Capital Strategy 2026 Analysis Breaking

Amazon Business Cards Are Moving to US Bank: What It Means for Your Capital Stack (2026)

Amazon is ending its partnership with American Express. On August 14, 2026, every Amazon business card converts to a US Bank Mastercard — and for capital stackers, the credit reporting and bureau pull changes are far more significant than the headline suggests.

PP
, Founder — Stacking Capital
| | 18 min read

TL;DR — Key Takeaways

  • Amazon is ditching Amex, moving to US Bank + Mastercard on August 14, 2026. All existing cardholders are automatically converted — no new application required. Per the Mastercard press release, the partnership covers both Amazon Business Card variants.
  • Two cards: Prime Business Card (5% Amazon, $0 fee, requires Prime) and Amazon Business Card (3% Amazon, $0 fee, no Prime required). Both issued by US Bank on the Mastercard network. Both carry a $150K annual cap on bonus categories.
  • The biggest win for capital stackers: credit reporting. The current Amex Amazon business cards report full activity — positive and negative — to personal credit bureaus. US Bank business cards do NOT report to personal credit unless delinquent. Carrying a balance on these cards will no longer affect your personal FICO.
  • Bureau pull shifts from Experian to TransUnion. Amex pulled Experian. US Bank pulls TransUnion. This changes how these cards fit into your three-bureau application strategy — your TransUnion round gets more products, your Experian round loses them.
  • The bonus category cap increases from $120K to $150K per year — an extra $30K of qualifying Amazon spend, worth up to $1,500 in additional cash back annually at the 5% rate.
  • Mastercard acceptance is significantly wider than Amex globally. For businesses that spend beyond Amazon, this is a meaningful operational upgrade.
  • Critical transition dates: Redeem Amex points by August 12. Set up new AutoPay after August 14. Update any recurring billing not tied to Amazon.com before the transition.

What's Actually Happening — The Transition Explained

Amazon has operated its business credit card program through American Express since 2019. That partnership is ending. Beginning August 14, 2026, all Amazon business credit cards will be issued by US Bank on the Mastercard network. The announcement was confirmed simultaneously via a Mastercard press release, a US Bank announcement, and an official FAQ from American Express on March 31, 2026.

This is a portfolio transition, meaning existing cardholders do not need to apply for the new card. Your current Amazon business card will automatically convert to the new US Bank Mastercard on August 14, 2026. You will receive a new card number, a new account, and new terms.

This type of portfolio transition is not uncommon in the credit card industry. The mechanics are straightforward: American Express winds down the co-branded relationship, transfers outstanding balances to US Bank, and US Bank issues new card numbers to all existing cardholders. For day-to-day spend, the transition is largely invisible — your Amazon purchases keep working the same way, your rewards rate stays similar, and your payment history (in most portfolio transitions) carries forward.

What most coverage of this transition gets wrong is treating it as a simple product swap. For business owners who think strategically about how their credit products interact with their personal credit profile and their broader funding capacity, the Amex-to-US Bank transition is a structural change with real consequences — most of them positive.

Let's walk through each dimension of what changes and what stays the same — and what it means for how you should position these cards in your capital stack.

Personal Amazon Card Not Affected

The Amazon Prime Visa — the personal consumer card issued by Chase — is a completely separate product and is not affected by this transition. If you hold both an Amazon Business Card (Amex) and a personal Amazon Prime Visa (Chase), only the business card is converting. Your Chase personal card remains unchanged.

The Cards: Prime Business Card vs. Amazon Business Card

The new US Bank Amazon product lineup maintains the same two-tier structure as the Amex versions: a higher-reward card for Amazon Prime members (the Prime Business Card at 5%) and a base card for non-Prime businesses (the Amazon Business Card at 3%). Both cards carry $0 annual fees and will be issued on the Mastercard network by US Bank. Here's what we know — and what's still TBA.

