Citi Product Change Rules Explained: How (and Why) to Downgrade, Upgrade, or Switch Cards Citi Product Change Rules Explained: How (and Why) to Downgrade, Upgrade, or Switch Cards

Citi Product Change Rules Explained: How (and Why) to Downgrade, Upgrade, or Switch Cards

AwardWallet receives compensation from advertising partners for links on the blog. The opinions expressed here are our own and have not been reviewed, provided, or approved by any bank advertiser. Here's our complete list of Advertisers.

Offers for the American Airlines AAdvantage® MileUp® Card, AT&T Access More Card from Citi, AT&T Points Plus Card, Citi® / AAdvantage® Executive World Elite Mastercard®, Citi® / AAdvantage® Gold World Elite™ MasterCard®, Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® World Elite Mastercard®, Costco Anywhere Visa® Card by Citi, Citi Custom Cash® Card, Citi® Dividend Card, EXPEDIA®+ VOYAGER CARD from Citi, Citi Prestige® Card, Citi Rewards+® Card, Expedia® Rewards Card from Citi, Chase Freedom Flex℠ and Citi ThankYou® Preferred Card are not available through this site. Some offers may have expired. Please see our card marketplace for available offers

Thinking about changing one of your Citi credit cards? You’re not alone. Whether you're aiming to downgrade a card to avoid an annual fee or hoping to upgrade to unlock better rewards, product changes can be a smart way to manage your account without affecting your credit history.

In the past, Citi made this process especially attractive, allowing cardholders to change between products in different families, including cards that weren’t open to new applicants. But Citi has recently tightened the reins, and some of that flexibility is now gone.

Here’s what’s still possible when it comes to Citi product changes — and how to navigate the latest restrictions.

Citi Product Change Rules

Here are the rules and restrictions for a Citi credit card product change:

  • Your account must have been open for at least 12 months to be eligible for a product change.
  • You cannot product change a personal card to a business card — or vice versa.
  • You cannot product change within business cards; product changes apply only to Citi's personal cards.

Things to be aware of before you request a Citi product change

With those basic rules covered, here are a few additional things you should be aware of before requesting a Citi product change:

  • You will not be eligible for a welcome bonus on the new card.
  • Product changes may take up to 51 days, but conversions should process quickly. Previously, conversion between card “families” could take quite a while.
  • As soon as you see the new card in the online account management, the new card terms are in effect, including the earning rates.
  • If your card number has remained the same, you can continue to use the old card until you receive the new one.
  • Citi's welcome offer eligibility typically counts 48 months from earning the bonus on the original card before you're eligible again. You aren't earning a welcome bonus during the product change, so this shouldn't affect your eligibility for sign-up bonuses. However, other rules for bonuses will still be in place.
  • Citi will charge you a prorated annual fee and offer a prorated refund of your old card's annual fee, based on the conversion date and annual fees of the cards involved.
2 friends use a laptop together while considering a Citi product change
Credit: Brooke Cagle/Unsplash

Changes to the Citi product change rules

Citi used to stand apart from other issuers with its product change rules. However, it appears that this is changing, and this is an unfortunate blow. Citi used to allow product conversions to most cards, even if they don't earn the same rewards currency. Contrast this with changes among cards at a bank like American Express or Chase, where you can only product change within a card family.

For example, American Express allows product changes between its personal Hilton credit cards. With Chase, you can upgrade from a Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card to the Chase Sapphire Reserve®. Additionally, you could downgrade to a Chase Freedom Flex℠. That's because all of these cards earn Ultimate Rewards points.

What you cannot do is convert a Hilton card to a Delta card (with American Express) or a Sapphire card to a United credit card (with Chase). That's because these cards aren't in the same families.

