Travel Cards and Holiday Money UK — Spend Abroad Without Fees

Best Travel Credit Cards UK 2026 — No Foreign Transaction Fees

The best travel credit cards in the UK charge no foreign transaction fees and add Section 75 purchase protection. Here's how they compare in 2026.

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A travel credit card does two things a debit card cannot: charges no foreign transaction fees and adds Section 75 legal protection on purchases over £100. For holiday bookings, flights, and hotels, that protection is genuinely valuable.

Why Section 75 Matters for Travel

Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act makes your credit card provider jointly liable with the retailer for any breach of contract or misrepresentation on purchases of £100–£30,000.

In practice this means: if your airline collapses, your hotel overbooks you and refuses your booking, or a holiday company goes into administration, you can claim the full purchase cost from your credit card provider — not just a chargeback.

Debit cards offer chargeback only (a voluntary scheme, not a legal right). Credit cards offer both chargeback and Section 75.

See Section 75 Protection on Holiday Purchases for the full guide.

Key Travel Credit Cards — 2026 Overview

Card Foreign fee Annual fee Cash abroad Rewards Best for
Halifax Clarity 0% £0 Low fee (0.5%) None Best no-fee all-rounder
Barclaycard Rewards 0% £0 Low fee 0.25% cashback Cashback + travel
Creation Everyday 0% £0 Low fee None Simple no-fee option
British Airways Amex 0% £0–£250/yr 3% cash fee Avios points Frequent BA flyers
Virgin Atlantic Reward 0% £0–£160/yr 3% cash fee Flying Club miles Virgin flyers

Always pay your travel credit card bill in full each month. The benefit of fee-free foreign spending disappears if you pay interest.

Halifax Clarity — The Benchmark No-Fee Card

The Halifax Clarity card is often cited as the baseline comparison for travel credit cards:

  • No foreign transaction fees anywhere in the world
  • Uses the Mastercard exchange rate (close to mid-market)
  • No annual fee
  • Low cash advance fee (0.5% + standard interest on withdrawals)
  • Standard credit card terms; requires fair to good credit

For most travellers, this is a solid, uncomplicated choice — especially combined with a fee-free debit card (Starling/Monzo) for ATM cash.

Rewards Cards — Are They Worth It?

Air miles credit cards typically charge no foreign transaction fee but have annual fees on premium tiers and lower base earn rates. They are worth it if:

  • You fly frequently and can redeem miles for good value
  • You spend enough to offset the annual fee
  • You can pay the balance in full each month without exception

They are not worth it if you might carry a balance — the interest rate makes any rewards irrelevant.

Card Profiles — What You Need to Know

Halifax Clarity — The Default Choice

The Halifax Clarity remains the most-recommended no-fee travel credit card because it is straightforward: no annual fee, no foreign transaction fee, Mastercard exchange rate, and standard credit terms. The cash advance rate is relatively low (0.5% on ATM withdrawals abroad) compared to other credit cards, though interest still accrues immediately on cash.

Eligibility: Requires a fair to good credit history. Halifax will check your credit file. Available to UK residents aged 18+.

Barclaycard Rewards

The Barclaycard Rewards card adds 0.25% cashback on all purchases (UK and overseas) on top of zero foreign transaction fees. The annual fee is £0. This makes it slightly better than Halifax Clarity for consistent everyday spenders who also travel.

The cashback rate is modest, but it compounds over a year of regular spending — adding roughly £25 per year on £10,000 of spending. Combined with fee-free travel, it edges ahead of Clarity for those who want some return on non-travel spending too.

Creation Everyday

The Creation Everyday credit card is a straightforward no-fee, no-foreign-transaction-fee card — similar in structure to Halifax Clarity. Lower profile but functionally equivalent for basic travel use. Worth considering if Clarity or Barclaycard Rewards are unavailable to you.

British Airways American Express

The BA Amex earns Avios points (British Airways’ loyalty currency) on all spending. The free version earns 1 Avios per £1 spent; the premium BA Amex Premium Plus (£300/yr) earns 1.5 Avios per £1 and includes a companion voucher.

The catch on travel credit cards: Amex is not accepted everywhere outside the UK — acceptance is lower in parts of Europe and many countries outside Western Europe. Always carry a Visa or Mastercard as backup.

Avios can be redeemed for flights, upgrades, and hotel bookings through British Airways and partner airlines. Value depends heavily on how you redeem — flight redemptions in Business Class offer significantly better pence-per-Avios than short-haul economy.

Virgin Atlantic Reward

The Virgin Atlantic Reward card earns Flying Club miles. The free card earns 0.75 miles per £1; the fee card (£160/yr) earns 1.5 miles per £1. Miles are most valuable redeemed for premium cabin flights.

Like the BA Amex, it is a Mastercard (better international acceptance than Amex) but the miles value requires careful redemption planning.

Amex Acceptance Abroad — What You Need to Know

American Express has lower merchant acceptance rates than Mastercard or Visa, particularly:

  • Germany — Amex widely refused at smaller retailers
  • Japan — acceptance improving but still lower than Mastercard/Visa
  • Smaller European towns — local restaurants, markets, independent retailers often Visa/Mastercard only

Rule of thumb: If you carry an Amex travel card, always also carry a Mastercard or Visa backup (Halifax Clarity or Barclaycard Rewards). Use Amex where accepted (primarily for the Avios/miles); use Visa/Mastercard everywhere else.

Eligibility — What Determines Approval

Travel credit cards are standard credit products. Approval depends on:

  • Credit score: Good to excellent score typically required. Subprime or thin credit history reduces approval chances.
  • Income: Most cards have no stated minimum income, but affordability checks apply.
  • Existing debt: High utilisation of existing credit limits can reduce approval chances.
  • UK residency: Must be a UK resident.

If you are declined for a premium card, try a lower-tier card (Creation Everyday) or build your credit file before applying. Use eligibility checkers (soft searches) before formal applications.

What Happens if You Carry a Balance?

Travel credit cards make sense only if you pay the balance in full each month. The interest rates on travel credit cards (typically 22–25% APR) wipe out all fee savings and rewards if you carry unpaid balances.

Scenario Monthly spend Annual interest (carrying balance)
£300/month, fully paid £0 £0
£300/month, £300 balance carried £5.50–£6.25/month £66–£75/year

The fee saving from no foreign transaction fees (3% on, say, £500/month overseas) = £15/month = £180/year. A carried balance of £300 costs roughly the same — wiping out the benefit entirely.

If you might carry a balance, use a fee-free debit card instead for overseas spending.

What to Do if Your Section 75 Claim Is Rejected

Credit card issuers sometimes reject Section 75 claims. If this happens:

  1. Ask the issuer to explain in writing why the claim was rejected
  2. Gather additional evidence (correspondence with the merchant, proof of failure)
  3. Escalate to the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) — free, independent, and the issuer must comply with FOS decisions
  4. The FOS resolves Section 75 disputes regularly and frequently finds in the consumer’s favour where the issuer has incorrectly refused a claim

The FOS complaint must typically be lodged within 6 years of the transaction or 3 years of when you knew (or should have known) of the complaint grounds.

For full Section 75 guidance see Section 75 Protection on Holiday Purchases.

The Best Combination for Holiday Spending

Product Use case
Fee-free travel credit card Flights, hotels, tour operators (Section 75 protection)
Fee-free travel debit card (Starling/Chase) Day-to-day spending, ATM withdrawals
Small amount of local cash Markets, taxis, emergencies

See Best Travel Money Cards UK for the debit card comparison.

Sources

  1. FCA — Section 75 and credit card protection
  2. Consumer Credit Act 1974 — Section 75