The Amex Platinum in the Netherlands — what you're actually getting
The American Express Platinum Card costs €65 per month, billed monthly with no long-term contract. New
cardholders who apply via referral currently receive 100,000 Membership Rewards points — worth roughly
€1,100, or a return business class flight to North America or several economy trips depending on how you
redeem.
US Platinum — spend requirement
$12,000
in 6 months to unlock the bonus
averaging $2,000/month
NL Platinum — spend requirement
€1
per month
one purchase. any purchase. that's it.
For an expat living in the Netherlands who travels internationally with any regularity, this is one of
the more straightforward first-year value propositions available.
Not convinced yet? Read the full breakdown — including who this
card isn't for →
Who this is actually for
Expats living in the Netherlands who are used to credit cards or points systems and want a simple, high-value setup.
People who travel a few times per year and can realistically use lounge access, Privium, or insurance benefits.
Anyone who was considering Amex but assumed the Dutch version wasn’t worth it compared to the US.
Why the Netherlands version is different from the US
Most comparisons online focus on the US version of the card — which is built around high spending and a long list of monthly credits.
The Dutch version works differently. The bonus is easier to unlock, and the value is more direct: lounge access, Privium, dining, and insurance — without needing to optimise dozens of credits.
That’s why, for the right person, the first-year value in the Netherlands can actually be simpler and more predictable than in the US.
Who qualifies
No Amex in the past 12 months. American Express checks this and has tightened
enforcement recently. If you've cancelled an Amex card recently, you'll need to wait out the 12-month
window.
Bonus paid in two instalments. 50,000 points at month 7, the remaining 50,000 at month
13 — provided you make at least one purchase of €1 per month throughout.
Total fees over 13 months: €845. Bonus value: approximately €1,100. Even if you ignore every benefit, the first year already puts you ahead — by around €255 in pure net value.
Why expats in the Netherlands should pay particular attention
The US credits — Uber Cash, airline fee credit, Resy restaurants credit — are largely useless if you don't live
in the US. The NL card is built around where you actually are.
€320 standalone value
Privium Plus membership
Fast-track security at Schiphol and Eindhoven on every departure. Passport
control fast-track on non-Schengen flights. Business class check-in included.
US removed guest access in 2023
Lounge access + 1 guest
1,550+ lounges globally. One guest included in Centurion and Priority Pass
lounges. Centurion Lounge expected at Schiphol in 2026.
≈ €300/year value
Dining for 2
Three two-course dinners per year for you and a guest at selected
restaurants in the Netherlands and Belgium. Covered by Amex.
€120/yr vs $195/yr on US card
Add a partner — €10/month
Authorised cardholder gets their own Privium Partner membership and lounge
access. Two Privium memberships in one card setup.
D
A quick note on who wrote this
I’m an expat living in the Netherlands, and I almost ignored this card completely. For years I went back and forth on the Amex Platinum — always
drawn to the US version, but those credits stop making sense the moment you leave the country. The NL
card I'd dismissed entirely: high fee, benefits that looked thin on paper. Then I found a referral link
and actually read the fine print. The spending requirement is €1 per month. The US card requires $12,000
in six months. That single fact changed everything. Add Privium, the dinners, hotel status, and solid
travel insurance — and the NL card stopped looking like a lesser version of something better. Year one
is a no-brainer. I'll be honest about year two when I get there. I have no relationship with Amex beyond
being a cardholder. If you use my link, I get points. You get 100,000. The card costs the same either
way. — David
Year one and beyond
Year one: The 100,000 point bonus is worth more than the total fees across 13 months
— with €255 to spare. A clear win even before touching a single benefit.
Year two: A genuine decision. If you fly internationally a few times a year and use
Privium, lounge access, and the dining benefit regularly, the card justifies its ongoing cost. If
you got it primarily for the bonus, cancelling after month 13 carries no penalty under the Dutch
credit system — no credit score impact, no consequences.
Worth knowing: Calling Amex after year one sometimes results in a retention offer of
25,000–50,000 points to stay. I haven't done this personally yet but will update this page when I
do.
Common questions
Why is the referral bonus higher than the website offer?
American Express regularly runs referral programs where existing cardholders can share elevated welcome bonuses. The card, approval process, and benefits are exactly the same — only the signup route changes.
Do I need to spend a lot to get the bonus?
No — unlike the US version, the Dutch card only requires one purchase of €1 per month to unlock the full bonus.
Can I cancel the card?
Yes — there are no long-term contracts. You can cancel at any time. However, the full 100,000-point bonus is only awarded if you keep the card active through month 13 and meet the monthly €1 spending requirement.
How to apply
1
Use a referral link
The only way to access the 100,000 point welcome bonus. Applying directly through the Amex
website gets you little to no bonus at all.
2
Complete the application
Valid ID, Dutch residential address, gross annual income, and bank login for iDIN identity
verification. Takes about ten minutes.
3
Make one purchase of €1 per month
50,000 points arrive at month 7. The remaining 50,000 at month 13.
The 100,000 point bonus is only available via referral — applying directly usually results in a significantly lower offer.
→ Get the 100,000 point offer