Which American Express cards charge fees on foreign purchases, which ones don’t, what the Amex Platinum’s annual fee increase means for travelers, and the one hidden fee even no-foreign-fee card holders get hit with — answered in plain language with every current card confirmed.
Foreign transaction fees are one of those charges that quietly drain money from your account every time you travel or shop from international websites — and American Express handles them very differently across its card lineup. Some Amex cards charge 2.7% on every foreign purchase. Others charge nothing. Knowing which category your card falls into — and understanding the one fee that catches even no-foreign-fee cardholders by surprise — can save a significant amount over a year of regular international spending or travel.
-
1
Does the Amex Platinum have a foreign transaction fee? No — $0 foreign transaction fee on all purchases, domestic or international, in-person or online · This applies to every Amex Platinum purchase in any currency, at any merchant worldwide · The $895 annual fee covers this benefit along with lounge access, travel credits, and moreThe Amex Platinum has charged no foreign transaction fee since its earliest iterations — it is a foundational feature of the card, not a recent addition. Whether you use it at a restaurant in Rome, a hotel in Bangkok, a cruise port in the Caribbean, or an online purchase from a UK retailer sitting at home in the U.S., Amex does not add a surcharge. The fee waiver applies to all purchases regardless of currency, including purchases in U.S. dollars that are processed through a bank located outside the United States. The Platinum Card’s annual fee increased from $695 to $895, effective for new cardmembers in September 2025 and for existing cardmembers renewing after January 2, 2026. The fee increase came alongside a meaningful package of new benefits including an expanded hotel credit (now up to $600/year), new quarterly credits, and continued access to 1,550+ airport lounges worldwide — the largest lounge network of any credit card.
-
2
Does the Amex Gold have foreign transaction fees? No — $0 foreign transaction fee · Annual fee: $325 · Best for: travelers who spend heavily on dining and U.S. supermarkets · Earns 4x Membership Rewards points at restaurants worldwide and at U.S. supermarkets · Comes with dining credits and hotel statement creditsThe Amex Gold Card charges no foreign transaction fee on any purchase, making it a strong travel companion for people who eat out regularly abroad. Unlike the Platinum’s travel-first design, the Gold is built around dining and grocery rewards — 4x points at restaurants worldwide is one of the highest dining earning rates available on any credit card. When traveling internationally, those 4x points at restaurants plus the zero foreign fee combine to make it particularly efficient. The Gold’s $325 annual fee is substantially lower than the Platinum’s $895 and is partially offset by up to $120 in annual dining credits and a $100 hotel credit through American Express Travel. For people who travel several times a year but don’t fly frequently enough to justify the Platinum’s airport lounge focus, the Gold is often the better-value choice at a lower price point.
-
3
Does the Amex Blue Cash Everyday or Blue Cash Preferred charge foreign transaction fees? Yes — both charge 2.7% on every foreign transaction · Blue Cash Everyday: no annual fee, 2.7% foreign fee · Blue Cash Preferred: $95 annual fee, 2.7% foreign fee · Do NOT use these cards for international travel or online shopping at foreign merchants · The 2.7% surcharge applies to any purchase processed through a bank outside the U.S. — even from homeThis is where many Amex cardholders get caught off guard. The Blue Cash lineup — Everyday and Preferred — is designed for U.S. domestic spending (cash back at U.S. supermarkets, U.S. gas stations, streaming services) and carries a 2.7% foreign transaction fee on any purchase processed outside the United States. That fee applies whether you are physically abroad or simply buying something online from an international retailer. If you subscribe to a streaming service based in Europe, order from a foreign online marketplace, or pay a freelancer through a foreign platform, the 2.7% fee can appear on your statement without warning. A $500 international purchase on a Blue Cash card costs an additional $13.50 in fees that provide no benefit in return. If you hold both a Blue Cash card and an Amex Gold or Platinum, always use the no-fee card for any international purchase — online or in person.
-
4
Does the Amex Delta card have foreign transaction fees? No — every Delta SkyMiles Amex card charges $0 foreign transaction fees · This includes: Delta Blue ($0 annual fee) · Delta Gold ($150 annual fee) · Delta Platinum ($350 annual fee) · Delta Reserve ($650 annual fee) · All business versions of the above · The foreign fee waiver applies regardless of whether you are flying DeltaAll six Delta SkyMiles American Express cards — consumer and business versions across every tier — waive the foreign transaction fee entirely. The Delta Blue card is particularly notable here: it carries no annual fee at all and still charges nothing extra on foreign purchases. That makes it one of the very few no-annual-fee credit cards in the U.S. market that also waives foreign transaction fees completely. For Delta loyalists, this means you can take any card in the portfolio internationally without worrying about an added surcharge. The Delta cards earn SkyMiles (not the more flexible Membership Rewards points that transfer to multiple partners), so they are most valuable for people who fly Delta regularly and want to accumulate miles toward Delta flights and upgrades.
