Airline Co-Brand Credit Cards in India: Which Ones Are Worth It?
Vistara, Air India, Singapore Airlines, Emirates, SpiceJet — the co-brand landscape and the cards that earn their keep.
Mira Nair
Travel-cards reporter covering airlines, hotels, IRCTC, and the lounges scene at Indian airports.
The co-brand landscape
Indian airline co-brand credit cards have shrunk since the Air India + Vistara merger. The remaining cards:
- Vistara co-brand cards (now Air India): HDFC Bank Club Vistara Credit Card, IDFC First Club Vistara Credit Card.
- SpiceJet co-brand cards: Closed to new applicants (legacy cardholders only).
- Air India co-brand cards: New cards in development (Tata Group).
- Singapore Airlines co-brand: Limited availability.
- Emirates co-brand: Standard Chartered Emirates card.
- British Airways co-brand: Limited availability.
- American Airlines / Delta: None.
HDFC Bank Club Vistara Credit Card
The most popular Air India/Vistara co-brand before the merger.
- Annual fee: ₹3,000 (waived at ₹3L spend).
- Welcome benefit: 5,000 Club Vistara points (now Maharaja Club points) on first spend of ₹1,50,000 in 90 days.
- Milestone: 5,000 points at ₹1,50,000 spend; 5,000 points at ₹3,00,000 spend.
- Rewards: 4 CV points per ₹200 on retail (2%); 6 CV points per ₹200 on Vistara/Air India bookings (3%).
- Lounge access: 4 domestic + 4 international per year.
The card's rewards are competitive with general HDFC cards, but the welcome bonus and milestone are the differentiators. For Vistara/Air India loyalists, the card is worth the fee.
IDFC First Club Vistara Credit Card
A lower-tier co-brand.
- Annual fee: ₹1,500 (waived at ₹1.5L spend).
- Welcome benefit: 1,000 CV points on first spend of ₹50,000 in 90 days.
- Rewards: 2 CV points per ₹200 on retail (1%); 4 CV points per ₹200 on Vistara/Air India (2%).
- Lounge access: 2 domestic + 2 international per year.
The lower fee makes this a reasonable entry-level co-brand. The rewards are modest.
Standard Chartered Emirates Card
The leading foreign-airline co-brand in India.
- Annual fee: ₹3,000 (waived at ₹3L spend).
- Welcome benefit: 5,000 Skywards miles on first spend of ₹1,50,000 in 90 days.
- Rewards: 3 Skywards miles per ₹200 on retail (1.5%); 5 Skywards miles per ₹200 on Emirates flights (2.5%).
- Forex markup: 2%.
For Emirates flyers, the card is competitive. For non-Emirates travellers, the rewards are below HDFC or Axis alternatives.
The transfer-partner alternative
For most Indian travellers, the transfer-partner route (HDFC → Air India, Amex MR → multiple airlines) delivers more flexibility and value than co-brand cards:
- HDFC Diners Club Black: 1 HDFC point = 1 Air India point (the merger-friendly transfer ratio).
- Amex Platinum Travel: 1 MR = 1 Air India point, plus transfers to Singapore, BA, Marriott.
- Axis Atlas: 1 EDGE Mile = 1 Air India point, plus Singapore, BA, Etihad.
For most travellers, the transfer-partner route beats the co-brand because:
- Transfer-partner points can be redeemed at multiple partners, not just one.
- Transfer-partner points don't expire as quickly (HDFC points have no expiry; Air India points expire after 36 months).
- The earn rate on general spend is higher on the parent card.
When co-brand makes sense
The co-brand card makes sense when:
- You fly the airline 10+ round-trips/year. The co-brand-specific earn rate beats the transfer-partner earn rate.
- You value co-brand-specific benefits: free tickets, priority check-in, extra baggage allowance.
- You're new to the airline's loyalty programme: the co-brand card comes with elite-like benefits.
For occasional flyers, the transfer-partner route is more flexible.
The Vistara-Air India impact on co-brand cards
The Vistara-Air India merger has created uncertainty around co-brand cards. The points are now Maharaja Club points (formerly Club Vistara points). The redemption chart and the elite-status rules have evolved. Some co-brand-specific benefits have been changed or removed.
For new applicants, the co-brand cards are still available but the long-term value depends on Tata Group's loyalty programme strategy. Watch for changes in 2026–2027.
The hidden fees
Co-brand cards often have additional fees that aren't on the headline:
- Forex markup: 2%–3.5% on international transactions.
- Renewal fee: same as joining fee; waived at the milestone threshold.
- Lost card replacement: ₹200–₹500.
- Reward redemption processing fee: 0%–2% of the redeemed value.
Read the MITC before applying.
The decision
Pick a co-brand card if:
- You fly the airline 10+ round-trips/year.
- You value co-brand-specific benefits (priority boarding, free tickets, elite status).
- You can hit the welcome bonus and milestones.
Pick a transfer-partner card if:
- You fly the airline occasionally.
- You want flexibility to redeem across multiple airlines.
- You don't want a card whose value depends on one airline's programme.
For most Indian travellers, the right answer is:
- HDFC Diners Club Black or Infinia: transfer to Air India at 1:1, no forex markup.
- Amex Platinum Travel: transfer to Air India + Singapore + Marriott, biggest welcome bonus.
- Axis Atlas: transfer to Air India + Singapore, lower annual fee.
The co-brand cards are niche. The transfer-partner cards are flexible.
The bottom line
Co-brand credit cards in India have lost ground to transfer-partner cards. For most Indian travellers, HDFC, Amex, or Axis premium cards with transfer partners deliver more value and flexibility than co-brand cards. The exception: heavy flyers of one specific airline who can hit welcome bonuses and milestones worth more than the transfer-partner route. For 90% of Indian travellers, the right answer is a transfer-partner card, not a co-brand.