Hero image for Robinhood Platinum Card vs Gold Card: Is the $695 Annual Fee Worth It?
By Personal Finance Tools Team

Robinhood Platinum Card vs Gold Card: Is the $695 Annual Fee Worth It?


The Robinhood Gold Card was one of the best no-annual-fee cash back cards in recent memory. Flat 3% on everything. No categories to track, no quarterly activations, no spending caps. Just swipe and get 3% back.

Then Robinhood launched the Platinum Card with a $695 annual fee and a bunch of premium perks. And here’s the catch nobody’s talking about enough: if you upgrade from Gold to Platinum, you lose that 3% flat cash back entirely. The Platinum’s base rate drops to 1%.

That’s not a minor detail. It changes the entire math.

Quick Verdict

AspectRating
Value for High Spenders★★★☆☆
Value for Average Spenders★★☆☆☆
Dining/Travel Rewards★★★★☆
Everyday Spending Rewards★★☆☆☆

Best for: Heavy spenders who put $8,000+ per year on hotels/rental cars AND $6,000+ on dining, and who actively use DoorDash Skip if: You spend less than $50K/year, your spending is spread across everyday categories, or you already have the Gold Card and love the 3% flat rate Price: $695/year (Gold Card: $0/year) The catch: Upgrading from Gold eliminates 3% flat cash back; Platinum base rate is 1%

The Cards Side by Side

Before getting into strategy, here’s what each card actually offers:

FeatureGold CardPlatinum Card
Annual fee$0$695
Base cash back3% on everything1% on everything
Dining3%5%
Hotels3%10%
Rental cars3%10%
DoorDash creditNone$250/year
Airport lounge accessNoneYes (Priority Pass)
TSA PreCheck/Global EntryNoneCredit every 4.5 years
Travel insuranceNoneTrip delay, lost luggage
Sign-up bonusNoneNone

Two things jump out immediately. First, the Platinum has no sign-up bonus. Most premium cards in the $695-$895 range offer $500-$1,000+ in first-year value to offset the fee. The Amex Platinum ($895) typically offers 80,000-150,000 points. The Chase Sapphire Reserve ($795) launched with 50,000 points. Robinhood gives you nothing upfront.

Second, the Gold Card’s 3% flat rate is genuinely hard to beat. Most cash back cards cap their bonus categories at 1-2% on non-category spending. Getting 3% on groceries, gas, Amazon, rent payments through Plastiq, everywhere. That’s unusual value. If you’ve been using the Gold Card alongside Robinhood’s brokerage to build an investment habit, that 3% cash back has been quietly fueling your portfolio. Losing it hurts.

The Break-Even Math

This is where most people’s decision should start and end. When does spending $695/year on the Platinum actually return more money than keeping the free Gold Card?

The Gold Card earns 3% on all spending. Simple.

The Platinum Card earns:

  • 5% on dining (2% more than Gold)
  • 10% on hotels (7% more than Gold)
  • 10% on rental cars (7% more than Gold)
  • 1% on everything else (2% LESS than Gold)
  • $250 DoorDash credit (if you’d use DoorDash anyway)

So you’re paying $695 for higher category rates but giving up 2% on all non-category spending. Every dollar you spend outside dining, hotels, and rental cars earns you 2 cents less than the Gold Card. That’s a drag on the entire card.

Scenario 1: Average U.S. Spending ($30,000/year on credit cards)

Let’s say you put $30,000/year on the card with a fairly typical breakdown:

  • Dining: $4,800/year ($400/month)
  • Hotels: $1,200/year (a few trips)
  • Rental cars: $600/year
  • Everything else: $23,400/year

Gold Card earnings: $30,000 x 3% = $900

Platinum Card earnings:

  • Dining: $4,800 x 5% = $240
  • Hotels: $1,200 x 10% = $120
  • Rental cars: $600 x 10% = $60
  • Everything else: $23,400 x 1% = $234
  • DoorDash credit: $250
  • Total: $904
  • Minus $695 fee: $209 net

Gold Card wins by $691.