Side-by-Side: New US Bank Amazon Cards

Sources: Mastercard, US Bank. Off-Amazon reward categories TBA.
Feature Prime Business Card Amazon Business Card
Issuer US Bank US Bank
Network Mastercard Mastercard
Annual Fee $0 $0
Prime Required Yes No
Amazon Reward Rate 5% 3%
Off-Amazon Rewards TBA TBA
Annual Bonus Cap $150,000 $150,000
Rate After Cap 1% 1%
Bureau Pull TransUnion TransUnion
Reports to Personal Credit? No (unless delinquent) No (unless delinquent)
Transition Date August 14, 2026

vs. The Old Amex Versions — What Changed

To understand the significance of this transition, you need to know exactly what the Amex versions offered and where they fell short. According to the American Express program FAQ, here's how the products compare:

Comparison of Amex (outgoing) and US Bank (incoming) Amazon business card features. Sources: American Express FAQ, Doctor of Credit, Upgraded Points.
Feature Old Amex Version New US Bank Version Change
Amazon Rate (Prime) 5% 5% No change
Amazon Rate (Non-Prime) 3% 3% No change
Off-Amazon Categories 2% gas, restaurants, wireless TBA TBD
Other Spend Rate 1% 1% (after cap) No change
Annual Bonus Cap $120,000 $150,000 +$30K ↑
Annual Fee $0 $0 No change
Network American Express Mastercard Wider acceptance ↑
Issuer American Express US Bank Changed ↑
Bureau Pull Experian TransUnion Shifted ↑
Reports to Personal Credit? YES — full activity No (unless delinquent) Massive win ↑
Amex Offers Yes No Gone ↓
CreditSecure Membership Yes (Amex product) No Gone ↓
AutoPay Transfer Active Must re-setup Action required

The headline changes — network, issuer, bureau pull, and credit reporting — are all upgrades for business owners who think about their credit strategically. The losses (Amex Offers, CreditSecure) are minor products that most cardholders never used meaningfully.

The one genuinely unknown is the off-Amazon rewards structure. The Amex versions offered 2% on gas, restaurants, and wireless phone bills — a secondary rewards category that many business owners used. Whether the US Bank version matches, improves, or degrades this category is not yet confirmed as of this writing. We will update this guide when full terms are disclosed.

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The Capital Stack Implications — Why This Actually Matters

Most of the media coverage of this transition has focused on the rewards changes. That's the wrong lens. For business owners who are actively building or managing a capital stack, there are four structural implications that matter far more than whether you earn 2% or 1.5% on gas purchases. Let's work through each one.

1. The Credit Reporting Change — The Biggest Win

This is the single most important change in the entire transition, and it's the one most business owners will miss completely.

The current Amazon business cards issued by American Express are an exception to how most Tier 1 business credit cards work. Normally, business credit cards from major issuers — Chase, Bank of America, US Bank, Wells Fargo, and Amex itself (for non-Amazon products) — do NOT report activity to your personal credit bureaus unless the account becomes delinquent. This is one of the foundational advantages of building a business card stack: you can carry balances, run up utilization, and access large amounts of revolving credit without it showing up on your personal FICO scores.

The Amazon Amex cards were an exception to this rule. As confirmed by FairFigure's credit reporting analysis, the Amazon Business American Express Card and Amazon Business Prime American Express Card both reported full positive and negative activity to personal credit bureaus. That means every balance you carried, every on-time payment, and every utilization spike on these cards appeared on your personal credit report — just like a consumer card would.

For capital stackers, this created a real problem. If you were using the Amazon Amex card for substantial business purchases — inventory, equipment, office supplies — and carrying a balance, that utilization was hitting your personal FICO scores. High utilization on personal credit is one of the fastest ways to push your FICO below the 720 threshold that most Tier 1 banks require for their best products. You were, in effect, penalized for using your Amazon business card the way it was designed.

