The honest Canadian verdict first
Canada is the one market where I’d steer most people away from both the Platinum and the Gold — because the Cobalt quietly out-earns them for normal spending. So before the Platinum’s prestige pulls you in: unless you fly often enough to use its lounges and credits, the Cobalt is almost certainly the better card. Here’s the full Canadian lineup, honestly ranked.
The Canadian Amex lineup compared
| Card | Annual fee (CA) | Rewards | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | $191.88 ($15.99/mo) | Membership Rewards | Dining & groceries (best value) |
| Platinum | $799 | Membership Rewards | Frequent flyers (lounges, status) |
| Gold Rewards | $250 | Membership Rewards | Travel all-rounder |
| SimplyCash (no fee) | $0 | Cash back | Free, everyday spend |
Fees change — confirm current terms on the application page.
Cobalt — the value star
The card most Canadians should look at first: rich Membership Rewards on dining, groceries and food delivery, billed monthly at $15.99. For anyone who spends meaningfully on food, it usually pays for itself. The fee rose to $191.88/year in late 2025, but the earn rate still leads the lineup.
Platinum — for frequent flyers
The American Express Global Lounge Collection, hotel status and annual travel and dining credits. At CAD $799/year it only pays if you’ll use the lounges and credits. See the Amex Platinum review .
Gold Rewards & no-fee — the alternatives
The Gold Rewards ($250) is a solid travel all-rounder with bonus categories and a travel credit. And if you’d rather pay nothing, a no-fee card like SimplyCash earns straightforward cash back — less than the Cobalt, but free.
The one-question test
Count last year’s airport visits. Double digits → Platinum. You spend big on dining/groceries → Cobalt. You want a travel all-rounder → Gold Rewards. You want zero fee → SimplyCash. (Compare the broader points-vs-perks logic in Amex Platinum vs Gold .)
A note on the FX backup
Elsewhere I’d tell you to pair your Amex with Revolut for fee-free foreign spending — but Revolut isn’t currently available in Canada. Use a no-foreign-transaction-fee Canadian card (or a service like Wise) for spending abroad, and keep the Amex for points and protection. The general logic is in Amex vs Revolut .
Frequently Asked Questions
Which Amex card is best in Canada?
For most people, the Cobalt — its dining and grocery points lead the lineup. The Platinum suits frequent flyers, the Gold Rewards is a solid all-rounder, and SimplyCash works if you want zero fee.
Is there a no-fee Amex in Canada?
Yes — no-fee cards like SimplyCash (cash back) and no-fee Membership Rewards options. They earn less than the Cobalt but cost nothing.
Is the Amex Cobalt worth it?
For most, yes — strong points on dining, groceries and food delivery at ~$15.99/month. The fee rose to $191.88/year in late 2025.
Verdict
In Canada: food-and-everyday spender → Cobalt; frequent flyer → Platinum; all-rounder → Gold Rewards; fee-averse → SimplyCash. Compare the current offers below.