Skip to content

How to avoid excise tax offset fees on points transfers from American Express

April 26, 2026
4 min read
delta spirit of freedom
The cards we feature here are from partners who compensate us when you are approved through our site, and this may impact how or where these products appear. We don’t cover all available credit cards, but our analysis, reviews, and opinions are entirely from our editorial team. Terms apply to the offers listed on this page. Please view our advertising policy and product review methodology for more information.

Editor's Note

This is a recurring post, regularly updated with new information.

If you want to transfer American Express Membership Rewards points to a U.S. airline, you may run into a pesky expense: the excise tax offset fee.

This only applies to transferring your Membership Rewards points to domestic airlines. However, there are still methods to book domestic flights with your points without paying the fee.

Here's what you need to know.

What is an excise tax, and how does Amex charge for it?

According to the IRS, excise taxes are "imposed on certain goods, services and activities," including transactions related to loyalty programs.

You'll often see them when purchasing points or miles directly from airlines, but they also come into play with transferable points.

JetBlue planes at Boston Logan International Airport (BOS). SEAN CUDAHY/THE POINTS GUY

To account for these taxes, American Express imposes an "excise tax offset fee" when transferring Membership Rewards points to a U.S. airline's loyalty program.

Here's how it's described on Amex's website:

"For each conversion of points into the Frequent Flyer program of a U.S. airline, a fee of $0.0006 per point, with a maximum fee of $99, will be charged to your Card account. We charge this fee to offset the federal excise tax we must pay on such conversions. The fee may be more or less than the actual amount of the excise tax we pay on any individual conversion. We may offer you the option to redeem points to cover this fee."

As noted, this fee applies only to U.S. airlines' frequent flyer programs. For Amex, this includes two programs:

Daily Newsletter
Reward your inbox with the TPG Daily newsletter
Join over 700,000 readers for breaking news, in-depth guides and exclusive deals from TPG’s experts

Transfers to hotel partners and international airline programs are not charged this fee.

Related: How to redeem American Express Membership Rewards points for maximum value

What does the excise tax offset fee look like?

If you choose to transfer your points to a U.S. frequent flyer program such as Delta SkyMiles, Amex will prompt you with an excise tax offset fee.

Excise tax fee on american express membership rewards redemption example
AMERICAN EXPRESS

In this example, you'll need to pay a $30 fee to transfer 50,000 Amex points to Delta SkyMiles. You can also use your points to cover the excise tax offset fee, but this isn't a good use of your hard-earned rewards.

By using 6,000 points to avoid the $30 fee, you'll redeem each point at just half a cent apiece, or a quarter of our April 2026 valuation of Amex points.

Related: What are American Express Membership Rewards points worth?

How to avoid the fee

As noted above, this fee is only charged on transfers to two of Amex's transfer partners. If you convert your Membership Rewards points to a hotel program's currency, there's no fee.

But most importantly, this fee is not charged for transfers to international airline loyalty programs — and you can often use these to book domestic flights.

delta on board
On board a Delta Air Lines Boeing 737-800. SEAN CUDAHY/THE POINTS GUY

For example, if there's award availability, you can use Air France-KLM Flying Blue or Virgin Atlantic Flying Club points to book domestic flights operated by Delta Air Lines.

Finally, it's worth noting that no other transferable points program charges a fee for these transfers. If you have Capital One miles, Chase Ultimate Rewards points or Citi ThankYou Rewards points, for example, you can transfer them to JetBlue without any additional charge.

Related: How to search flight award availability for the major airlines

Bottom line

If you plan to transfer Membership Rewards to Delta SkyMiles or JetBlue TrueBlue, remember to factor in the excise tax offset fees into the overall cost. Be sure to pay this fee with your American Express card, as redeeming Amex points in this way is not a good use of your rewards.

Otherwise, stick with hotel or international loyalty programs, as that's the best way to maximize your Membership Rewards points.

Related: Best ways to use Amex Membership Rewards points, from business-class flights to Europe to budget-friendly hotel stays

Featured image by SEAN CUDAHY/THE POINTS GUY
Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.

TPG featured card

Rewards rate
2X milesEarn 2X miles per $1 on every purchase, everywhere
5X milesEarn 5X miles per dollar on hotels, vacation rentals and rental cars booked through Capital One Business Travel
Intro offer
Open Intro bonus
Limited-time offer: Earn up to 150,000 bonus miles
Annual fee
$95
Regular APR
24.49% (Variable)
Recommended credit
Open Credit score description
740-850Excellent

Pros

  • Simple earning structure
  • Bonus categories
  • Annual credits
  • No foreign transaction fees
  • Flexible redemption options, including transfer partners

Cons

  • Has an annual fee
  • Fewer bonus categories than some competitors
  • Lacks premium perks
  • Limited-time offer: Earn up to 150,000 bonus miles—75,000 miles once you spend $7,500 in the first 3 months, and an additional 75,000 miles once you spend $30,000 in the first 6 months
  • Earn unlimited 2X miles per dollar on every purchase, everywhere, no limits or category restrictions, and miles won't expire for the life of the account
  • Receive up to $220 in credits: Receive an annual $50 travel credit for bookings through Capital One Business Travel, up to an annual $50 statement credit for purchases at qualifying advertising or software merchants, plus up to a $120 credit for Global Entry or TSA PreCheck® every four years. Terms and conditions apply
  • Unlimited 5X miles on hotels, vacation rentals and rental cars booked through Capital One Business Travel
  • Transfer your miles to 15+ travel loyalty programs
  • Redeem your miles instantly for any travel-related purchases, from flights and hotels to ride-sharing services
  • $95 annual fee
  • Free employee cards which also earn unlimited 2X miles from their purchases
  • Top rated mobile app