The US Bank Amazon cards are expected to follow US Bank's standard business card policy, which is consistent with the rest of the Tier 1 issuer market: no reporting to personal credit unless the account becomes delinquent. As NerdWallet's analysis of business card credit reporting confirms, most major bank business credit cards operate this way. When the Amazon cards move to US Bank, they should finally join the standard model.

What this means in practice: after August 14, 2026, you can carry a $50,000 balance on your Amazon Business Card for months while stocking inventory, and it will not show up on your personal credit report, will not affect your utilization ratio, and will not impact your FICO scores — as long as you make your minimum payments. That is a fundamental change in how these cards interact with your personal credit profile.

Advisor Strategy Note — Patrick Pychynski

The credit reporting change is the real story here, and it matters most for clients who've been avoiding high balances on their Amazon Amex card out of concern for their personal FICO. After the transition, the Amazon card becomes what every other Tier 1 business card already is: credit-score-invisible for ongoing spend. If you run significant Amazon purchases for your business — supplies, raw materials, FBA inventory, office equipment — you can now run that spend through the 5% card without managing the personal credit footprint. That changes the calculus on how aggressively you use these cards. It also removes the Amazon card from the "personal credit risk" column in your capital plan. That's a significant portfolio shift. For clients who were keeping their Amazon card balance near zero to protect their personal FICO for a mortgage or a future funding round, you now have more flexibility than you think.

2. The Bureau Pull Change — Reshaping Your Three-Bureau Strategy

The second structural change is the shift in which bureau gets pulled when you apply for these cards. American Express typically pulls Experian for business card applications. US Bank typically pulls TransUnion. This shift has direct consequences for how you sequence your capital stack applications.

Here's how the Tier 1 issuer bureau landscape breaks down for business credit card applications:

Standard bureau pull behavior for Tier 1 business card issuers. Bureau pull behavior can vary by state and applicant profile. Verify before applying.
Issuer Typical Bureau Pull Multi-Card Strategy Reports Personal Credit?
Chase Experian 2 cards = 1 inquiry (same day) No*
Bank of America TransUnion Up to 5 cards = 1 inquiry (30-day window) No*
American Express (non-Amazon) Experian Soft pull if existing personal card 3+ mo. No*
US Bank TransUnion Standard — each application = inquiry No*
Wells Fargo Experian Up to 2 business cards No*
Amazon Amex (OUTGOING) Experian Experian round YES — full activity
Amazon US Bank (INCOMING) TransUnion TransUnion round No*

* "No" means does not report unless delinquent. All Tier 1 issuer business cards follow this policy for ongoing activity.

Before the transition, applying for an Amazon business card added an inquiry to your Experian file — the same bureau used by Chase and Wells Fargo. This meant that adding Amazon to your stack was competing for inquiry capacity on your most-used bureau.

After the transition, Amazon cards pull TransUnion — the same bureau used by Bank of America and US Bank's other products. This consolidates the Amazon cards into your TransUnion round, which creates two effects:

  • Your TransUnion round gets more products. BofA (up to 5 cards), US Bank (Business Shield, Triple Cash, Platinum, + Amazon cards), and Elan Financial (a US Bank subsidiary) all pull TransUnion. You can now add Amazon Prime Business and/or Amazon Business to this cluster, potentially getting more approvals in a single TransUnion round.
  • Your Experian round loses the Amazon cards. Chase (2 Ink cards = 1 inquiry), Amex Blue Business cards (often soft pull for existing cardholders), and Wells Fargo (up to 2 cards) remain on Experian. Removing Amazon from this bureau frees up inquiry capacity for future Experian-side applications.

For business owners who are actively sequencing applications across bureaus, this matters. The three-bureau strategy works by rotating which bureau you hit with each application round, then allowing inquiries to age before hitting that bureau again. The Amazon cards moving to TransUnion means your TransUnion round is denser — but also that you have cleaner Experian capacity for Chase and Wells Fargo products going forward.

