines because of Hyatt. But because the international airline partner list is where the real action lives.

This guide is everything I would tell a friend who just got approved for their first Amex Gold and asked "okay, what now." We will cover what MR actually is in April 2026, which cards earn it, where to transfer for outsized value, and the handful of pitfalls that quietly cost people thousands of points a year.

The Quick Answer

American Express Membership Rewards is a transferable points currency. You earn it on Amex personal and business cards, points pool into one balance, and you transfer them to airline and hotel partners (or use them for flights through Amex Travel) when you book. Real-world value ranges from about 0.6 cents per point at the worst end (statement credits, which you should not use) to north of 2.5 cents on premium cabin international awards.

Why Membership Rewards Matters

The whole appeal of a transferable currency is optionality. With co-branded miles, you are stuck with one airline's award chart, devaluation risk, and availability. With Membership Rewards, you wait until you find an award you actually want, like Air France business to Paris, ANA business to Tokyo, or Aeroplan to Lisbon. Then you move the points in. If a program devalues, you pivot to another partner. If a transfer bonus runs, you can ride it.

The other thing people miss: every MR-earning card you hold pools into the same balance. That means a $325 Gold and a $895 Platinum and a no-fee Blue Business Plus aren't three little point accounts. They are one account fed by three taps. A common rookie mistake is thinking each card has its own pool. It doesn't.

The MR program also pairs well with the rest of your stack. Most serious points collectors run MR alongside Chase Ultimate Rewards. Chase brings Hyatt, MR brings the international airline partners, and between the two programs you can book almost any meaningful redemption that exists. They complement each other rather than compete.

The Cards That Earn Membership Rewards

Pricing reflects the post-2025 refresh wave. Annual fees as of April 2026:

The Platinum Card from American Express ($895): 5x on flights booked direct with airlines or via Amex Travel (capped at $500,000 per year, which you and I will not hit), 5x on prepaid hotels through Amex Travel, 1x everything else. The fee math now leans heavily on the credit stack. If you are not using the airline, hotel, dining, and digital entertainment credits, you are not getting fee value. If you are flying premium cabin internationally and using even half of those credits, the math still works.

American Express Gold Card ($325): 4x at restaurants worldwide, 4x at U.S. supermarkets up to $25,000 a year (then 1x), 3x on flights booked direct with airlines or Amex Travel. The Gold is the workhorse. Most points hobbyists I know put more raw spend on the Gold than any other card in their wallet, because dining and groceries are the categories that actually move every month.

American Express Green Card ($150): 3x on travel, 3x on transit, 3x on dining (worldwide on all three categories, which is the underrated detail). It does not get the press the Plat and Gold get, but for a mid-tier slot it earns well and the credits are simple. The Green is what I recommend to readers who want a single travel card that pulls 3x on most trip-related spend without committing to a $325 or $895 fee.

Schwab Platinum: Same earning structure as the regular Platinum, but you can cash out points to a Schwab brokerage account at 1.1 cents per point. Think of it as a permanent floor. You will rarely use it, but knowing your points have a 1.1 cpp escape hatch is reassuring. If you have a Schwab account already, this is the personal Platinum to hold.

The Business Platinum ($895): 5x on flights and prepaid hotels through Amex Travel, 1.5x on purchases of $5,000 or more (capped). Lounge access mirrors the personal Plat. Welcome bonuses on Business Plat tend to run higher than the personal version, so if you have a business entity that qualifies, this is often the better entry point.

American Express Business Gold ($375): 4x on the top two of six rotating-but-broad business categories each month, capped at $150,000 in spend. If you can steer business spend into media buys or shipping, this card is excellent. If you cannot, the Blue Business Plus does the same job for free.

Blue Business Plus ($0): 2x on everything up to $50,000 a year, then 1x. The unsung hero of the lineup. Every points hobbyist should hold one even if they don't put real spend on it, because it keeps your points alive at zero cost if you ever need to drop the premium cards. The 2x on non-bonus categories is also a meaningful uplift over the 1x you'd otherwise eat on the personal Plat or Gold.

I'll repeat this because new readers miss it: every one of these cards feeds the same Membership Rewards balance. There is no "Gold pool" or "Platinum pool." It's all one account.

Transfer Partners (The Whole Reason We're Here)

Amex transfers points to 20+ airline programs and three hotel programs. Most transfers are 1:1 and instant. Hilton is 1:2 (you get more Hilton points back than you sent, but Hilton points are worth less, so the math is closer to a wash than it looks). Marriott is 1:1.

