Citi Brought Back the Best AAdvantage Business Card Offer — 75,000 Miles

Don’t wait on the biggest offer for Citibank’s American Airlines small business card, Citi® / AAdvantage BusinessTM World Elite Mastercard®. It’s definitely limited-time.

Right now you can earn 75,000 American Airlines AAdvantage bonus miles after spending $5,000 in purchases within the first 5 months of account opening. The card’s $99 annual fee is waived for the first 12 months which is awesome with the return of the card’s best-ever offer. [See rates and fees]

It comes with first checked bag on domestic American Airlines itineraries for the primary cardholder and preferred boarding on American Airlines flights as well.

Here’s how the card works with AAdvantage business.

  • Miles earned on the card (including the initial bonus) accrue into your AAdvantage Business account. If you don’t already have one, they open one for you, and you access it with your AAdvantage account number and password.

  • Those miles can be transferred from your business account into your personal AAdvantage account, or into the AAdvantage accounts of any travelers you register/attach to your AAdvantage Business account.

  • Normally companies need to meet $5,000 spend and 5 traveler minimums to transfer points out of an AAdvantage Business account, but cardholders have these minimums waived.

  • While any authorized employee cards accrue miles into the AAdvantage Business account, Loyalty Points towards status from card spend accrue to each traveler’s own AAdvantage account.

  • When travelers flag their solo trips for work when booking direct with American they also earn an extra Loyalty Point per dollar spent on tickets – as do you – so Citi® / AAdvantage BusinessTM World Elite Mastercard® cardmembers earn AAdvantage status faster.

  • Earning in the AAdvantage Business program is three times as fast for those with this card provided that tickets are purchased with the card: base earn in AAdvantage Business is one mile per dollar spent on travel, while cardholders earn an additional two miles per dollar spent on travel credited to that account.

Getting the card historically hasn’t added to 5/24 (for getting approved for Chase cards), according to most reports I’ve seen. You can have this card even if you have a Citi or Barclays AAdvantage consumer card, and even if you already have a Barclays AAdvantage small business card. And anecdotally I’ve found the card easy to get, with readers (and my wife) reporting great success.

You can generally only receive an initial bonus on a Citi card every 48 months. I got this card again and currently hold it because I wanted to use an AAdvantage Business account, and because I realized it had been a little over four years since I’d had it previously.

Note of course that this limitation applies to the same specific card, not to card families. I also hold a Citi Executive card, and that didn’t get in the way of being approved or earning a bonus. I also have a Barclays Aviator Silver card – you can have a Barclays AAdvantage card and Citi AAdvantage card at the same time.

Earn this bonus and you’ll have a minimum of 80,000 miles. 70,000 is what it costs from the US to the Mideast, India or Maldives on Qatar in business. You can even fly Qatar’s Qsuites, which may be the best business class in the world. Flying business class from the US to Southeast Asia also costs 70,000 miles – and you can fly carriers including Japan Airlines and Cathay Pacific.

AAdvantage miles are great if you want to redeem for international first class because they have some of the best airlines in the world as their partners, airlines that offer an international first class product, and that make first class available to partners on points. I’ve been fortunate to regularly redeem my miles for Qantas first class, Cathay Pacific first class, and Etihad first class (tougher to get than it used to be!) — not to mention that first class is available on Japan Airlines, and British Airways.

Miles you earn from this offer aren’t the end of the story. Citibank has a personal AAdvantage card too and American also partners with Barclays for its co-branded credit cards. As I’ve frequently heard flight attendants remind customers on flights, you can get AAdvantage cards from both Citi and Barclays. That’s four cards you can get earning the same mileage currency. And readers have reported to me great success in getting this card even when other issuers haven’t wanted to approve small businesses.

Citi® / AAdvantage BusinessTM World Elite Mastercard®

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. Applied last week, instant approval. I do have a good personal relationship with Citi, but this was my first biz card with them. So I’ve now banked points from the AA Platinum 100k, the 90k Globe card and soon this 75k offer.

    Just a sole proprietor here.
    12k annual business.
    They pulled Equifax which is 806 and gave a limit of 16,500.

    IG: https://www.instagram.com/pointswhorelife

  2. You briefly mentioned this in your article, but I just want to be sure.

    I hold this card for business A under an EIN. Can I open this for business B under it’s EIN and earn the bonus?

  3. The SUB is tied to your personal AA number, not EIN. I have 3 of these cards for 3 separate businesses (i.e. 3 different EIN’s). I earned the bonus on the 1st and 3rd, because the applications have to be 48-months apart to receive an additional SUB.

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