
SBI Card Miles Review
SBI Card
By Vikram Warialani, Editor-in-Chief
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Quick Verdict
Four unconditional domestic lounge visits and 1% Travel Credits on travel spends; an entry-level travel card honest about its ceiling.
Who Should Get This Card
Domestic lounge access without a spend gate. That is the clearest case for the SBI Card Miles.
The card targets salaried applicants earning at least ₹30,000 per month and self-employed individuals with equivalent income. It works best for those who fly domestically a handful of times a year but have no regular international connections. The four annual lounge visits cost nothing to access beyond holding the card, removing the quarterly spend tracking that governs lounge access on several competing entry-level travel cards. Cardholders who want to earn transferable rewards on spending and are not expecting complimentary international lounge access will get more from this card than those chasing a high base cashback rate.
Rewards and Cashback in Detail
Travel Credits on SBI Card Miles earn at two rates. Spends coded as airline, hotel, or travel portal purchases generate 1 Travel Credit per ₹100 of spend. All other eligible purchases generate 0.5 Travel Credit per ₹100. At ₹1 per Travel Credit, the effective return is 1% on travel category spends and 0.5% on general purchases. These are not standout earn rates; the SBI Card Miles Prime delivers double the credits per rupee spent at ₹1,500 more in annual fee.
The card's transferability is its stronger angle. Travel Credits convert 1:1 into multiple airline and hotel loyalty programme currencies. A cardholder who transfers into a programme with high-value redemptions can stretch the apparent 1% well beyond face value. Whether that arithmetic works depends on the specific transfer partner's award chart at the time of redemption, which is a meaningful caveat. Cardholders who do not engage with transfer partner programmes and treat credits as straightforward cashback will find the 0.5-1% range unimpressive compared with dedicated cashback alternatives.
New cardholders who spend ₹30,000 within 60 days of issuance receive 1,500 welcome Travel Credits, worth ₹1,500 in programme transfers. The milestone structure adds 5,000 bonus Travel Credits at ₹5 lakh in annual spends. Credits expire 2 years from the date of receipt, and redemptions must be made in minimum blocks of 2,000 at a time. Light spenders who earn 200-300 credits per month will accumulate to the redemption floor only after several months of consistent use.
The milestone lounge benefit adds another layer for higher spenders. Every ₹1 lakh of incremental spend beyond the base earns one additional complimentary domestic lounge visit. Heavy users who route ₹4-5 lakh through the card in a year can extend their annual access well past the base four visits without separate programme enrolment. Standard category exclusions apply across fuel, wallet top-ups, insurance premiums, and government service payments.
| Category | Reward Rate | Cap / Details |
|---|---|---|
| travel | 1X | 1 Travel Credit per ₹100 on airline, hotel, and travel portal spends (1% effective return at ₹1 per Travel Credit) |
What Does It Actually Cost
Joining fee and annual renewal fee are both ₹1,499 plus GST. The annual fee reversal threshold sits at ₹6 lakh in spends during a membership year. That ratio, a ₹1,499 fee waived only at ₹6 lakh, compares unfavourably with peers: the SBI Card PRIME waives its ₹2,999 fee at ₹3 lakh spend, and several cashback cards reverse comparable fees at ₹1-2 lakh spend.
For cardholders who clear ₹6 lakh, the annual fee becomes a non-issue. For those who do not, the effective cost is ₹1,499 per year. Four domestic lounge visits at roughly ₹500-700 per visit suggests the card can still justify its fee for those who fly several times annually even without the waiver condition.
The 1,500 welcome Travel Credits on ₹30,000 spend within 60 days, worth ₹1,500 in programme transfers, covers the full joining fee in year one. This makes the first year a lower-risk trial for applicants who can clear the spending condition.
A 1% fuel surcharge waiver applies per statement cycle, capped at ₹250. The forex markup is reported at 1.99%, materially below the 3.5% standard charged on most entry-level credit cards, providing some benefit on the occasional international card transaction even without complimentary lounge access.
| Joining Fee | ₹1,499 |
| Annual Fee | ₹1,499Waived on annual spend of ₹6 lakh or more |
Lounge Access
Domestic
4 visits / year
Program
Priority Pass membership complimentary for first 2 cardholder years; no complimentary international lounge visits included. Additional domestic visits earned at 1 per ₹1 lakh spend milestone.