I am going to skip the polite list-everything-neutrally approach and tell you which partners actually matter. The full list includes Delta SkyMiles, Air Canada Aeroplan, Air France-KLM Flying Blue, Avianca LifeMiles, British Airways Executive Club, Cathay Pacific, Emirates Skywards, Etihad Guest, Hawaiian Airlines, JetBlue TrueBlue, Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer, Virgin Atlantic Flying Club, ANA Mileage Club, Qantas Frequent Flyer, Aeromexico Rewards, Iberia Plus, EVA Air Infinity MileageLands, plus Hilton Honors, Marriott Bonvoy, and Choice Privileges on the hotel side.

Here are the four I actually use, in the order I'd learn them.

1. Virgin Atlantic Flying Club

The single best reason to earn Amex points. Virgin Atlantic transfers from MR at 1:1 and gives you access to ANA business class to Tokyo at 95,000 points round-trip, or Delta One to Europe at varying prices that occasionally drop into "wait, really" territory. ANA-via-Virgin is the iconic Amex sweet spot, and it has survived multiple devaluation cycles.

The catch: Virgin only releases ANA award space to its own partners (including Amex transfers) when ANA opens it, and you have to call to book. Annoying, but a 95,000-point round-trip in ANA business is worth picking up the phone for. The Delta One redemptions through Virgin are dynamic, so the price varies wildly. Sometimes 50,000 one-way to Europe, sometimes 200,000. Search regularly.

2. Air France-KLM Flying Blue

Flying Blue runs Promo Rewards every month, which means discounted award flights of 20 to 50% off published rates. If you watch the Promo Rewards calendar, you can find Paris in business for under 50,000 points one-way. Flying Blue is also a SkyTeam workhorse for Delta partner space, and the Flying Blue website is one of the better award search tools among the major programs.

The catch: Flying Blue surcharges on European partners can run high. Always check the cash component before transferring. A 50,000-point one-way to Paris might come with $400 in surcharges, which changes the math.

3. Air Canada Aeroplan

Aeroplan is the most flexible Star Alliance program in existence. Stopovers for 5,000 points, distance-based pricing, no fuel surcharges on most partners (United, Air Canada, Avianca), and a phenomenal app and website. Business class to Europe starts around 60,000 to 70,000 points one-way depending on the season. If you are flying Star Alliance, you are flying Aeroplan.

The Aeroplan stopover trick is one of the best-kept "if you know, you know" plays in points. Build a one-way award with a stopover in your destination, fly to a third city for the throwaway segment, and you have effectively bought a vacation plus a positioning flight for one award. 5,000 points to add a stopover is the cheapest stopover pricing in the entire transferable currency ecosystem.

4. ANA Mileage Club

The classic Star Alliance round-trip sweet spot. 88,000 to 110,000 miles for business class round-trip on partner airlines, depending on region. Round-trip booking only (no one-ways), fuel surcharges on most carriers, but the chart pricing is so aggressive that it is still worth the headaches for a U.S.-to-Asia trip. ANA also has its own first class on its own metal, which is bookable through ANA Mileage Club at chart rates that look like typos compared to direct cash pricing.

Honorable mentions

Avianca LifeMiles books United business to Europe without massive surcharges and runs occasional transfer bonuses from Amex. British Airways Executive Club is excellent for short-haul partner awards on American (the AAdvantage trick, but for Amex earners). Singapore KrisFlyer is the only way to book Singapore Airlines Suites awards. Cathay Pacific has gotten more useful since the relaunched program changes.

The ones I rarely use: Delta SkyMiles (you can earn Delta miles directly cheaper through co-brand cards), Hilton (the 1:2 ratio sounds great but Hilton points value sits around 0.5 cents), and Marriott (the only reason to transfer there is to top off for a specific stay, and even that is usually a worse use than transferring to a flight partner instead).

Transfer Bonuses (The Cadence to Watch)

Membership Rewards itself rarely runs program-wide transfer bonuses. What you get instead is partners running bonuses on inbound transfers from MR. The cadence in 2024-2025 ran roughly:

Virgin Atlantic: 30% bonus once or twice a year, usually summer or fall. This is the bonus to wait for if you have an ANA business class trip planned.

Air France-KLM: 20% to 25% bonus quarterly. Predictable enough that I plan around it. Combined with Flying Blue's monthly Promo Rewards, this is the most reliable pairing in the program.

British Airways: 30% bonus once or twice a year, often in spring. Best used for short-haul American Airlines awards within the U.S., where the BA distance chart is unbeatable.

Avianca LifeMiles: Occasional 25% to 30% bonuses, less predictable timing. LifeMiles also runs its own miles sales periodically, which sometimes stack with the transfer bonus.

Hilton has run 1:2 base + a 25% bonus a few times, which is the only scenario where I would consider transferring to Hilton. Marriott bonuses do not justify the underlying program math.

