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Six credit cards that give free access to airport lounges

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By SingSaver.com.sg

Find out which travel credit cards in Singapore give free access to Priority Pass and DragonPass airport lounges around the world.

First published on 13 April 2016.

Credit card terms and conditions updated as of 3 November 2016. Many Singaporeans think that VIP airport lounge access is a privilege reserved for business travelers and the very rich. But with the right travel credit card, you can get free access to airport lounges all over the world, even if you’re not pulling a six-figure salary.

We’ve compared six different air miles cards in Singapore that offer complimentary airport lounge access worldwide.

Read on if you’d like to wait for your flight in a quiet, comfortable space, without paying expensive membership fees.

Credit Card Airport Lounge Access How to Redeem
Citi PremierMiles Visa Card Two complimentary access a year with Priority Pass Apply for the Priority Pass Membership (complimentary for cardholders) and flash Priority Pass card
ANZ Travel Visa Signature Credit Card Two complimentary access to over 800 DragonPass lounges around the world a year Charge at least S$10,000 to your ANZ Travel Card in each calendar quarter.
DBS Altitude Visa Credit Card Two complimentary access a year with Priority Pass Apply for the Priority Pass Membership (complimentary for cardholders) and flash Priority Pass card
American Express Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer Ascend Credit Card Four complimentary vouchers each year to participating SATS Premier Lounges in Singapore and Plaza Premium Lounges worldwide

KrisFlyer Elite Gold Members get KrisFlyer Gold Lounge access at Changi Airport and access to Star Alliance Gold Lounges worldwide

Complimentary access to SATS and Plaza Premium Lounges is granted upon Card approval and fully paid renewal of Card membership thereafter

Spend above S$15,000 on your Card at singaporeair.com within the first 12 months upon Card approval to be automatically upgraded to the KrisFlyer Elite Gold Membership tier

Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Credit Card Six complimentary access a year with Priority Pass Apply for the Priority Pass Membership (complimentary for cardholders) and flash Priority Pass card
HSBC Visa Infinite Credit Card Unlimited access to over 700 Priority Pass lounges around the world Flash your Priority Pass Card (membership is automatically granted upon card approval)

 

1. Citi PremierMiles Visa Card

Cardholders get a complimentary Priority Pass membership that lets you access Priority Pass airport lounges twice a year, at any airport in the world.

You can use the two complimentary visits on separate occasions or with a guest. Any additional visits will cost US$27 and will be charged to your Citi PremierMiles Visa Card.

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2.ANZ Travel Visa Signature Credit Card

With VIP lounges at over 800 airports in the world, DragonPass provides a quiet haven for busy travelers who’d like to relax or be productive. If you have an ANZ Travel Visa Signature Card, you get two complimentary visits to DragonPass lounges around the world when you spend at least S$10,000 on your card per quarter.

anz-visa-travel-card

3.DBS Altitude Visa Credit Card

The DBS Altitude Visa Card has similar benefits to the Citi PremierMiles Card, so it comes as no surprise that the two of them have the same airport lounge access benefits at Priority Pass. To make sure you get your Priority Pass card well before your trip, apply for your membership the moment you receive your credit card in the mail.

dbsaltitudevisasignaturecard

4.American Express Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer Ascend Credit Card

The Ascend is the American Express Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer Card’s sophisticated older sister. Besides getting a higher earn rate for KrisFlyer miles, cardmembers get 4 complimentary vouchers to participating SATS Premier Lounges in Singapore and Plaza Premium Lounges worldwide.

Once you’ve used your airport lounge vouchers, you can still wait at selected Plaza Premium lounges (including the one at Changi Airport) for 30% off the walk-in rate. If you use your Card to spend more than S$15,000 at singaporeair.com within the first 12 months upon Card approval, you get automatically upgraded to the KrisFlyer Elite Gold Membership tier.

This unlocks KrisFlyer Gold Lounge access at Changi Airport and access to Star Alliance Gold Lounges worldwide, which are one among the most comfortable places you can wait for your flight in.

american-express-krisflyer-ascend-card

5.Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Credit Card

The Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Credit Card is one of the most exclusive air miles credit cards in Singapore. Like the DBS Altitude Cards and the Citi PremierMiles Visa Card, you get a complimentary Priority Pass membership.

