Co-Branded Credit Card
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Definition
Credit card partnership between airline and bank, earning airline miles on purchases
A co-branded credit card is a payment card jointly issued by an airline and a financial institution (bank or card network), designed to earn the issuing airline's loyalty currency on everyday purchases. Co-branded cards are a cornerstone of airline loyalty economics and one of the most powerful tools for accumulating miles outside of flying.
What Is a Co-Branded Credit Card?
A co-branded card combines the payment functionality of a credit card with the earning mechanics of a frequent flyer program. The card carries both the airline's brand and the bank's or card network's brand on its face — for example, the Delta SkyMiles American Express Gold Card, the United Explorer Visa, or the Citi AAdvantage Platinum Select. When a cardholder uses the card for purchases, they earn miles directly into their airline account rather than generic reward points.
Most airlines partner with a single primary banking institution for their co-branded card portfolio. Delta's exclusive partner is American Express; United partners with Chase; American Airlines partners with Citi (and Barclays for some products). These partnerships are extraordinarily lucrative: banks pay airlines one to two cents per mile when purchasing miles to credit to cardholders' accounts, and airlines receive additional bonuses for new card activations and spending milestone triggers.
How It Works in Practice
A cardholder earns miles based on the card's earning structure: typically 2–3× miles on airline purchases (flights, seat upgrades, in-flight purchases) and 1× miles on all other purchases. Premium tiers of co-branded cards often include elevated multipliers on dining, hotels, and supermarkets. Sign-up bonuses — commonly 50,000 to 100,000 miles after meeting a minimum spending requirement within the first few months — provide an immediate, substantial infusion of loyalty currency.
Beyond miles, co-branded cards often include travel benefits: complimentary checked baggage, priority boarding, companion certificates, lounge day passes, or automatic elite status qualification credits. Some cards offer credits against the card's annual fee through statement credits for airline purchases, effectively reducing the net cost of holding the card. The United Explorer Card, for example, includes two United Club day passes annually — a benefit worth approximately $100.
Why It Matters
For travelers who cannot fly frequently enough to earn miles organically, co-branded cards are the primary tool for accumulating meaningful balances. A cardholder spending $30,000 per year on a card earning 1.5× miles accumulates 45,000 miles annually — enough for a domestic round-trip or a meaningful contribution toward an international award. For airlines, co-branded card revenue has become so significant that the loyalty program's profitability often exceeds that of the airline's operating business.
Key Facts and Figures
- Delta receives over $7 per year per active SkyMiles American Express cardholder from Amex.
- United's partnership with Chase is estimated at $3+ billion annually.
- American Airlines signed a 2021 co-branded deal extension with Citi and Barclays valued at approximately $11 billion over 10 years.
- Co-branded card sign-up bonuses peaked during 2020–2022, with some cards offering 100,000+ miles.
- Annual fees for premium co-branded cards range from $95 to $695.
Related Concepts
Frequent Flyer Program, Airline Miles, Transfer Partner, Earning Rate, Elite Status
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Co-Branded Credit Card?
Why is Co-Branded Credit Card important in aviation?
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Loyalty Programs
- Frequent Flyer Program (FFP)
- Airline Miles / Points
- Elite Status / Tier Status
- Airline Lounge
- Status Match
- Mileage Run
- Award Flight / Redemption
- Earning Rate
- Redemption Rate
- Dynamic Pricing Awards
- Revenue-Based Earning
- Tier Points
- Lifetime Status
- Transfer Partner
- Sweet Spot Redemption
- Loyalty Program Devaluation
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