If a partner you actually want to use runs a 30% bonus, that takes a 60,000-point Aeroplan one-way down to about 46,000 points, which is the kind of change that turns a "good" redemption into a "drop everything and book" redemption. Subscribe to email notifications from each program, or use a points-tracking tool that pings you when bonuses launch.

Pay With Points, the Travel Portal, and the Schwab Trick

Outside of transfers, Amex offers three fixed-value redemption paths.

Amex Travel Portal for flights: 1 cent per point. Platinum cardholders get 1.1 cents per point on flights through the portal. This is a reasonable floor for domestic economy when transfer math doesn't work, and the Pay with Points feature on flights is the only fixed-value redemption I use with any regularity.

Amex Travel Portal for hotels and other categories: Roughly 0.7 cents per point. Don't.

Schwab Platinum brokerage redemption: 1.1 cents per point cashed straight to a Schwab brokerage account. The only reason this exists is because Schwab pays Amex for the partnership. Use it as a hard floor: your points never need to be worth less than 1.1 cents because you can always do this. Useful if you are downgrading the card and want to lock in value before closing, or if you have a chunk of points sitting unused with no upcoming travel plans.

Statement credits, Amazon checkout, gift cards: 0.6 to 0.7 cents per point. These are point destruction options. The only time they make sense is if you are about to lose your last MR-earning card and have no transferable balance to extract.

Common Pitfalls

Pitfall 1: Transferring to Marriott to "save up." New points hobbyists sometimes treat Marriott as a backup currency because it transfers from Amex, Chase, and Citi. The problem is that 60,000 MR becomes 60,000 Marriott points, which is worth about half what 60,000 MR would have been at a transfer partner. You are pre-devaluing your own points. Marriott points should be earned on Marriott co-branded cards or stays, not transferred in.

Pitfall 2: The Hilton 1:2 illusion. A 1:2 ratio sounds like a 100% bonus. It is not. Hilton points are worth roughly 0.5 cents each, so 60,000 MR becoming 120,000 Hilton points is worth about $600. That same 60,000 MR would generate $1,000 to $1,500 of value in business class flights. The ratio is an illusion of value.

Pitfall 3: Transferring before confirming award space. Transfers are irrevocable. Always pull up actual award availability on the partner's site, screenshot it, then transfer. Especially with ANA via Virgin Atlantic, which involves a phone call after the transfer. You do not want to find out the seat closed during the transfer window.

Pitfall 4: Family pooling. Amex does not allow Membership Rewards balances to be combined across separate accounts. You can transfer points from your MR account to a partner program account in your spouse or family member's name (with their account number), which is the workaround. But there is no MR-to-MR transfer between two cardholders. Plan accordingly if you and a partner are pooling rewards strategy.

Pitfall 5: Closing your last MR card without parking points. Points die 30 days after your last MR-earning card closes. The fix is the Blue Business Plus, which is free, earns 2x on everything, and keeps your points alive forever. Open one before you ever consider downsizing.

Pitfall 6: Ignoring Amex Offers. These are the per-merchant bonus offers that load to your account. They stack with your card's earning rate and routinely deliver 5-10x effective return on a single purchase. Check them weekly. Add the relevant ones to every Amex card you hold. The offers are linked to specific card numbers, so you have to add them to each card individually if you want the benefit on whichever card you happen to use.

What I'd Actually Do

If you are starting from zero and reading this guide, here is the order of operations I would follow.

Get the Gold first. The 4x on dining and groceries hits more spend than any other multiplier in the program for most people. Earn the welcome bonus, get comfortable with the points balance, and hold the card.

Add the Plat after a year if you travel enough to use the credits. The fee is real now at $895, but if you are flying premium cabin internationally and using even half the airline, hotel, and dining credits, the math works. If you are not, the Green at $150 covers most of the same earning categories with a much friendlier fee.

Open a Blue Business Plus the first time you have a side-hustle expense, a freelance gig, an Etsy store, anything that qualifies you for an Amex business card. Use it to keep the 2x floor on non-bonus spend, and to keep your points alive forever.

Learn Virgin Atlantic, Aeroplan, and Flying Blue as your three core partners. Skip the rest until you need them. Each has a different sweet spot and a different region of strength, and three is the right number to actually get good at.

Default every redemption to a transfer partner unless you are booking a domestic economy ticket and the portal math is within 10% of the transfer math. Every time you hit "redeem for statement credit," you are setting fire to half the value of your points.

That's the program. Build slowly, learn three partners well, treat the points like the international currency they are, and ignore the noise from the Amex marketing team telling you to use them at Amazon checkout.

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