-
5
How do I avoid a 3% foreign transaction fee when traveling? Use a credit card with no foreign transaction fee — the simplest and most reliable approach · Amex options: Platinum, Gold, Green, any Delta card, any Hilton Honors card, Marriott Bonvoy cards · Always pay in local currency when given the choice at a register or ATM — never choose “pay in U.S. dollars” (this triggers Dynamic Currency Conversion, an additional fee averaging 7%) · Always pay with a credit card abroad, never withdraw cash from ATMs using a credit cardThe 3% foreign transaction fee — actually 2.7% on Amex cards that charge it — is entirely avoidable by using the right card. The key insight most travelers miss is that avoiding the foreign fee is only half the battle. Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) is a separate trap that catches even savvy travelers. When a merchant abroad or an ATM offers to show you the price in U.S. dollars and convert for you, it sounds convenient — but those merchants apply their own exchange rate on top of any card fees, and DCC typically costs 7% or more, sometimes as much as 18%. The correct answer is always: pay in the local currency and let your card’s network apply the standard exchange rate. Amex converts foreign currencies at rates tied to the wholesale exchange rate on the day of the transaction, which is generally fair. One more rule: never use a credit card to withdraw cash at an ATM abroad. Even on no-foreign-fee cards, cash advances at ATMs trigger separate cash advance fees and immediate interest accrual.
-
6
Can I use my Amex Platinum abroad — is Amex accepted everywhere internationally? Amex is accepted in 160+ countries — but acceptance is significantly lower than Visa or Mastercard · Major cities, luxury hotels, large retailers, and airports worldwide: generally excellent · Rural areas, smaller merchants, many parts of Asia (especially Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam): limited acceptance · Always travel with a no-fee Visa or Mastercard backup · Check merchant acceptance at americanexpress.com before traveling to a specific destinationAmerican Express acceptance has expanded significantly over the past decade, but a meaningful gap with Visa and Mastercard remains in many parts of the world. In Western Europe, the Caribbean, Australia, Canada, and major cities globally, the Amex Platinum works reliably. In Japan, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia, rural Asia, smaller towns in Eastern Europe, local markets in Latin America, and many neighborhood restaurants and shops worldwide, Amex is less commonly accepted. This is not a reason to leave the Platinum at home — its travel benefits are too valuable not to bring. But it is a reason to always carry a Visa or Mastercard with no foreign transaction fee alongside it. The combination of an Amex Platinum for maximum benefits where accepted and a no-fee Visa/Mastercard (Chase Sapphire Preferred, Sapphire Reserve, Capital One Venture, or others) for everywhere else covers essentially any travel scenario. The Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95/year) charges no foreign transaction fee and runs on Visa’s global network — the standard recommendation as a travel backup to Amex.
-
7
What is the Amex Platinum annual fee — and is it worth it for international travelers? Annual fee: $895 (increased from $695 in September 2025 for new members; January 2, 2026 for existing renewals) · The card offers $3,500+ in total annual benefit value for people who use everything · Key annual benefits: up to $600 hotel credit · up to $200 airline fee credit · up to $200 Uber Cash · 1,550+ airport lounges including Centurion Lounges · Global Entry/TSA PreCheck credit · Marriott and Hilton hotel elite status · $120 Uber One credit · Additional lifestyle credits (Lululemon, Resy, etc.)The Amex Platinum’s value proposition has shifted over the years — it now functions as a lifestyle card as much as a travel card, with an array of quarterly and annual statement credits that require active management to capture. For frequent international travelers who use airports regularly, the card can be straightforwardly worth $895: the Global Lounge Collection alone (1,550+ lounges, more than any other card on the market) has an estimated value of over $850/year per American Express. Add the hotel credit, airline credit, Global Entry reimbursement, and Uber Cash and the math works for travelers who use those benefits. The honest qualification: the $895 fee requires you to actually use the credits. Someone who travels twice a year and never visits airport lounges will struggle to extract full value. Someone who travels frequently, uses the Uber Cash monthly, takes two hotel stays through Amex Travel each year, and visits airport lounges on most trips will find the card earns its fee many times over — and the no-foreign-transaction-fee benefit is built in on top of all of that.