Citi used to allow “out of family” conversions for many of its cards, which meant that its product change rules were the most flexible of any major bank. However, it now seems that you cannot convert outside of card families, at least based on recent reports. There are some limited situations where an out-of-family conversion may be allowed, but these appear far more restricted. As one example, you can no longer convert a card that earns American AAdvantage® miles to one that earns ThankYou® points, and vice versa.

Related: How to Earn Citi ThankYou Points

When to Still Consider a Citi Product Change

All that said, you may still want to consider a Citi product change, even though Citi has tightened the rules. One reason is that several Citi cards are attractive from a points-earning perspective but lack a sign-up bonus. Applying for another product, earning a bonus, and then product changing a year later becomes an attractive option, if you're willing to wait.

Another reason to product change to a different Citi card is to give yourself additional earning potential. The Citi Custom Cash® Card is a great example. The card earns 5% cash back on the first $500 in purchases in the bonus category where you spend the most. If you have another Citi credit card you no longer need, you can product change to the Citi Custom Cash, giving yourself 5% spending potential to complement your earnings on other cards. We should note that this is another Citi product change that has been problematic for some people. It initially appeared that Citi was not allowing some people from holding multiple Citi Custom Cash products. But there are also reports where this conversion was successful.

Yet another reason is to upgrade a Citi credit card to one that has more useful benefits. Say you have the  Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® World Elite Mastercard® but have a lot of travel coming up. Maybe the Citi® / AAdvantage® Executive World Elite Mastercard® makes more sense for the lounge access it provides. While you won't earn a sign-up bonus, you can still do a Citi card upgrade to the AA Executive Card and enjoy its perks. And this is an “in family” conversion that is still allowed.

What's unclear is whether you can still obtain one of the issuer's discontinued cards with the new rules.

a couple reads credit card information about a Citi product change on a smart phone
Credit: Kampus Production/Pexels

List of Product Change-Eligible Citi Credit Cards

Here are the personal credit cards you have historically been able to product change to or from, some of which are discontinued or closed to new applications:

Here is a list of discontinued cards that you can no longer product change to:

  • Citi® / AAdvantage® Bronze Mastercard®
  • Citi® Dividend Card
  • AT&T Access More Card from Citi
  • Expedia® Rewards Card from Citi
  • EXPEDIA®+ VOYAGER CARD from Citi
  • Citi Rewards+® Card
  • Citi Prestige® Card

Another thing to note is that to convert to Citi Costco Visa, you must have a Costco account. This is a requirement of opening the card, as well. As long as you maintain a Costco membership, there is no annual fee on the Citi Costco Visa card.

However, understand that converting a Citi card to the Citi Costco Visa is a one-way street! You can convert another card to the card, but you cannot convert the Citi Costco Visa to a different card. The Costco Visa appears to be one of the exceptions to the new family product change rule. However, it still only works in one direction, limiting its usefulness.

Related: Build a Winning Combo of Citi ThankYou Rewards Cards

How To Product Change or Upgrade a Citi Card

Call the number on the back of your card to request a product change. Once you've verified your identity with the Citi representative, you can request a product change or to “convert” your card to another Citi card.

At one point, I'd understood that you could complete a product change via chat with a Citi rep. However, when I tried this, the agent I was connected to directed me to call Citi to complete the change and provided the phone number for Citi account specialists: 800-950-5114. Maybe I got a bad representative. However, calling is likely the way you'll have to go about completing a Citi credit card product change. Changes should also process quickly, given the new Citi product change restrictions.

Make sure you ask if the card number will change! I can recall the rep clearly stating that the card number would remain the same during my last Citi product change, so this question was answered before I even had to ask. If your card number changes, you won't be able to use that account until the new card comes in the mail and you activate it. Typically, as a conversion will be within a given card family, the number should no longer change.

Related: Tips for Managing Your Credit Score This is a key detail for a couple reasons.

Final Thoughts

It's unfortunate that the Citi product change rules aren't what they once were. Citi used to offer the greatest flexibility of any major bank. Many people have taken great advantage of Citi's broad rules over the years, converting cards to discontinued products or to another family etirely.