Advisor Strategy Note — Patrick Pychynski

The bureau pull shift is a sequencing adjustment, not a problem. For clients doing a fresh capital stack build starting after August 14, 2026: Amazon cards now belong in the TransUnion cluster alongside BofA and US Bank. If you're planning to apply for US Bank products anyway — and you should be, because the Business Shield at 18 months in-branch is the best 0% product on the market — adding the Amazon Prime Business Card to that TransUnion round costs you relatively little in bureau capacity. BofA's 30-day same-inquiry window doesn't extend to US Bank, so you'll take two separate TransUnion pulls for BofA and US Bank. But you're already accepting that. Adding the Amazon card to your US Bank branch visit is an efficient use of a TransUnion inquiry. For clients mid-stack who already have Amazon Amex cards: the transition happens automatically. Your TransUnion strategy now has one more product in it. Adjust your next application round accordingly.

3. US Bank Is Already a Tier 1 Stacking Issuer — Amazon Cards Add to That Portfolio

US Bank is not a minor player in the capital stack universe. It is already one of the five Tier 1 issuers that serious capital stackers target, primarily because of three products that no other issuer matches:

  • US Bank Business Shield Visa (in-branch): 18 billing cycles of 0% intro APR — the longest 0% period of any major business credit card. Only available in branch. This is the anchor of any well-engineered capital stack.
  • US Bank Triple Cash Rewards Business Card: 12 billing cycles of 0% intro APR, plus 3% cash back on gas, office supplies, cell phone, and dining, and a $100 annual software credit.
  • US Bank Business Platinum Card: 18 billing cycles of 0% intro APR (in-branch) — a pure capital vehicle with no rewards complexity, ideal for maximum credit deployment.

Adding the Amazon business cards to US Bank's portfolio means that a single banking relationship with US Bank now gives you access to a broader product set — the 0% stacking products AND the Amazon rewards products. This is operationally simpler: one banking relationship, one TransUnion footprint, and products that serve different strategic purposes.

The Amazon cards are rewards cards — they do not offer 0% intro APR periods. Do not conflate them with the Business Shield or Triple Cash as stacking vehicles. Their role in the stack is different: they are ongoing-spend optimization tools for businesses that buy meaningful amounts from Amazon.com, not capital deployment instruments.

But as part of a complete capital architecture, having both: (1) 0% APR cards for capital deployment and (2) rewards cards for operational spend — all under one issuer relationship — is a clean and efficient structure. US Bank, with the Amazon cards added, becomes the issuer with the most diverse product suite for business owners who need both.

4. Mastercard Acceptance — A Practical Upgrade

American Express has historically had lower merchant acceptance rates than Visa and Mastercard, particularly outside major metropolitan areas and internationally. This is a well-documented characteristic of the network — Amex charges higher interchange fees to merchants, and a meaningful percentage of merchants, particularly in B2B categories, gas, and international contexts, decline Amex.

Mastercard is accepted at virtually every merchant that accepts credit cards globally. For business owners whose purchasing extends beyond Amazon.com — vendors, suppliers, international transactions, domestic merchants that decline Amex — the network change is a meaningful practical improvement. You won't need to carry a backup Visa or Mastercard for situations where your Amazon Amex is declined. The new card will simply work everywhere.

This also has implications for employee card programs. If you issue cards to employees and they encounter Amex rejection issues in the field, the Mastercard versions of the Amazon business cards should reduce that friction significantly.

5. The $150K Cap — The Math on Amazon Spend

One often-overlooked aspect of this transition is the increase in the annual bonus category cap from $120,000 (Amex) to $150,000 (US Bank). For the Prime Business Card, this means you can earn 5% cash back on up to $150,000 in Amazon purchases per year — generating up to $7,500 in cash back annually before dropping to 1%.

