Toni Perkins-Southam
Barclays AAdvantage cardholders are about to see a major issuer shift—and while the transition with this card is automatic, your strategy shouldn’t be.
With Citi taking over the AAdvantage portfolio this spring, you’re probably wondering whether to let the conversion happen, close the account, or make a proactive move before the change takes effect.
Before deciding what to do, here’s a quick refresher on what’s actually happening.
On April 24, 2026, Barclays will transfer its AAdvantage credit card portfolio to Citi. If you currently hold a Barclays AAdvantage Aviator card, your account will automatically move to Citi — no application required and no account closure involved.
This is a portfolio transfer, not a new approval. Your existing credit line and account history will remain intact, and the change should not create a new account on your credit report — though it’s always wise to check your credit after the transition.
Replacement Citi AA cards will begin mailing after April 27, and you can continue using your Barclays-issued card until your new Citi card arrives and is activated.
Automatic payments and account alerts will not transfer and will need to be reestablished with Citi. You’ll also lose access to your Barclays online account once the transition is complete.
For a deeper breakdown of the transition details, see our full coverage here.
With the mechanics out of the way, the bigger question becomes whether you should let the conversion happen — or take action before it does.
While all Barclays-issued AAdvantage cards are moving to Citibank, the exact replacement depends on which card you currently hold.
Here’s how the conversions are mapping:
Once the change is complete, your card’s benefits, annual fee and earning structure will reflect the corresponding Citi version.
For many cardholders, doing nothing is perfectly reasonable.
If you:
One major reason to keep the card open is Loyalty Points. Eligible spending on AAdvantage credit cards earns Loyalty Points that count toward elite status with American Airlines. For travelers chasing Gold, Platinum or higher tiers, card spending can meaningfully accelerate progress—especially in lighter travel years.
Importantly for Chase-focused strategists, the automatic conversion typically should not count as a new account under Chase’s 5/24 rule, since it isn’t a new approval—but you should still monitor how the account reports after the transition.
Keeping the card may not make sense if you rarely use it, aren’t pursuing status or can earn stronger rewards elsewhere. But for engaged AAdvantage flyers, maintaining that Loyalty Points pipeline may be reason enough to stay put.
Some cardholders may prefer to close the account before it moves to Citi.
This could make sense if you’re simplifying your wallet, avoiding another annual fee or simply don’t want a Citi relationship.
But consider a few factors before canceling:
If you’re currently taking advantage of a 0% introductory or promotional APR on your Barclays card, Citi has indicated those terms will be honored through their scheduled expiration after the transfer. But closing the account early could end that benefit.
If your annual fee recently posted, you may still be within the issuer’s refund window. Refund policies vary by bank, and some issuers offer refunds only within a limited period after the fee posts rather than prorating long-term.
Before April 24, your account is still with Barclays, so you’ll need to contact Barclays, not Citi, if you plan to close or downgrade the card before the transfer.
Barclays has historically limited annual fee refunds to a short window after the fee posts. Once the account moves to Citi, refund policies will follow Citi’s rules, which typically allow a full refund within a brief period after the fee posts but generally do not prorate beyond that timeframe.
Before making the final decision, it’s worth calling to confirm:
If the card hasn’t played a meaningful role in your rewards strategy, this transition could be a natural exit point—just make sure the math works in your favor.
For some readers, the proactive move is applying for a new Citi AAdvantage card before April 24.
Citi’s AAdvantage welcome bonuses are typically subject to a 48-month restriction. In plain terms, if you open (or convert into) a Citi AAdvantage card, you generally won’t be eligible for a new-card bonus on that same product again for 48 months—even if you close the card shortly after receiving it.
This is important because once your Barclays Aviator card converts to a Citi AAdvantage product, it may be treated as an existing Citi account for bonus-eligibility purposes, but a new Citi account for 48-month counting purposes. If that happens, the 48-month clock could effectively start over with the conversion.
If earning a Citi AAdvantage welcome bonus is part of your strategy, applying before the transfer may preserve that opportunity.
But there are other trade-offs to consider, too. A new Citi application would create a new account on your credit report—and that would count toward Chase’s 5/24 rule. If you’re planning to apply for a Chase card in the next six to 12 months, using a 5/24 slot on an AAdvantage card may not fit your broader strategy.
This is where you should zoom out and ask yourself: are you optimizing for an AAdvantage bonus, or preserving flexibility across issuers?
Once your account is under Citi, product change options may become available depending on your card type.
That could mean downgrading to reduce an annual fee or shifting to a different AAdvantage tier that better fits your travel habits.
Keep in mind that product changes do not come with welcome bonuses, and not all cards are eligible for conversion paths.
Ask yourself three questions:
If you’re engaged in the AAdvantage ecosystem, preserving flexibility is usually smart. But if this card has been sitting in a sock drawer for years, the issuer change may be your cue to reassess.
Issuer transitions often lead to refreshed benefits, adjusted approval rules or new bonus opportunities. This shift from Barclays to Citi isn’t just administrative—it reshapes the AAdvantage credit card landscape.
You don’t need to rush, but you should decide intentionally.
When banks reshuffle portfolios, the most informed cardholders usually come out ahead.
American Airlines Business-Class Flight Review
Citi Strata Elite℠ Card and American Airlines Transfer Partnership
Japan Airlines Business Class Review


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.
Responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser’s responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.
Advertiser Disclosure: Points Talk Squad has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Points Talk Squad and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers when a customer clicks on a link, when an application is approved, or when an account is opened. This compensation may impact how or where products appear on this site. Points Talk Squad has not reviewed all available credit card offers on this site.
Editorial Note: Opinions expressed here are author's alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, hotel, airline, or other entity. This content has not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of the entities included within the post.
I just opened the Citi AA to get the SUB knowing my Barclays would become Citi AA. Do you know if it is possible to downgrade a Citi AA to the Double Cash? Thought I might let my Barclays switch to Citi and then downgrade it (if that’s possible). Thanks!
I opened the Barclays AA card last May. I’m interested in the Citi AA card because of the low SUB spend and the annual fee being waived for the first year. Do you think I could go ahead and apply for the the Citi AA card in the next week or two, even though my Barclays AA card is slated to become the same Citi AA card in April? Thanks!
Yes, I would do that!