That’s not close. For a typical spender, the Gold Card earns $900 in cash back for free while the Platinum nets you $209 after fees. You’d need to fundamentally restructure your spending to make the Platinum work.

Scenario 2: Heavy Travel Spender ($60,000/year)

Now let’s look at someone who travels constantly for work and puts serious money through the card:

  • Dining: $12,000/year ($1,000/month)
  • Hotels: $8,000/year
  • Rental cars: $3,000/year
  • Everything else: $37,000/year

Gold Card earnings: $60,000 x 3% = $1,800

Platinum Card earnings:

  • Dining: $12,000 x 5% = $600
  • Hotels: $8,000 x 10% = $800
  • Rental cars: $3,000 x 10% = $300
  • Everything else: $37,000 x 1% = $370
  • DoorDash credit: $250
  • Total: $2,320
  • Minus $695 fee: $1,625 net

Gold Card still wins by $175.

Even at $60,000/year with heavy travel spending, the Gold Card comes out ahead. The 2% drag on non-category spending is that significant.

Scenario 3: The Platinum Actually Wins

For the Platinum to beat the Gold, you need extremely concentrated spending in the bonus categories. Something like:

  • Dining: $15,000/year
  • Hotels: $12,000/year
  • Rental cars: $5,000/year
  • Everything else: $18,000/year
  • Total: $50,000/year

Gold Card: $50,000 x 3% = $1,500

Platinum Card:

  • Dining: $15,000 x 5% = $750
  • Hotels: $12,000 x 10% = $1,200
  • Rental cars: $5,000 x 10% = $500
  • Everything else: $18,000 x 1% = $180
  • DoorDash: $250
  • Total: $2,880 - $695 = $2,185 net

Platinum wins by $685. But you’re spending $32,000/year on dining, hotels, and rental cars. That’s a very specific lifestyle. Think consultant or sales professional who travels four days a week and expenses everything to a personal card.

How It Stacks Up Against Amex Platinum and Chase Sapphire Reserve

If you’re considering a $695 premium card, you’re also looking at these:

Robinhood Platinum ($695/year)

  • Sign-up bonus: None
  • Dining: 5% cash back
  • Hotels: 10% cash back
  • Airport lounges: Priority Pass
  • Airline credits: None
  • Hotel credits: None
  • Streaming credit: None

Amex Platinum ($895/year)

  • Sign-up bonus: 80K-150K pts (varies)
  • Dining: 1x (5x at eligible restaurants via Resy)
  • Hotels: 5x at prepaid FHR/THC
  • Airport lounges: Centurion + Priority Pass + Delta + more
  • Airline credits: $200 airline incidental
  • Hotel credits: $200 hotel credit (FHR)
  • Streaming credit: $240/year

Chase Sapphire Reserve ($795/year)

  • Sign-up bonus: 50K-60K pts
  • Dining: 3x points ($0.045/dollar)
  • Hotels: 10x on hotels via portal
  • Airport lounges: Priority Pass
  • Airline credits: $300 travel credit
  • Hotel credits: None
  • Streaming credit: None

The Amex Platinum costs $200 more but comes with better lounge access (Centurion lounges are significantly better than Priority Pass options), a sign-up bonus worth $800-$1,500 depending on redemption, $200 in airline credits, $200 in hotel credits, and $240 in streaming credits. Those credits, if you’d use them naturally, offset most of the fee before you earn a single point.

The Chase Sapphire Reserve costs $100 more but includes a sign-up bonus worth $750+ through the Chase travel portal, a $300 travel credit that’s easy to use, and points transferable to airline and hotel partners. If you fly a specific airline or stay at specific hotels, Chase points can be worth 2-4 cents each through transfers, far more than 1:1 cash back.

Robinhood’s advantage is simplicity. Cash back, not points. No transfer partners to optimize, no portal to book through, no credits that expire or require specific merchants. 10% on hotels is the highest flat cash back rate you’ll find on any card right now if you book hotels frequently and want cash, not points.