That $30,000 cap increase is worth up to $1,500 more per year in cash back for Prime members who were hitting the $120,000 ceiling. For businesses that buy significant inventory, supplies, or equipment through Amazon Business — FBA sellers, e-commerce businesses, office-intensive businesses — this is a tangible financial improvement.

To put the math in context:

Annual cash back calculation at various Amazon spend levels for Prime Business Card holders.
Annual Amazon Spend Rate Earned Annual Cash Back vs. Old $120K Cap
$50,000 5% on all $2,500 Same
$100,000 5% on all $5,000 Same
$120,000 5% on all $6,000 Cap limit on old Amex
$150,000 5% on all $7,500 +$1,500 vs. old cap
$200,000 5% to $150K, then 1% $8,000 Improved vs. old

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Advisor Strategy Note: How to Position Amazon Cards in Your Stack

There are three distinct scenarios depending on where you are in your capital stack journey. Here is how to think about Amazon cards in each one.

Scenario 1: Existing Amazon Amex Cardholders

You have an Amazon Business Card or Amazon Business Prime Card issued by Amex right now. Here is your action checklist:

  • Do NOT cancel the card before the transition. Canceling your account eliminates your credit history on that account and reduces your total available credit — both of which can negatively affect your personal FICO scores. Let the automatic conversion happen.
  • Redeem your Amex rewards by August 12, 2026. This is a hard deadline. Points not redeemed by August 12 cannot be accessed through Amex after the transition. According to the American Express FAQ, points transfer to the US Bank program 1:1 — but redeeming them directly through Amex before the deadline ensures you control the timing.
  • Download statements and year-end summaries now. Once the transition completes, historical Amex statements may not be accessible through the new US Bank portal. Download everything relevant — especially for business expense documentation and tax purposes.
  • Set up new AutoPay after August 14. Your Amex AutoPay settings do NOT transfer. As of August 16, 2026, all Amex scheduled payments for this card are cancelled. You must set up AutoPay directly through US Bank after the transition to avoid missing payments.
  • Update recurring billing for non-Amazon merchants. If you use the card for subscriptions, vendor auto-billing, or any non-Amazon recurring charges, those merchants need your new US Bank card number. Amazon.com saved cards update automatically — but third-party merchants do not.

Scenario 2: New Applicants — Timing Your Application

If you don't currently hold an Amazon business card and are thinking about adding one to your stack, timing matters. As of this writing (April 2026), the US Bank versions are not yet available for new applications — the full launch is expected in spring 2026, ahead of the August 14 transition for existing cardholders.

Do not apply for the Amex version now with the intent to convert. The Amex version reports to personal credit, which is exactly the behavior you want to avoid. Wait for the US Bank version to launch before applying. The difference is significant enough to justify patience.

When applying for the new US Bank Amazon cards, plan to do so as part of your TransUnion round — alongside other US Bank products (Business Shield, Triple Cash) or Bank of America products. This clusters your TransUnion inquiries efficiently. If you're building a fresh capital stack, prioritize the US Bank Business Shield (18-month 0% in-branch) as your anchor first, then add the Amazon card in the same or a subsequent application batch.

Scenario 3: Mid-Stack — Integrating Amazon Cards into an Existing Strategy

If you already have a capital stack with US Bank products, the Amazon cards integrate cleanly into your TransUnion cluster. The credit reporting change means they no longer pose a utilization risk to your personal FICO. You can now use them aggressively for Amazon spend without monitoring their impact on your personal credit profile.

One strategic note: these are rewards cards, not 0% APR cards. They are not stacking vehicles in the traditional sense — you should not be deploying capital onto them and expecting to carry the balance at zero cost. Their role is in the rewards optimization layer of your capital architecture: reducing the effective cost of operational Amazon spend and generating cash back that offsets your cost of capital elsewhere. If you find yourself tempted to carry a large balance on the Amazon card because "it doesn't affect personal credit anymore," remember that the ongoing APR still applies. Use the Business Shield for capital deployment. Use the Amazon card for Amazon spend.