-
8
Does Chase Sapphire Preferred have foreign transaction fees? No — Chase Sapphire Preferred charges $0 foreign transaction fees · Annual fee: $95 · Runs on Visa’s global network — much wider acceptance than Amex internationally · Earns 3x points on dining, 2x on travel · Best used as a backup card to Amex Platinum when traveling abroad where Amex is not accepted · Chase Sapphire Reserve ($550/year) also charges no foreign transaction fees and adds Priority Pass lounge accessChase Sapphire Preferred is the most commonly recommended no-foreign-fee backup card to carry alongside an Amex Platinum, for a practical reason: it runs on the Visa network, which has broader international acceptance than Amex. At $95/year, it earns Chase Ultimate Rewards points (transferable to many of the same airline and hotel partners as Amex Membership Rewards) and charges nothing extra on foreign purchases. For someone who already carries an Amex Platinum for the lounge access and premium benefits, adding a Chase Sapphire Preferred or Reserve as a Visa-network backup card addresses the Amex acceptance gap without paying for duplicate lounge access or travel insurance. Capital One Venture and Venture X also charge no foreign transaction fees and run on Visa/Mastercard networks — any of these works as a travel backup. The key attribute to look for in a backup card: no foreign transaction fee + Visa or Mastercard network. Those two attributes together cover the situations where the Amex Platinum can’t be used.
Green = $0 foreign transaction fee (safe for international use). Red = 2.7% fee charged on all foreign purchases (use a different card abroad and for international online shopping). Annual fees shown are current as of May 2026 and subject to change — always verify at americanexpress.com.
- $500 international purchase on a Blue Cash card = $13.50 in unnecessary fees
- $2,000 European vacation spending on a Blue Cash card = $54 in foreign fees
- $5,000/year in international purchases or online foreign merchant spending = $135/year in avoidable fees
- One week all-inclusive international trip with $3,000 total card spending on a Blue Cash card = $81 in foreign fees — enough to offset a significant portion of a no-fee card’s annual cost
- Ordering from international websites monthly ($200/month average) on a Blue Cash card = $64.80/year in foreign fees from your living room
The practical takeaway: For anyone who travels internationally even once a year, or shops regularly from international online retailers, moving those purchases to an Amex Platinum or Gold saves real money. The fee waiver is not a minor perk — for regular international spenders, it is one of the most financially meaningful features on the card.
Use the buttons below to find the nearest Amex Centurion Lounge, a currency exchange for backup cash, or locate a bank with no-fee travel cards.
- Step 1 — Check your specific card’s terms at americanexpress.com. If your card is a Blue Cash, EveryDay, Cash Magnet, or any entry-level Amex, it almost certainly charges 2.7% on foreign purchases. Log in to your account, go to Card Benefits, and look for the foreign transaction fee disclosure.
- Step 2 — Assign the right card to international purchases immediately. If you hold any Amex Platinum, Gold, Green, Delta, or Hilton card — use that one for all international purchases, both while traveling and when shopping online from foreign merchants at home. Put the Blue Cash away for international transactions.
- Step 3 — Add a no-fee Visa or Mastercard as a travel backup. Chase Sapphire Preferred, Capital One Venture, or Apple Card are the most commonly recommended options. None charge foreign transaction fees. All run on Visa or Mastercard, covering the locations where Amex is not accepted.
- Step 4 — Always choose local currency at foreign registers and ATMs. Every time you are asked to pay in USD or local currency abroad — choose local currency. Dynamic Currency Conversion adds 5–18% and cannot be reversed after the transaction.
- Step 5 — Never use a credit card for ATM cash withdrawals abroad. Even on no-fee cards, cash advances at ATMs trigger cash advance fees and immediate interest with no grace period. Use a debit card from a bank with no foreign ATM fees (Charles Schwab, Fidelity, etc.) for cash withdrawals while traveling.
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Credit card terms, annual fees, benefits, and foreign transaction fee policies are subject to change at any time. Always verify current terms directly at americanexpress.com or by calling the number on the back of your card before making decisions based on this information. American Express, Amex Platinum, Amex Gold, Delta SkyMiles, Hilton Honors, Marriott Bonvoy, Blue Cash Everyday, Blue Cash Preferred, and related names are trademarks of American Express. Chase Sapphire and Apple Card are trademarks of their respective owners. This guide is not affiliated with or sponsored by American Express or any card issuer.