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The ultimate guide to credit card retention offers

Aug. 12, 2025
9 min read
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Editor's Note

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

You should periodically review the credit cards you hold to gauge their value. Sometimes, cards you may have opened for specific benefits stop being useful. And other times, bonus categories can become less (or more) valuable if there's a shift in your spending habits. If you're paying an annual fee for a card you no longer use, it may not be worth keeping.

However, before you decide to cancel or downgrade as your card renewals approach, you should talk to a customer representative to see if you can score a retention offer that makes the card worth keeping for another year.

Here's what you need to know about these valuable incentives.

What are retention offers?

Once a credit card issuer has spent hundreds of dollars (with a welcome bonus in cash back, points or miles) to entice you to open a card, it needs to find a way to recoup that investment. If you close your card after only a year or two — especially if you aren't using it regularly — the issuer will likely lose money on you.

In an effort to recoup that investment, some (but not all) issuers will extend targeted retention offers to encourage customers to keep a card open longer. These offers can take the form of bonus points, statement credits, reductions or outright waivers of an annual fee — anything that helps persuade you to keep the card open (and, in the issuer's eyes, keep you spending on the card).

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For example, multiple cardholders of The Platinum Card® from American Express have reported the $895 annual fee (see rates and fees) being partially offset with a statement credit. Others were offered a points bonus when they called or chatted via the app to tell a representative that they are considering canceling.

Related: Here's why you should never close your credit cards before the one-year mark

How to ask for a retention offer

One common misconception about retention offers is that you can only get them if you're trying to close a card. Indeed, you'll generally have the most success asking for a retention offer right around the time your annual fee posts (since that's when many people decide to cancel a card), but you can try your luck at any time.

With more companies using automated systems, how you phrase your request is very important. Instead of saying, "I'd like to close my credit card" and hoping the agent makes you an offer, you need to say, "I'm considering closing my card," or, "I'm not sure I want to keep paying the annual fee on my card."

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We've heard horror stories of people who said they wanted to close their card, and the automated system shuttered the account before they could ever speak to a human being about it.

Each issuer handles retention offers differently. Some, like American Express, have a dedicated retention department to which you can ask to be transferred.

You can also use the chat feature online or on the mobile app with Amex. For other cards, a front-line customer service representative might be able to help you. You can adapt the script to suit your own needs, but my calls or online chats usually go something like this:

"Hi, I noticed that the annual fee on my ______ card just posted, and I'm really not sure I can justify paying it for another year. I really like (insert your favorite benefits), but I'm just not sure about this annual fee. I was wondering if you could check if there were any retention offers available on my account that might help me make up my mind?"

At this point, you can expect the corporate marketing to kick in, and the agent will read you some talking points about why the card is so great and worth keeping. You'll need to deflect, which you can do by bringing the discussion back to the annual fee you don't want to pay.

Try mentioning that you have other cards with similar perks (especially if you have multiple Marriott, Delta or Hilton cards, for example), or consider saying that you don't find yourself spending much on the card. Remember, at no point should you actually say, "I want to close the card" — only that you're thinking about it.

10’000 HOURS/GETTY IMAGES

This is purely anecdotal, but we've found American Express to be the most generous with retention offers. Some TPG staffers have even received retention offers on multiple cards within the Amex family in recent years.

Chase rarely gives them out (though it's more common on cobranded Chase cards than the issuer's Ultimate Rewards-branded cards).

One TPG staffer was denied a retention offer on their Chase Sapphire Reserve® (see rates and fees) and ultimately decided to downgrade it. Other card issuers may do so, but much less frequently.

Related: Is the Amex Platinum worth the annual fee?

What types of offers are there?

Depending on the issuer, there are three different offers you might receive:

  • Annual fee reduction or waiver: Depending on the card, this can be as good as cash. Even if you don't plan to use the card much, if you get an annual fee waiver, you can keep the card open for another year, which could boost your credit score. When you factor in perks like statement credits or elite status, an annual fee reduction may be enough to push the card past its break-even point.
  • Bonus points or miles: Sometimes you'll be awarded points for agreeing to keep the account open, though more often than not, it will be an offer similar to an initial welcome bonus: spend a certain amount of money in a specified period to earn bonus rewards.
  • Statement credits: Statement credits can sometimes be applied directly to the account, but they more often come with a spending requirement.

It goes without saying that the more you spend on a card, the more likely you are to receive an offer. Issuers want to keep their most valuable customers.

Sometimes, you might even be given a choice between a statement credit or bonus points, in which case you can quickly pull up TPG's August 2025 valuations and decide which offer is better.

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As an example, one TPG staffer once received a retention offer on their Amex Platinum after simply saying they didn't feel like they were receiving good value from all of the benefits to justify the high annual fee.

After speaking with a customer representative, the staffer was given the choice between 40,000 Membership Rewards points after spending $3,000 in the next three months, a $400 statement credit for $3,000 in spending or a $150 statement credit with no spending requirement.

TPG's August 2025 valuations peg 40,000 Amex points at $800, so it was a no-brainer, and the staffer picked the 40,000 points.

Some other TPG teammates also shared some retention offers they've received:

  • Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant® American Express® Card: "I got an offer of 20,000 points for $2,000 in spending in three months — was hoping for a bit more since I was on the fence about keeping the card but decided to keep it for one more year!" — Becca Manheimer, senior director of marketing and communications
  • Marriott Bonvoy Business® American Express® Card: "I was given the option to earn a $200 statement credit for adding an authorized user and spending $2,000 on the card in the next six months — effectively a return of 10%." — Nick Ewen, senior editorial director
  • Amex Platinum: "I had just one offer, which was 50,000 Membership Rewards points after spending $4,000 in the next three months, so I immediately jumped on it!" — Danyal Ahmed, credit cards writer
  • Delta SkyMiles® Reserve American Express Card: "I was on the fence about keeping my card after an annual fee increase and change to benefits. I asked if there were any retention offers available that could help offset the annual fee and give me more time to evaluate the card's value. The agent offered me 30,000 Delta SkyMiles after spending $2,000 or more on the card within the next three months. Based on TPG's August 2025 valuations, the offer I received was worth $360." — Tarah Chieffi, senior writer

Related: 4 major considerations before upgrading your credit card

Bottom line

Every time an annual fee comes due on one of your cards, consider whether to keep it open, downgrade or cancel it.

We recommend spending a few minutes on the phone with an issuer to see what type of retention offer you might receive; in terms of pure return on time, there aren't many better deals.

Related: How to use retention offers for extra points and miles

For rates and fees of the Amex Platinum, click here.

Featured image by HIRURG/GETTY IMAGES
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.

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The Capital One Venture X Business Card has all the Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card has to offer and more. It offers an incredible welcome bonus and requires an equally impressive spend to qualify. In addition, the card comes with premium travel perks like annual travel credit. (Partner offer)

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