Advisor Strategy Note — Patrick Pychynski

I want to be direct about what Amazon business cards are and aren't in a capital stack. They are NOT zero-interest capital vehicles. They are rewards optimization products — and very good ones if your business buys significant amounts from Amazon. A client buying $120K/year in inventory through Amazon Business was earning $6,000 in cash back on their Amazon Amex, but it was reporting to personal credit, suppressing their FICO, and blocking their ability to qualify for additional 0% stacking products. After August 14, that same $120K/year of Amazon purchases will generate $6,000 in cash back AND be invisible to their personal credit profile. That's the real double win here. If you haven't been tracking Amazon cards closely because of the personal reporting issue — now is the time to reconsider them as part of your rewards optimization layer. They've just become a clean product.

Advisor Strategy Note — Patrick Pychynski

On the question of whether existing Amex Amazon cardholders should cancel before the transition: the answer is an unambiguous no. Canceling a card with established account history — even to "clean up" your profile — reduces your total available credit and can lower your credit scores. The account age and payment history on your Amazon Amex card has value. Let it transfer automatically to US Bank. The only exception would be if you're carrying a balance you can't manage, but even then, negotiate or pay it down rather than canceling outright. Portfolio conversions are smooth in practice — your account history typically carries over, your credit line follows, and your new card arrives before the transition date. There is no strategic reason to cancel early.

If you're working on building or optimizing your credit profile ahead of a capital stack deployment, the self-guided resource at creditblueprint.org covers the foundational credit optimization steps that prepare you for Tier 1 approvals.

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Key Transition Dates and Action Items

The American Express FAQ provides a precise timeline for how this transition will unfold. Here are every date and every action item you need to track, sourced directly from the official American Express program update FAQ:

All confirmed transition dates from American Express. Source: American Express Amazon Program Update FAQ.
Date Event Action Required?
March 31, 2026 Amex emails sent to all existing Amazon business cardholders announcing the transition Read the email
May 14, 2026 Last day to request a basic card member replacement (lost/stolen replacement) under Amex If needed before this date
July 2, 2026 Last day to request additional employee cards under the Amex program If needed before this date
August 6, 2026 Last day to add an account manager to the Amex account If needed before this date
August 12, 2026 LAST DAY to redeem Amex rewards points Action required — redeem all points
August 13, 2026 Last day to earn Amex rewards on Amazon card purchases None — informational
August 14, 2026 Transition date — all Amazon business cards convert to US Bank Mastercard Multiple actions required (see below)
August 16, 2026 Amex AutoPay and all scheduled payments for Amazon card are cancelled Set up new AutoPay with US Bank

Your Transition Action Checklist

Do Now (Before August 12)

  • Redeem all Amex Membership Rewards points before August 12 — this deadline is firm
  • Download all historical statements and year-end summaries from the Amex portal
  • Note any Amex Offers you have active — they will not transfer to US Bank
  • If you use CreditSecure, make note that this Amex product ends at transition
  • Make a list of all recurring billers using your Amazon Amex card number

Do After August 14

  • Activate your new US Bank Mastercard when it arrives
  • Set up new AutoPay with US Bank — Amex AutoPay does NOT transfer
  • Update recurring billing at all non-Amazon.com merchants with your new card number
  • Confirm your balance transferred correctly to the US Bank account
  • Verify that Amazon.com payment methods updated automatically to the new card
AutoPay Is the Most Common Transition Mistake

The single most common and costly mistake in card portfolio transitions is assuming that AutoPay carries over. It does not. As confirmed by the American Express FAQ, all AutoPay and scheduled payment settings are cancelled as of August 16, 2026. If you had AutoPay set up with Amex and do nothing, your first US Bank payment will be due — and will not be automatically paid. Missing a payment on a business credit card can trigger a penalty APR, and if the account becomes delinquent, it will then report to personal credit (the one outcome the transition is otherwise designed to prevent). Set up AutoPay with US Bank the day you activate your new card.

