How Australian business owners can turn everyday expenses into flights and travel perks
The conversation around business credit cards in Australia has shifted considerably over the past few years. What was once a fairly straightforward question — does this card have a low interest rate? — has become a more nuanced assessment of annual fees, earn rates, sign-on bonuses, ATO payment eligibility, and the real-world value of the points programs attached to different cards.
For small and medium business owners who are paying their card balance in full each month, the right card choice can generate returns that are genuinely worth tracking. For those who are not, the maths works firmly against them. That distinction matters more with business cards than personal ones, because the spend volumes involved are often much higher.
The core mechanics
Most Australian business credit cards earn points at a rate expressed as points per dollar of eligible spend. The earn rate varies significantly depending on the card, the program it feeds, and the type of transaction. Everyday business purchases typically earn at the standard rate. Spend with government bodies, including the ATO, usually earns at a reduced rate — or not at all, depending on the card.
Understanding which spend categories earn what is important when calculating whether a card’s annual fee actually pays for itself. A card charging $450 per year needs to deliver more than $450 in points value before it earns its keep. At Point Hacks’ current Australian credit card rewards valuations — which put Qantas Frequent Flyer points at 1.6 cents each — a business spending $8,000 per month on a card earning 1.25 points per dollar would accumulate roughly 120,000 points in a year, worth around $1,920 in flight redemptions. Against a $450 annual fee, that represents a meaningful net return.
The calculation looks different if most of that spend is on government payments or categories that earn at a reduced rate. This is why the category breakdown matters as much as the headline earn rate when comparing cards.
Business credit cards and the ATO
One of the more nuanced areas of business card management in Australia is ATO payments. Many business owners make significant credit card payments to the ATO throughout the year — GST, PAYG, and income tax — and whether those payments earn points depends entirely on the card.
Some cards exclude ATO transactions entirely. Others earn at a reduced rate, typically around 0.5 points per dollar. A smaller number of premium cards continue to offer full earn rates on government payments, which makes a material difference for businesses with large quarterly BAS obligations.
The card most frequently cited for ATO earn is the American Express Business Platinum, which earns Membership Rewards points on government spending. The American Express Qantas Business Rewards card earns 0.5 Qantas Points per dollar on ATO payments — lower than the everyday rate but still meaningful on large tax bills.
Detailed analysis of which Australian business cards currently earn on ATO payments — and at what rate — is tracked in real time by Point Hacks, including their best business credit cards for frequent flyers guide which covers earn rates, annual fees, and whether ATO and government spend is included.
Worth noting separately: the card payment fee charged by the ATO when paying by credit card is generally deductible as a business expense. The ATO’s own guidance on business operating expense deductions confirms that a credit card payment fee associated with paying a business tax liability is deductible. That partially offsets the cost of using a card to pay tax rather than via bank transfer.
Choosing between programs
The two main loyalty programs attached to Australian business credit cards are Qantas Frequent Flyer and Velocity Frequent Flyer, alongside the Amex Membership Rewards program which transfers to multiple partners.
Qantas suits business owners who primarily fly Qantas domestically and internationally. The program’s most valuable redemptions are typically business class flights on Qantas or its oneworld partners, particularly for routes to Europe and North America where cash fares in business class run well above $5,000.
Velocity suits those who prefer Virgin Australia domestically and want flexibility through Virgin Atlantic and Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer transfer options internationally. Velocity points currently hold slightly higher valuations than Qantas points on a like-for-like basis according to specialist analysis, partly because of redemption opportunities via Singapore Airlines and other transfer partners.
Membership Rewards through American Express offers the most flexibility — points transfer to both Qantas and Velocity at a 2:1 ratio, as well as to Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer, Cathay Pacific, and several hotel programs. For business owners who haven’t committed to a single airline, an Amex business card can make sense as a first move that preserves optionality.
The interest-free period as a cash flow tool
Beyond points, business credit cards serve a secondary function that is often underused: the interest-free period. Premium Australian business cards typically offer 44 to 55 days interest free on purchases. For a business with predictable cash flow cycles, this can function as a short-term working capital facility at zero cost.
A business that puts $30,000 of monthly expenses on a card with a 44-day interest-free period is effectively extending its payment terms by six weeks at no cost — while earning points on the full amount. The catch is that this only works if the balance is cleared in full each month. Carrying any balance on a rewards card typically means paying interest at 20% or more, which eliminates any points value quickly.
The ATO’s guidance on claiming business expenses is useful context here — card fees and eligible transaction costs paid in the course of business are generally deductible, which further improves the net economics of using a rewards card for business purposes.
Sign-on bonuses and how to evaluate them
The sign-on bonus is often the most immediately attractive feature of a business credit card offer, and for good reason — for high spenders, a bonus of 150,000 to 350,000 points can represent more than a year’s worth of ongoing earn.
Evaluating a sign-on bonus requires knowing what it is actually worth in redemption terms. Points redeemed for domestic economy flights typically return around 0.8 to 1.0 cents each. Points redeemed for international business class flights can return 2 to 3 cents per point or more, because award seats are priced in points at rates that don’t track cash fares proportionately.
A 200,000-point sign-on bonus redeemed for economy travel might be worth $1,600. The same 200,000 points used for a business class leg from Sydney to Tokyo can be worth $4,000 or more in displaced cash fare. The redemption choice makes the sign-on bonus two to three times more valuable in practice than it appears at first.
The minimum spend requirement attached to most bonuses — typically $3,000 to $6,000 within the first three months — is usually achievable for an SME using the card for business expenses. Running normal operating costs through the card during the qualification period, rather than changing spending behaviour, is the sensible approach.
When the maths works and when it doesn’t
Business credit card rewards deliver genuine value for owners who spend consistently, pay their balance on time and in full, and take the time to redeem points for high-value options rather than gift cards or merchandise.
The model breaks down for businesses that carry a balance, use the card for occasional purchases, or let points accumulate without a clear redemption plan. Points that expire unused have a value of zero, and most Australian programs apply earn caps or expiry policies that require at least one earn transaction per 18 months to keep a balance active.
The honest assessment is that a rewards credit card is worth pursuing for any Australian SME with monthly card spend above around $3,000 to $4,000, a reliable cash flow that supports clearing the balance monthly, and at least one travel goal that can be served by the attached program. Below that threshold, the annual fee is harder to justify and the simpler option is a low-fee or no-fee card.
For those who do fit the profile, the points accumulated over two to three years of business spending can fund meaningful travel that would otherwise represent a significant out-of-pocket cost — making the card a genuine component of the business’s overall financial picture rather than a peripheral perk.

