The Citi American Airlines AAdvantage Executive is once again offering an increased welcome bonus of 100,000 miles after $10K in purchases in the first 3 months. I think this will likely appeal most to those who yearn for Admirals Club access and the Loyalty Point boosts.
The Offer & Key Card Details
Card Offer and Details |
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![]() ⓘ $635 1st Yr Value EstimateClick to learn about first year value estimates 100K miles Non-AffiliateThis is NOT an affiliate offer. 100K miles after $10,000 spend in first 3 months$595 Annual Fee Information about this card has been collected independently by Frequent Miler. The issuer did not provide the details, nor is it responsible for their accuracy. FM Mini Review: Good choice for those who need Admirals Club® access and those who value the Loyalty Points boosts at 50K and 90K Loyalty Points earned. Plus, it offers the usual collection of perks for flying AA (free checked bag, priority boarding, etc.) and some handy credits for Avis or Budget rentals and GrubHub. Earning rate: 4X AA ✦ 10X hotels booked through AA.com/Hotels ✦ 10X car rentals booked through AA.com/Cars ✦ 1X everywhere else Card Info: Mastercard World Elite issued by Citi. This card has no foreign currency conversion fees. Noteworthy perks: ✦ First Checked Bag Free ✦ Admirals Club® access for both primary and authorized users ✦ Up to $120 per 12 monthly billing cycles for GrubHub purchases (up to $10 per monthly billing cycle) ✦ Up to $120 back on eligible Avis or Budget prepaid car rentals every calendar year ✦ $10 monthly Lyft credit after you take 3 Lyft rides that calendar month ✦ 10K bonus Loyaty Points after earning 50K Loyalty points through all channels and another 10K bonus Loyalty Points after earning 90K Loyalty Points through all channels ✦ 25% savings on eligible in-flight purchases on American Airlines flights ✦ Up to $120 Global Entry or TSA PreCheck application fee credit every 4 years |
Quick Thoughts
The initial bonus on this card is a large sum of miles that could easily get you a one-way ticket in business class on a partner airline to almost any region of the world. That said, I don’t feel like it is wildly compelling given that there is currently a 70K offer on the Barclays Aviator Red card after the first purchase, so paying the $595 annual fee and only ending up with 100K miles doesn’t draw me in on its own.
However, the main attraction here is of course the Admirals Club lounge access. The primary cardholder gets access to Admirals Clubs. Unfortunately, authorized users are no longer free and are actually quite expensive at $175 for the first three and then $175 for each one thereafter. Still, if you frequently use Admirals Club lounges, the cost could still be worth it — but it’s fairly expensive if that’s your only reason for carrying the card.
The card also a few key benefits that may be of interest.
For starters, there is a rental car benefit that sounds broadly useful: get up to $120 in statement credits each calendar year for car rentals booked directly with Avis or Budget . That’s great since it means that you should be able to use any corporate codes that you’re eligible to use so long as you book directly with Avis/Budget. Furthermore, I bolded the words “calendar year” to be clear that you could double up and get this credit twice in your first cardmember year. In other words, you could get the card now and use the credit for a rental car next week and then you could use the benefit again in January, getting up to $240 in statement credits before your next annual fee comes due.
The card also features a monthly $10 credit for GrubHub purchases, which will be useful to some and not at all for others. I don’t get very excited about GrubHub statement credits simply because GrubHub doesn’t exist in my nearby area, but if I lived in a city where I passed by a place where I might want to place a GrubHub pick up order once a month, I’d surely feel differently.
There’s also a Lyft benefit, though it isn’t as generous as it sounds. It gets billed as “up to $120 in Lyft ride credits”, but that’s a $10 Lyft credit after you take 3 qualifying rides in a month. All Mastercard World and World Elitecardholders can get a $5 Lyft credit after 3 Lyft rides in a month, so the AAdvantage Exexutive card is only adding another $5 to that. This benefit seems kind of gimmicky to me in that you have to make sure that you use Lyft frequently in order to get the credit and then you also have to forgo the chance to earn better rewards with a different card.
You also earn 4x on American Airlines purchases, which is a nice bump that Greg has noted might make the card worth using instead of a transferable currency card that would earn 3x points. You can also get 10x for hotels booked at AA.com/hotels, which might make sense when you don’t care about elite credit or benefits, and you’ll get 10x for cars booked at AA.com/Cars, but I imagine that you’ll rarely get a competitive price on a car rental through that portal.
Those chasing elite status will enjoy the bumps in Loyalty Points: with this card, you’ll get 10,000 bonus Loyalty Points after you earn 50,000 Loyalty Points (from all sources combined) in an elite status year and 10,000 after you earn 90,000 Loyalty Points. You could presumably earn all of those Loyalty Points through the shopping portal without ever using the Executive card at all and you’d still qualify for those 10K Loyalty Point bonuses just by virtue of having the card.
Overall, I still suspect that this card will be a good fit for some, though it won’t be a good fit for those who want it primarily for the cheap access to Admirals Club lounges for a group of people. However, but if you value the other parts and pieces, this offer could still be intriguing.

OK…If I understood correctly, I can get another AA Executive Platinum card even if I already have one? If so, can I earn 10K bonus when I hit the 50K in loyality points twice? And again at 90K LP? This seems too good to be true?