But because this is a Visa Infinite Card, members get six (instead of two) free visits to airport lounges a year. These six visits are applicable to you and your guests, but any subsequent visits after the sixth will cost S$38 per person.

standardcharteredvisainfinitecreditcard

6.HSBC Visa Infinite Card

It’s easy to see why the HSBC Visa Infinite Card is the crème de la crème of travel credit cards. Besides perks like expedited immigration clearance and airport limousine transfers, cardmembers (and supplementary cardmembers) instantly get a Prestige Priority Pass Membership Card two weeks after their credit card approval.

This unlocks unlimited access to Priority Pass lounges worldwide, while guest charges cost only S$35 per guest per visit. Membership is by invitation only. Premier and Private Banking customers may call their HSBC Relationship Manager to inquire.

Singsaver.com.sg, Singapore’s go-to personal finance comparison platform, guides consumers on the best money habits with its credit card comparison tool and allows real-time personal loans product comparison.

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AFP

Top rice supplier India bans some exports

India, the world’s largest rice exporter, bans non-basmati white rice exports to ensure domestic availability and tackle rising prices amid global food crises, potentially impacting rice-dependent nations.

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MUMBAI, INDIA —  The world’s biggest rice exporter India has banned some overseas sales of the grain “with immediate effect”, the government said, in a move that could drive international prices even higher.

Rice is a major world food staple and prices on international markets have soared to decade highs as the world grappled with the Covid pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the impact of the El Nino weather phenomenon on production levels.

India would ban exports of non-basmati white rice — which accounts for around a quarter of its total — the consumer affairs and food ministry said.

The move would “ensure adequate availability” and “allay the rise in prices in the domestic market”, it said in a statement late Thursday.

India accounts for more than 40 percent of all global rice shipments, so the decision could “risk exacerbating food insecurity in countries highly dependent on rice imports”, data analytics firm Gro Intelligence said in a note.

Countries expected to be hit by the ban include African nations, Turkey, Syria, and Pakistan — all of them already struggling with high food-price inflation — the firm added.

Global demand saw Indian exports of non-basmati white rice jump 35 percent year-on-year in the second quarter, the ministry said.

The increase came even after the government banned broken rice shipments and imposed a 20 percent export tax on white rice in September.

India exported 10.3 million tonnes of non-basmati white rice last year and Rabobank senior analyst Oscar Tjakra said alternative suppliers did not have spare capacity to fill the gap.

“Typically the major exporters are Thailand, Vietnam, and to some extent Pakistan and the US,” he told AFP. “They won’t have enough supply of rice to replace these.”

Moscow’s cancellation of the Black Sea grain deal that protected Ukrainian exports has already led to wheat prices creeping up, he pointed out.

“Obviously this will add to inflation around the world because rice can be used as a substitute for wheat.”

Rice prices in India rose 14-15 per cent in the year to March and the government “clearly viewed these as red lines from a domestic food security and inflation point of view”, rating agency Crisil’s research director Pushan Sharma said in a note.

India had already curbed exports of wheat and sugar last year to rein in prices.

— AFP

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AFP

Chinese mortgage strikers despair as unfinished homes stay stalled

Chinese homebuyers are resorting to mortgage boycotts and protests against developers due to ongoing housing crisis, with little legal recourse and government sensitivity to the issue.

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ZHENGZHOU, CHINA — Gao Zhuang says he has refused to pay his mortgage for months, a desperate protest against the Chinese property developer he blames for endless delays on the unfinished apartment he bought years ago for his son.

He is one of many victims of a long-running housing crisis still wreaking misery on the lives of homebuyers, many of whom have little legal recourse on what has become an ultra-sensitive subject for the government.

The 49-year-old labourer from central Henan bought an apartment in the provincial capital Zhengzhou for 1.2 million yuan (US$170,000) in 2019, and said he was told it would be completed in two years.

He staked much of his savings on the flat, hoping it would improve his son’s marriage prospects and allow his family to start leaving their poorer rural hometown behind.

