The Barclays Era Is Ending: What Citi’s AAdvantage Takeover Means for Cardholders

Toni Perkins-Southam

The long-running Barclays chapter of American Airlines credit card story is officially coming to a close. Beginning April 24, 2026, Citi will take over as issuer for Barclays-issued AAdvantage cards—a move that will affect both personal and business cardholders.

If you currently hold a Barclays AAdvantage Aviator card, your account will automatically transfer from Barclays to Citibank, with no application or action required to keep your account open.

Here’s what you need to know.

 

What’s Changing

The biggest shift is on the business side. The AAdvantage Aviator World Elite Business Mastercard will be converted into the Citi / AAdvantage Business World Elite Mastercard.

Personal Aviator cards will also move under Citi’s umbrella, though the card name and core structure are expected to remain largely intact for now.

Citi will begin mailing replacement cards starting April 27, 2026, with delivery expected within six to eight weeks.

Cardholders can continue using their Barclays-issued cards until the new Citi card arrives and is activated.

 

What Cardholders Need To Do Now

While the transition is automatic, there are a few important housekeeping items to do ahead of time:

  • Update your contact information with Barclays to ensure a smooth transfer
  • Download or save statements from your Barclays account before April 23, 2026. Access to historical account data will end once the transfer is complete
  • Prepare to reset AutoPay and alerts. Automatic payments and account alerts will not carry over to Citi and must be reestablished after April 27, 2026

For now, payments should continue going to Barclays. Citi billing statements—with new payment instructions—will begin after the transition date.

 

What Stays the Same (For Now)

Your existing AAdvantage miles and Loyalty Points will still post to your American Airlines AAdvantage account, though Citi notes posting may take eight to ten weeks during the changeover. There’s no indication yet of immediate benefit changes, but longer-term updates could follow as Citi fully absorbs the portfolio.

 

What Comes Next for AAdvantage Credit Cards

This is a major backend shift, but not an overnight shake-up. Still, cardholders should stay alert—issuer changes often pave the way for refreshed perks, reworked benefits, or less-welcome tweaks down the road. 

 

toni

American Airlines airplane flying with a control tower in the background.

Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities. American Express is a Travel Mom Squad advertiser, but we always show the best public offer even when we don’t earn a commission. Terms Apply. 

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  1. Emily says:

    My husband has the Barclay’s card but also already has the Citi Advantage Platinum Select. Any idea what will happen in that case–will he have two AAdvantage Platinum Selects then, and can just downgrade or cancel one (or keep them both?)?

  2. Mia says:

    I have the Barclays card and have been trying to get the Citi card forever, but keep getting denied. Is it worth applying again to try and get the bonus points before they transition?

    • Pam says:

      I would. If you get denied and have had the Barclays card a while, I’d considering cancelling the Barclay. It might open you up to an approval on the Citi card sooner.

  3. Charity says:

    My husband and I each opened the Barclay’s card last MAY so we’ll be under 12 months when this transition takes place. I would like to be able to re-apply to the Citi AA card within the next year or so for the SUB (I used to have one, but downgraded when I started travel hacking ~2 years ago). I’ve heard I wouldn’t be eligible for the Citi SUB for 48 months if my Barclay’s card transfers to Citi. Is that true? Should I cancel before the transition even though it will be <12 months? Should I just apply for the Citi card NOW, before the transition, and then cancel my Barclay/Citi card once it hits 12 months?

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