What do you guys think is the best premium airline card now? With the United revamp and Jetblue joining the fray, I really wonder which is the best option to be loyal to. Delta has the limited access and no family option but does give the companion cert, at least AA still gives family access. United was probably the best with the old fee and full *A lounge access but with that gone maybe this AA card actually is competitive if you’re traveling with a family, assuming you don’t need to add AUs.
I’m wondering about your valuation of the card. You say here $645 first-year value, but the 100,000 miles alone are worth $1,400 by your calculations. Take away the $595 annual fee and that still leaves $805 before considering any value at all for the other perks. I’m wondering if there’s some misprint, or what am I missing?
Having to deal with Citi knocks a few hundred off the value…
Jokes aside, their first-year values account for the cost of meeting minimum spend. For example, if you might otherwise have spent the $10k on a card that earns 3% back, then meeting the spending requirement on this card “costs” you $300. I don’t know how they calculated the result for this card specifically, but I think that’s where the difference comes from.
Here’s more detail on how FM calculates first-year value:
https://frequentmiler.com/estimated-first-year-value/
Thank you for the replies. This is helpful. I do have an expense for American Airlines tickets of about $10,000 (for a group of people) coming up, so that 4x moves the needle quite a bit.
To add on to the previous comment, the opportunity cost of spend is currently set to 3.1%, which is the RRV of earning 2x with the Amex Blue Business Plus. (See the FM article on 1st year value calculations.)
Spending $10k yields a minimum of 110k AA miles, valued at $1540. The cost of spend is $10k * 3.1% = $310 and the AF is $595, so $1540 – $595 – $310 = $635 (looks like the backend still uses 3% as the opportunity cost of spend). So this is not the best card to earn a SUB in year one and then cancel.
Note that this calculation doesn’t take account the value of the credits, the LP boosts, and the club access. If you fully value the club access, that should be at least $700 on its own, versus buying membership outright.
$10k in three months is a heavy lift for only 100k miles…
Is there a referral code?
FYI if you fly first class you get in the lounge anyway
Only on international and premium transcon routes (like JFK-LAX/SFO).
[…] Miler flags a 100,000 mile bonus offer for the Citi AAdvantage Executive Card, the $595 annual fee card that […]
[…] Miler flags a 100,000 mile bonus offer for the Citi AAdvantage Executive Card, the $595 annual fee card that […]
Looks like AA is doing elevated offers pretty much across the portfolio. I just picked up both the Citi Platinum Personal and Business cards for the 75K offers last month and the Barclays Aviator Red has its elevated bonus too.
It would be great if this elevated offer comes around again in 6 – 8 months (wishful thinking here!). With the new LP bonus scheme picking up this card late in the elite status year would be beneficial for trying to double dip it. Get an extra 10K or 20K LP added towards the end of the current status year, and then earn an extra 10K or 20K again in the 2025 – 2026 status year by reaching the 50K or 90K point thresholds before you reach the card anniversary and downgrade. The card overhaul is new enough I’m not sure what will happen to those bonus LP points when you downgrade but I would assume you get to keep them, or at a minimum keep the earned Platinum or Platinum Pro status if you pass the needed LP threshold. I’m indifferent to their lounge access but AA did a smart job on this card overhaul to try to entice those interested in racking up AA miles and LPs.
I got this card over 4 years ago. Ready to downgrade and get the bonus. How much time do I need to let pass before I re-apply?
You don’t even need to downgrade. Citi doesn’t have rules against getting two of the same card, just rules about how long it needs to be since you last got the bonus before you get the bonus again. Obviously you would probably want to downgrade, but you could probably just go ahead and apply for the card again now and make sure you get approved, then downgrade the existing one.
Keep in mind that the clock isn’t 4 years since you got the card, it’s 4 years since you earned the welcome bonus. So if you got the card 4 years and 2 months ago but it took you 3 months to meet the spending requirement, you may not yet qualify for the bonus.
Does the 4 year waiting period apply if I got a bonus on the Citi AAdvatage Platinum select recently?
No as long as it’s not the same card
It’s 4 years for a new bonus on the same card. So if you have an executive get the miles then you can also apply for platinum select and get another bonus and the fee is waved the first year.
Hi FM team- the page for this card says the offer expires 9/6. Is this accurate or is there a possibility it could end sooner? Trying to delay applying as long as I can! Thanks!
Yes, it’s supposed to go until 9/6…but I would advise applying on 9/5 as we don’t know the exact time on 9/6 it will be going away.
Great, thanks!
Will try to get SUB quickly and cancel to get a refund on the annual fee 😀
To me the Grubhub pickup food for $10 is the only benefit I will be using other than the lounges. Easy to add the card in the Grubhub app and do one order per month. Other than that it like buying miles since the annual fee and SUB spend is so high with most purchases getting 1x.
Is the $120 rental card credit simply per year or is it $10 a month like the other credits? Say I book a rental car once for $200 – will I get the full $120 credit for that single rental?
10.00 a month
No, it’s not metered out monthly. You can get back $120 on a single or multiple purchases throughout the calendar year.
I remember you writing about a maximum 120k bonus pts/365 day limit from AA. I’m not seeing the language here. Does that apply? I got a citi aa biz bonus only a few months ago.
This year I have gotten 70K from Barclay, 65K from Citi Biz, and 75K from Citi personal. They all posted.
Doesn’t matter as long as it’s a different AA type of card