Earn 2 reward points for every Rs. 100 spent online
Earn 1 reward points for every Rs. 100 spent offline
Milestone Spends Benefit: In a year, spend Rs. 75,000 and get 4 free PVR tickets OR cashback of Rs. 750
Avail 1% fuel surcharge waiver on transactions between Rs. 500 and Rs. 3,000. Do note that fuel transactions are not eligible to earn any Reward points
Railway Surcharge Waiver: Save railway surcharge of 1.8% for transactions on www.irctc.co.in and 2.5% for transactions on Indian Railways Booking Counters. Maximum railway surcharge waiver allowed in a calendar year is Rs. 500
Add-on Card will have all the benefits that the cardholder enjoys on its Card
This card is embedded with EMV Chip that adds additional level of security. You can set 6-digit PIN for authentication for higher security of your transactions
Redeem reward points across a variety of categories such as mobile recharge, shopping across 10,000 products, e-vouchers across various brands, movies (BookMyShow Vouchers), travel and many more
On achieving annual spends of Rs. 5 lakhs and 8 lakhs, earn 15,000 bonus Reward Points
Spend Based Reversal of Annual Fee on spends of Rs. 10 Lakhs
Complimentary membership to the Priority Pass Program worth $99
Six complimentary Airport Lounge visits per calendar year, outside India ( max. 2 visits per quarter)
Enjoy obtaining Club Vistara Silver membership as complimentary
Editor's Review
Pros
Earn 2 reward points for every Rs. 100 spent online, and 1 reward points for every Rs. 100 spent offline
In a year, spend Rs. 75,000 and get 4 free PVR tickets OR cashback of Rs. 750
Railway Surcharge Waiver
Cons
No dinning benefits
No Golf Benefits
No Airport Lounge Access
Pros
Get 5X Reward Points on Dining, Departmental stores and Grocery Spends
Earn nearly 50,000 Bonus Reward Points worth Rs. 12,500 per year
On achieving annual spends of Rs. 3 lakhs and 4 lakhs, earn 10,000 bonus Reward Points
Cons
High joining/renewal fees
Although the Credit Card offers savings on rental cars on Hertz & Avis, which is good, but in India, there’s no much scope for it