ICICI Bank has quietly redrawn the value map for millions of credit card users, cutting select rewards and capping point earnings from February 1, a move that directly affects everyday spends like travel, transport, and movies.
The private lender confirmed changes to its retail credit card portfolio that include the removal of some popular benefits and tighter limits on reward earnings across key spending categories. The revisions apply from February 1 and affect both entry-level and premium cardholders, though the impact varies by card type.
BookMyShow movie benefit removed on select cards
One of the most visible changes is the removal of the complimentary BookMyShow movie benefit from ICICI Bank’s Instant Platinum Credit Card variants.
For years, free or discounted movie tickets have been among the most used perks on entry-level cards. From February 1, Instant Platinum users will no longer receive this benefit, effectively ending one of the card’s strongest lifestyle attractions.
However, ICICI Bank clarified that BookMyShow benefits are not being eliminated entirely.
Cards that already operate under a spending-linked structure will continue to offer movie ticket benefits, provided users meet the minimum quarterly spending thresholds set under the revised rewards framework that is already in force.
This means movie perks are now firmly tied to spending behavior rather than being automatic.

New reward caps hit transport spends
Another major change affects reward point earnings on transportation-related spending, an area where many users rack up frequent transactions.
ICICI Bank has introduced monthly caps on reward points earned from transport spends, including rail bookings and public transport payments. The limits vary based on the card category and merchant classification.
The bank says the move is aimed at aligning reward payouts with usage patterns, but it reduces upside for heavy commuters and frequent travelers.
Here is how the revised transport reward caps break down:
| Card Category | Monthly Reward Cap on Transport Spends |
|---|---|
| Premium cards like Rubyx, Sapphiro, Emeralde | Up to ₹20,000 |
| Entry-level and mid-tier cards like Coral, Platinum | Up to ₹10,000 |
The exact cap applied may also depend on the merchant category code used by the transport provider.
For users who rely on credit cards for daily metro travel, train tickets, or recurring transport expenses, this change means fewer reward points once the monthly cap is reached.
Entry-level users face sharper impact
The reward cap changes are expected to be felt most strongly by entry-level and mid-tier cardholders.
Cards such as Coral and Platinum are widely used for routine spends, including commuting and small-ticket travel purchases. With the lower ₹10,000 monthly cap, users who cross that limit early in the month will no longer earn points on additional transport transactions.
For premium cardholders, the higher ₹20,000 cap offers more breathing room, but even that represents a ceiling where earlier there was often no defined monthly limit.
This marks a shift from open-ended reward accumulation to controlled earning, even on cards positioned as travel friendly.
Insurance spends remain largely protected
While transport and entertainment perks have taken a hit, ICICI Bank has chosen not to cut back on rewards for insurance-related transactions.
From February onward, eligible cardholders will continue to earn reward points on insurance premium payments, subject to existing earn rates and card-specific limits.
On select cards such as the HPCL Super Saver Credit Card, users can earn reward points on insurance spends of up to ₹40,000 per month.
This decision offers relief to customers who use credit cards to pay for life, health, or motor insurance, which often involve large, recurring payments.
A single sentence here says a lot.
Insurance remains one of the few high-value categories where ICICI Bank is still encouraging card-based payments.
Part of a broader rewards reset
The February changes do not stand alone. ICICI Bank had already implemented a wider set of credit card revisions earlier in January, signaling a broader recalibration of its rewards strategy.
Across the industry, banks are tightening benefits on low-margin spends while pushing users toward milestone-based rewards and higher spending thresholds.
For ICICI Bank, the latest update continues that trend by:
Removing flat lifestyle perks on entry-level cards
Placing caps on high-frequency, low-margin spend categories
Preserving rewards on categories that drive higher transaction value
The pattern suggests a focus on cost control without fully stripping cards of their core utility.
What this means for cardholders
For customers, these changes mean it is time to reassess how each card fits into daily spending habits.
Users who primarily valued movie benefits on Instant Platinum cards may now find less reason to hold or use the card actively. Frequent commuters may need to track transport spends more closely to understand when reward earnings stop for the month.
At the same time, those paying insurance premiums via credit cards continue to enjoy stable rewards, making that category a key area where card usage still pays off.
The biggest shift is psychological. Rewards are no longer assumed. They must be earned through planned spending.
As banks tighten benefits and link perks more closely to usage thresholds, customers who stay informed stand to lose less value.
What do you think about ICICI Bank’s latest credit card changes? Are tighter reward caps fair in today’s market, or do they reduce the appeal of everyday card use? Share your thoughts and pass this article along to friends who rely on credit cards for daily spending.

