A product change is still a great way to pick up a card you want without a sign-up bonus, such as the Costco Anywhere Visa® Card by Citi. I do a decent amount of Costco shopping, and a product change is likely how I'll eventually get a Costco credit card. As long as Citi still allows this. But at the moment, I don't want to surrender any of my cards that earn ThankYou points.

For rates and fees of the cards mentioned in this post, please visit the following links: Citi Strata Premier® Card (Rates & Fees), and Citi Double Cash® Card (Rates & Fees)

AwardWallet Tip of The Day
Did you know that if someone else accesses your AwardWallet account, you will see an alert at the bottom of the page? Clicking that alert will show you all the current sessions accessing your account. If you see something that doesn’t make sense, you can log the other sessions out and change your AwardWallet password. We highly recommend enabling two-factor authentication on your account for increased security.
Show me how

The comments on this page are not provided, reviewed, or otherwise approved by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments

    What are the rules around how frequently you can product change a card? I have a card that I product changed twice in a short time, then I changed my mind and tried to change it a third time but they said I couldn’t. I’m wondering how long I have to wait before I’ll be able to.

    Insightful! I had no idea you could convert an existing card to the Costco card. It looks like there was some confusion among some Citi reps back in 2024 from past comments. Do we know if the official word is that you can still do this, as of June 2025?

    Jonathan S says:

    Hi, I just called Citi to convert my MileUp to a Double Cash and the rep said that I couldn’t do that. Does that make sense?

      That does make sense. Typically issuers require cardholders to stay within the same “family” and you’re looking to switch an AA card to a Citi-branded card.

    Fenspinbi says:

    It is NOT possible to PC from/to the Costco Visa. I HUCA’d Citi twice, and got the same straightforward answer. It’s a standalone product and a dead-end in terms of conversions. You can only close the account.

      Ryan Smith says:

      Thanks for your comment. This surprises me, though, because I personally changed from the Citi AAdvantage Platinum Select to the Costco card. I’m going to reach out to Citi’s PR team to inquire about this to see if something has changed.

        I tried to change from custom cash to Costco, and they wouldn’t let me do that either.

          Ryan Smith says:

          Hi Elaine, it seems like the phone reps are mistaken. If you have a Costco membership, this is the official word: Other Citi cards can convert to a Costco card if the customer has a Costco membership. This has been in place since launch and we have not made any changes.

            Terrific, I’ll call back. The guy I talked to seemed really on the ball, but everyone makes mistakes!

      Ryan Smith says:

      Confirmed that there haven’t been any changes. You can’t change from the Costco card to another card (just close the account) but still can change from other Citi cards to the Costco card if you have an existing Costco account.

    I think you should have mentioned the strategies of product changing so you can apply for a new card, such as Citi Premier. I changed my Citi Premier to a Custom Cash, so I could preserve that line of credit. Then applied for a new Premier with a 80K SUB.

    But again no one mentions the Sears Mastercard that earns Thank You points. That card has so many incredible bonuses that it has become my biggest earner of TYPs. I am not sure if one can product change to it. But it is an outstanding card. This past year, the Sears card had a promotion for home improvements. It was 16X TYP for a minimum of $1k purchases at any home improvement store. I earned 80K for that promotion, mostly by buying gift cards at Lowes.

    I’m assuming you can’t PC from a CitiBusiness Platinum Select to a Citi double cash back CC?

      I haven’t heard of someone switching from a small business to a personal card… but it’s worth a shot!

    If card number changes, then would this be also reported to the credit report as a new account? I attempted to change product and rep mentioned that number will be changed. So I just asked to hold, because I was worried if this change could be reported as a new account, which harms my report in terms of keeping under 5/24 for Chase card. Any idea or info?

      Josh – I can tell you from my personal experience doing this 3 times that it never reported as a new account on my credit report.