What We Don't Know Yet

There are aspects of the new US Bank Amazon cards that have not been fully disclosed as of April 2026. We document these transparently because omitting them would give you an incomplete picture. We will update this guide as full terms are released.

Off-Amazon Rewards Categories and Rates

The Amex versions earned 2% cash back on gas, restaurant purchases, and wireless phone bills. The new US Bank cards have confirmed 5% and 3% on Amazon spend but have not yet disclosed the off-Amazon rewards structure. Per the Doctor of Credit coverage of the announcement, the off-Amazon details are TBA. This matters for businesses that used the Amex version for vendor spend beyond Amazon.

Foreign Transaction Fees

The current Amex Amazon business cards carry no foreign transaction fees. US Bank's standard business card policy varies by product — some carry fees, some do not. The foreign transaction fee structure for the new Amazon US Bank cards has not been confirmed. For businesses with international purchases, this is a detail to watch for when full terms are disclosed.

Purchase Protection and Extended Warranty

American Express is well known for strong purchase protection and extended warranty benefits. The incoming US Bank card's benefit suite — specifically purchase protection and extended warranty — has not been confirmed. Business owners who relied on Amex's purchase protection for equipment or inventory purchases should verify coverage terms when US Bank releases the full product disclosure.

New Application Availability Timing

As of this writing, the new US Bank Amazon business cards are not yet available for new applicants. The launch is expected in spring 2026. The exact date when new applications open — and whether there will be introductory offer structures for new applicants — has not been disclosed. As noted by Upgraded Points, the announcement focused on the portfolio conversion rather than new product launch details.

Credit Limit Treatment in the Transition

The transition FAQ confirms that balances transfer automatically. What remains unclear is whether credit limits are maintained exactly, potentially adjusted by US Bank's underwriting at the time of conversion, or subject to re-evaluation. In most portfolio transitions, credit limits follow — but US Bank may apply its own underwriting standards when it picks up the portfolio. We expect clarity on this before August 14.

Full US Bank Terms, Conditions, and APR Range

The new cards' ongoing APR range, late payment fees, cash advance terms, and full benefit guide under US Bank have not been publicly disclosed as of this writing. These will be released prior to the August 14 transition and mailed to existing cardholders. Review the full disclosure carefully when you receive it.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to apply for the new US Bank Amazon card?

No. If you currently hold an Amazon Business Card or Amazon Business Prime Card issued by American Express, you will be automatically converted to the new US Bank Mastercard version on August 14, 2026. No new application is required. You will receive a new card with a new account number before the transition date. Your existing balance transfers automatically. The process is handled at the issuer level — you don't need to do anything to trigger the conversion, only the post-transition setup steps (AutoPay, recurring billing updates).

Will my credit limit transfer to the new US Bank card?

In most portfolio transitions of this type, credit limits follow the portfolio. Based on the American Express transition FAQ, balances transfer automatically to US Bank. The specific credit limit treatment — whether US Bank maintains your current Amex limit exactly, adjusts it based on its own underwriting, or issues you a new credit decision — has not been fully disclosed as of this writing. Full terms will be provided to existing cardholders before the transition. Review your transition documents carefully when received.

Does this affect my personal Amazon Prime Visa from Chase?

No. The Amazon Prime Visa is a personal consumer credit card issued by Chase. It is an entirely separate product from the Amazon business cards and is not part of the Amex-to-US Bank transition. The Chase Amazon Prime Visa remains unchanged — same issuer (Chase), same network (Visa), same rewards rates, same reporting behavior. If you hold both a personal Amazon Prime Visa (Chase) and an Amazon Business Card (Amex), only the business card is converting. Your Chase personal card is unaffected.

Will the new US Bank card report to my personal credit?