Pros
- 4 complimentary domestic airport lounge visits per year with no spend condition, plus 1 additional visit per ₹1 lakh spend beyond the base
- Travel Credits transfer 1:1 to airline and hotel programmes, enabling above-face-value redemptions for cardholders who engage with award charts
- 1,500 welcome Travel Credits on ₹30,000 spend within 60 days effectively covers the full joining fee in year one
- Forex markup of 1.99% is materially below the 3.5% standard on most entry-level cards, reducing the cost of occasional international card transactions
Cons
- No complimentary international lounge visits; Priority Pass membership is free for 2 years but each visit is billed at standard rates (typically USD 27-35 per entry)
- Annual fee waiver requires ₹6 lakh in annual spend, a high threshold relative to the ₹1,499 fee compared with competing cards in this price range
- Base earn rate of 0.5 Travel Credit per ₹100 on non-travel spends equates to 0.5% effective return, below par for daily spending consolidation
- Minimum redemption of 2,000 Travel Credits per transaction means light spenders wait several months before accessing any programme benefit
- Travel Credits expire 2 years from date of receipt, a tighter window than points programmes on competing travel cards that carry rolling or indefinite validity
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Travel Credits on SBI Card Miles and what is their value?
Travel Credits are the reward currency for SBI Card Miles. Each Travel Credit carries a value of ₹1 when transferred to airline or hotel loyalty programmes in a 1:1 ratio. You earn 1 Travel Credit per ₹100 on travel category spends and 0.5 Travel Credit per ₹100 on all other eligible purchases. Credits must be redeemed in minimum blocks of 2,000 and expire 2 years from the date of receipt.
Does SBI Card Miles include free international airport lounge access?
No. The base SBI Card Miles does not include complimentary international airport lounge visits. You receive a Priority Pass membership at no charge for the first two cardholder years, but each international lounge visit is billed at Priority Pass standard rates. If international lounge access matters, the SBI Card Miles Prime (4 free international visits per year) or Miles Elite (6 free international visits per year) are more appropriate variants.
How do I get the ₹1,499 annual fee waived on SBI Card Miles?
SBI Card Miles reverses the annual renewal fee when you reach ₹6 lakh in spends during a membership year. At that spend level you also collect 5,000 bonus Travel Credits (the ₹5 lakh milestone reward), which partly offsets the fee in earlier months. The ₹6 lakh threshold is high relative to the ₹1,499 fee, but cardholders who route most of their spending through the card generally clear it.
Can I earn extra domestic lounge visits beyond the base four?
Yes. For every ₹1 lakh spent on the card during the membership year, you earn one additional complimentary domestic airport lounge visit beyond the unconditional base four. These milestone visits provide meaningful extra access for higher spenders who consolidate their purchases on the card.
Our Verdict
The SBI Card Miles earns its space as a low-cost entry into transferable travel rewards, not as a comprehensive travel card for regular international flyers. The fee is accessible, the domestic lounge access is unconditional, and the 1:1 transfer programme opens the door to disproportionate value for cardholders who understand how to work airline or hotel award charts.
What the card is not is made explicit by the official product page: there are no complimentary international lounge visits. The Priority Pass membership for the first two cardholder years sounds substantial until one reads past the headline. Each international lounge visit under Priority Pass is billed at standard rates, typically USD 27-35 per entry. A cardholder expecting free global lounge access will be caught off-guard at the first international terminal. This is worth stating clearly because several card comparison sites describe the Priority Pass membership without flagging that visits carry a charge on the base variant.
The fee waiver arithmetic also deserves examination before applying. Reaching ₹6 lakh on this card requires routing a significant share of household spend through it or concentrating travel bookings on the card. For a mid-spender who runs ₹3-4 lakh per year through the card, the ₹1,499 fee will not reverse. At that spend level, the 0.5% effective return on non-travel spends becomes the relevant comparison figure, not the 1% travel earn rate.
Apply if domestic lounge access without a spend condition matters, the ₹1,499 annual fee is acceptable without the waiver, and there is a plan to transfer credits to a travel programme rather than sit on them until expiry. Pass if international lounge access is a regular need, or if a flat-rate cashback card's simpler structure suits the spending pattern better.
3.4 / 5
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