Credit Cards in Travel — Concepts, Types, Benefits, Insurance Cover & How They Work
Credit Cards in Travel — Concepts, Types, Benefits, Insurance Cover & How They Work
The credit card transformed travel from a cash-heavy, risky activity into a seamless, protected, points-earning experience. Understanding credit cards is essential for every travel professional — and for every traveller.
A credit card is a card issued by a bank or financial institution that lends money to the customer for a stipulated period. It is made of plastic with a magnetic strip containing customer details in coded form readable by a machine.
The Grace Period is the time given to repay the borrowed money without charge — typically 25-30 days. If repaid within the grace period: no charge. If repaid after: interest charged plus potential penalties.
Cashback rewards — percentage cash back on purchases
Points rewards — points redeemable for cash, gifts, merchandise
Travel rewards — points redeemable for free flights, hotel nights, upgrades
Premium travel credit cards include: Lost baggage insurance, flight cancellation/delay insurance, travel accident insurance, emergency medical insurance abroad, purchase protection, card fraud liability protection. Coverage varies by card level — entry/classic cards have minimal cover; premium/platinum cards have comprehensive cover.
◆ Grace period = 25-30 days — repay within grace period = no interest
◆ Types: Standard, Secured, Reward (cashback/points/travel), Charge, Student, Travel co-branded
◆ Secured card: credit limit = 80% of deposit — for no/bad credit history
◆ Charge card: NO preset limit but MUST pay full balance monthly
◆ American Express = best-known charge card globally
◆ Travel credit card benefits: lounge access, miles, hotel points, insurance
◆ Traveller’s cheques history: Thomas Cook (circular notes 1874) → AmEx traveller’s cheques (1891) → credit cards (1950s) → digital payment