Based on US Bank's standard business card policy, the new Amazon US Bank cards are expected to NOT report to personal credit bureaus unless the account becomes delinquent — a significant change from the current Amex versions, which report full activity (positive and negative) to personal bureaus. This is consistent with how all other major Tier 1 business card issuers operate: Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Amex's own non-Amazon business cards all follow the same non-reporting standard for ongoing activity. As confirmed by NerdWallet's analysis of business card credit reporting, major bank business credit cards typically don't appear on personal credit reports unless delinquent. The Amazon Amex cards were an exception to this standard. The US Bank versions are expected to conform to the standard. Verify in the full US Bank terms when disclosed.

What happens to my Amex rewards points?

According to the American Express FAQ, earned rewards points transfer 1:1 to the US Bank rewards program. However, there is a critical deadline: you must redeem any unredeemed Amex points by August 12, 2026. After that date, they are no longer redeemable through American Express. August 13, 2026 is the last day to earn Amex rewards through purchases on the card. Do not wait until the last minute — log into your Amex account now, check your points balance, and redeem anything you want to apply directly. Points transferring to US Bank's system will be available in the new program, but the value and redemption mechanics may differ from what you're accustomed to with Amex.

Should I cancel my Amex card before the transition?

No. Canceling your Amazon Amex card before the August 14 transition is the wrong move for almost every cardholder. Here's why: (1) Canceling reduces your total available credit, which can increase your personal credit utilization and lower your FICO scores. (2) You lose the positive account history associated with that card — payment history, account age, and credit limit history that has likely been building for years. (3) If you have a balance outstanding, you still owe it regardless of cancellation. (4) The automatic conversion to US Bank will happen whether you cancel or not — the question is only whether you benefit from the transition or lose your account history by canceling prematurely. Let the automatic conversion happen. Review the US Bank terms when they arrive. If you decide you don't want the US Bank card after reviewing full terms, you can cancel at that point — after your history has transferred.

How does this change my three-bureau application strategy?

The Amazon cards shifting from Amex (Experian pull) to US Bank (TransUnion pull) has two direct effects on your three-bureau strategy. First, your TransUnion round now includes more products: Bank of America (up to 5 cards in a 30-day window = 1 inquiry), US Bank Business Shield (18-month 0% in-branch), US Bank Triple Cash, US Bank Business Platinum, and now the Amazon business cards. This makes your TransUnion round denser in products. Second, your Experian round loses the Amazon cards — meaning Chase (2 Ink cards = 1 inquiry), Amex Blue Business cards (often soft pull for existing cardholders), and Wells Fargo (up to 2 business cards) retain exclusive Experian territory among Tier 1 business cards. For a fresh stack build after August 14, plan your TransUnion round to include BofA + US Bank products (including Amazon if relevant to your business), and your Experian round for Chase + Amex + Wells Fargo. For existing cardholders, the transition happens automatically — your next application round should factor in that Amazon is now in the TransUnion column, not Experian.

Are the Amazon US Bank cards good for capital stacking?

That depends on what you mean by "capital stacking." If you mean 0% APR products for deploying working capital at zero cost — no, the Amazon cards do not offer 0% introductory APR periods. They are rewards cards, and carrying balances on them will cost you interest at the ongoing APR. For that purpose, the US Bank Business Shield (18-month 0% in-branch) is the correct product. If you mean building a comprehensive business credit portfolio that is invisible to personal credit — yes, after August 14, the Amazon US Bank cards fit cleanly into a business credit stack. They will not report to personal credit, they pull TransUnion alongside BofA and US Bank, and they generate strong rewards on Amazon spend. They belong in the rewards optimization layer of your capital architecture, not the capital deployment layer. For businesses buying $50K+ per year on Amazon, they are genuinely valuable products — just not for the reasons most people associate with capital stacking.

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Build Your Capital Stack Around the New Amazon Cards

Tell us about your business and current credit profile. We'll map out how the Amazon card transition affects your bureau strategy and where these products belong in your overall capital architecture.