But the developer announced delay after delay, and construction work ground to a virtual halt late last year.

“The main impact has been on my son,” said Gao, who requested his name be changed to avoid repercussions.

“How can he get married without his own place?”

Gao’s case is not uncommon.

A wave of mortgage boycotts spread nationwide last summer, as cash-strapped developers struggled to raise enough to complete homes they had already sold in advance — a common practice in China.

Endemic issues in the real estate sector had been brought to a head in 2020, when the government cracked down on excessive borrowing and rampant speculation.

Cut off from the easy money that had fuelled the boom of the last few decades, many companies began floundering under accumulated debts.

A slowing economy was hammered further by pandemic-era health curbs, adding to low consumer confidence and a slump in housing demand.

Beijing recently introduced a raft of measures intended to remedy the disarray in the sector.

Although some properties have since been completed, many buyers like Gao are still waiting — while other issues have surfaced, from slapdash building work to disputes over compensation and pressure from local officials.

‘I blame the government’

The property crisis grabbed headlines for its scale, notably entangling industry giant Evergrande, which flirted with bankruptcy before announcing a massive restructuring deal.

The smaller regional firm building Gao’s complex, Henan Jin’en Real Estate, is not publicly listed, making its financial situation hard to discern.

It did not reply to AFP’s requests for comment.

Disgruntled homeowners say the compound’s estimated 100 undelivered homes and shoddy finishes are evidence the company is struggling.

AFP journalists visiting in June observed crumbling exterior masonry, holes in interior walls, loose wiring and unsecured fire doors.

A handful of workers dug trenches and stacked cinder blocks on the site’s periphery, while the sound of drilling emanated from several homes.

Some buyers said the developer had hired a skeleton staff of labourers to justify a rumoured government bailout.

One owner said local officials seemed powerless to ensure the project’s completion, adding that “ordinary people have suffered the worst”.

“I don’t blame the developer — I blame the government,” the middle-aged man told AFP, gazing around the concrete shell of an apartment.

“Some people around here still believe in our government, but I think they’re the least worthy of our faith.”

‘Nothing I can do’

Gao told AFP he stopped paying his 5,000-yuan (US$700) monthly mortgage in January, joining a boycott with others from the complex.

He said his attempts to claim compensation for the delays from the developer had been unsuccessful.

“Their attitude has been, ‘If you don’t like it, sue us,'” Gao said.

“But they know that in China, people like us are rarely able to afford a lawsuit.”

For others, initial fury has given way to helplessness.

“There’s no point getting angry because there’s nothing I can do,” said 24-year-old homebuyer Wang, using a pseudonym.

The online store operator purchased a home in the wealthy eastern city of Ningbo for 690,000 yuan in 2021, but work stopped later that year.

When AFP visited the site, empty towerblock facades surrounded mounds of overturned earth and piping, with rusty vehicles parked chaotically among the rubble.

Around a dozen workers mooched among stone slabs and upturned trees waiting to be planted, roots drying out in the summer sun.

Wang said he had “no confidence” in the latest promise the property would be finished by August’s end.

“After this, I’ll never buy a house that isn’t finished already,” he said.

“And I won’t believe all the rhetoric the government and others come out with.”

Don’t speak out

China’s leadership has recently cut mortgage rates, slashed red tape and offered developers more loans in a bid to shore up the industry.

But analysts warn President Xi Jinping’s government has limited room for manoeuvre and could face further threats as debt distress spreads to state-owned developers and larger cities.

The prognosis for the sector, according to a June note from Japanese bank Nomura, “appears dire”.

For Beijing, the issue threatens one of its highest priorities — social stability.

Authorities in multiple regions have moved to stifle public complaints about unfinished homes in recent months, according to mortgage boycott participants contacted by AFP.

Both Gao and Wang said they had been contacted by local officials to dissuade them from petitioning the government or speaking to the media.

Multiple other buyers said they had received calls from the police, who they feared were also monitoring their private social media groups.

“There’s nothing I can say about this,” one initially receptive group administrator told AFP before abruptly breaking off contact.

“The state is controlling this too strictly right now.”

— AFP

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