But the missing sign-up bonus is hard to overlook. That’s $800-$1,500 in year-one value you’re leaving on the table compared to Amex or Chase.

The DoorDash Credit: Real Value or Manufactured Spending?

The $250/year DoorDash credit breaks down to about $20.83/month. If you already order DoorDash regularly, it’s essentially a $250 reduction in the effective annual fee, bringing it to $445.

But “if you already order DoorDash” is doing a lot of work in that sentence. DoorDash meals typically cost 30-40% more than restaurant pickup once you add delivery fees, service fees, and tip. If the credit causes you to order DoorDash when you’d otherwise cook or pick up, you’re not saving $250. You’re spending more money on marked-up food delivery and calling it a perk.

Be honest with yourself about whether you’d spend that money on DoorDash regardless. If yes, count the full $250. If no, discount it heavily or ignore it.

Who Should Upgrade (and Who Shouldn’t)

The Platinum makes sense if you check ALL of these:

  • You spend $8,000+ per year on hotels booked directly
  • You spend $6,000+ per year on dining
  • You already use DoorDash for $250+/year
  • You value airport lounge access and don’t have it through another card
  • You don’t want to deal with points, transfer partners, or booking portals

Keep the Gold Card if ANY of these apply:

  • Your spending is spread across many categories (groceries, gas, online shopping, bills)
  • You spend less than $50,000/year on credit cards total
  • You’d rather have guaranteed 3% on everything than chase higher rates on specific categories
  • You don’t travel enough for the hotel/lounge perks to matter
  • You’re already automating your savings and the Gold Card’s simplicity fits your system

The Two-Card Strategy

Here’s what Robinhood probably doesn’t want you to think about: you might not have to choose.

If Robinhood allows you to hold both the Gold Card and the Platinum Card simultaneously (their terms currently don’t explicitly prohibit it, though this could change), the optimal play is obvious:

  • Use the Platinum for dining, hotels, and rental cars
  • Use the Gold for everything else at 3%

You’d pay $695/year for the Platinum but only run high-bonus spending through it, avoiding the 1% penalty on everyday purchases. On Scenario 2’s numbers:

  • Platinum categories: $600 (dining) + $800 (hotels) + $300 (rental cars) + $250 (DoorDash) = $1,950 - $695 = $1,255 net
  • Gold for everything else: $37,000 x 3% = $1,110
  • Combined: $2,365 vs. Gold-only’s $1,800

That’s $565 more per year. Not bad. But it requires holding two cards and remembering which to use when, which defeats the simplicity that made the Gold Card appealing in the first place.

Check Robinhood’s current terms before trying this. Card issuers frequently update their policies about holding multiple products.

The Bigger Picture for Your Wallet

A credit card is a tool for spending money you’re already going to spend. If you’re carrying a balance, none of this matters because the interest rate on either card will dwarf any cash back you earn. (And your credit score takes a hit from high utilization regardless of what perks you’re chasing.) Pay off the statement in full every month or pick a strategy to eliminate that debt first.

If you’re using the Robinhood Gold Card today and it’s working, the Platinum probably isn’t worth the switch. The Gold Card’s 3% flat cash back is exceptional, and the Platinum’s higher category rates don’t overcome the fee plus the 2% drop on everyday spending unless your lifestyle heavily skews toward dining and hotels.

The Platinum Card isn’t bad. The 10% hotel rate and 5% dining rate are legitimately strong. But you’re paying $695 for the privilege of earning less on most of your spending, with no sign-up bonus to cushion the first year.

For most people reading this, the Gold Card is the better financial tool. If you’re the kind of spender who’d benefit from the Platinum, you probably already know it—and you’re comparing it against the Amex Platinum or Chase Sapphire Reserve, not against keeping the Gold.

If you’re still on the fence, track your last 12 months of dining and hotel spending. A good budgeting app can pull that data in minutes. Run the actual numbers. The math will tell you what marketing won’t.


Rates, fees, and card features verified March 2026. Robinhood credit cards are issued by Coastal Community Bank, Member FDIC. Terms may change—verify current offers at robinhood.com before applying.