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HDFC Regalia Gold vs Axis Atlas

Manu_CK

TF Buzz
I tried to compare Regalia Gold and Atlas with some numbers (which is derived from my spending pattern) using Chat GPT. My prompt is the following

Can you compare HDFC Regalia Gold and Axis Atlas
- Compare the features
- Compare Exclusions
- Calculate the rewards in INR and reward percentage

My spend details are
- Total 8 lakhs a year
- Minimum 1.5 lakh spends in a calendar quarter
- Airline tickets + Hotel spend → <= 2 Lakhs
- Entertainment + Eating out → <= 1 lakhs
- Fuel → 90000
- Other spends will be → School fees, Insurance Payments, Government Utilities, Miscellaneous

  • Consider Reg Gold rewards points at 0.50/-
  • Consider the card renewal charges in the calculation. If the fees are waived off, consider it as 0/-
  • Consider the normal calculations and ACCOR transfer scenarios both

The answer I got is a bit surprising. For the above numbers, Regalia has the upper hand on Atlas.



4. Reward Calculation (Normal Value)

HDFC Regalia Gold (₹0.50 / RP)

  1. Flights + Hotels via SmartBuy (5X)
    • Base: (₹2,00,000 ÷ ₹150) × 4 = 5,333 RP
    • 5X = 26,665 RP → Value = ₹13,333
    • (₹1,00,000 ÷ ₹150) × 4 = 2,666 RP → ₹1,333
  2. Total Value (before fee) = ₹13,333 + ₹1,333 + ₹5,466 + ₹16,000 = ₹36,132
  3. Fee after waiver check → Spend > ₹4L → Fee waived = ₹0
  4. Final Value = ₹36,132 (Yield = 4.52%)



Axis Atlas (₹1 / EM)

  1. Flights + Hotels (5 EM/₹100)
    • ₹2,00,000 ÷ ₹100 × 5 = 10,000 EM → ₹10,000
    • ₹1,00,000 ÷ ₹100 × 2 = 2,000 EM → ₹2,000
  2. Total Value (before fee) = ₹10,000 + ₹2,000 + ₹8,200 + ₹5,000 = ₹25,200
  3. Fee after waiver check → Spend < ₹15L → Fee = ₹5,000 + GST = ₹5,900
  4. Final Value = ₹19,300 (Yield = 2.41%)



5. Reward Calculation (Accor Transfer Scenario)

Assumptions:
  • HDFC Regalia Gold (2 RP = 1 ALL Point ≈ ₹1 → same as ₹0.50/RP)
  • Axis Atlas: ₹1.80 / EM when transferred to Accor ALL (1 EM = 2 ALL points, 2 ALL points = €0.04)

HDFC Regalia Gold (₹0.50 / RP)

  • No change from normal: ₹36132 net, 4.52% yield.



Axis Atlas (₹1.80 / EM)

  • Points from normal calculation: 25,200 EM equivalent
  • Value = 25,200 × 2 × ₹1.80 = ₹90720
  • Milestones (in EM) already included in above
  • Fee = ₹5,900
  • Final Value = ₹84820 (Yield = 10.6%)



6. Summary Table


CardNormal ValueNormal YieldAccor ValueAccor Yield
HDFC Regalia Gold₹36,1324.52%₹36,1324.52%
Axis Atlas₹19,3002.41%₹84,82010.60%



n.b., Clear side by side comparison.
 
Last edited:
Thanks bro. I am also in the same situation. I have many cards, but last month I got Atlas, and all of my core spends are now moved to Atlas.
With my relationship with HDFC I think I will get RG FYF sometime this year. (Or at the best DCB, but chances are less)
I am planning to consolidate my card strategy with these 2 core cards alone.

I will write a detailed post on how I will use these two cards.
(Only now, after spending 2-3 years + using so many cashback and LTF cards, only now I got some clarity on how to consolidate and move forward).
One good thing I realized is that we need to take cards as per our spend categories and where/how we need returns, and not anything else.


Almost the same case here. Using credit cards since 2005 but I believe I was living under a rock this long 🙁 . I had good enough spends over the years and I believe I wasted them. Only learnt about the points and how to categorize spends since last year; still learning.

Have many cards now (8), but will be reducing them to 3.
1. AMEX Plat Travel → 4L
2. HDFC Reg Gold → 5L
3. Axis Atlas → Rest everything

n.b. RG gets a bigger chunk now because of SmartBuy. If Axis counterparts are better, will definitely re-align the numbers.
 
@cardio_guy Attaching the excel sheet for calculations
Super. Thanks a lot.
Small suggestion:
If you want, you can make it a public google sheet and share the link so that people can work online.
Make sure your copy is not editable, people can just make copy and work on it.
Experts can give further suggestions on finetuning and correcting mistakes if any.

Tagging some people for visibility and support.
@hender @jk51 @Fini7777 @Sriim @S U D O @Z_S @SSquad @Jatayu @CodeCrusher @panchabhut @the_collector
 
@Manu_CK @cardio_guy @hellowo₹ld @HumorSimpson
Looks good — you did some solid number crunching 👌. On paper the math is fine, but in reality things don’t always play out the same. For example, I’ve often noticed fares on HDFC SmartBuy are inflated compared to airline sites or OTAs, so the “real” return feels lower than what the reward % suggests. That’s why I never fully trust just the numbers.

From my experience, it really depends case-to-case. Sometimes Regalia Gold gives better value, and other times Atlas pulls ahead. The one thing I’ll agree on — Atlas has a stronger transfer ratio (esp. for Accor and airline partners), but it can be unpredictable with frequent T&C changes.

I currently use both HDFC RG and Atlas, and I’ll soon be trying HSBC TravelOne too. Early feedback says HSBC shows more competitive fares and lower convenience fees than HDFC or Axis, so I’m curious how that plays out.

I’m not a hardcore “miles gamer,” but here are some common mistakes most of us make with these cards:
  1. Spending big but not using the best redemption routes.
  2. Believing reward numbers blindly — real value depends heavily on where/how you redeem.
  3. Flight fares + convenience fees are critical — since most of us redeem for travel, they can make or break the ROI.
  4. Focusing only on reward % instead of net return.
So yeah, the math is a great reference point, but the actual value depends on redemption choices, pricing quirks, and even convenience fees.

My Suggestions:
  • Consider Atlas if you’re into Accor stays, or if you can hit milestones and enjoy tier-based benefits. Some airline partners (like Air India) also give decent value on transfers — though it depends on the route.
  • HDFC Regalia Gold is solid for medium spenders, and if you get it LTF, it’s hard to beat.
  • HSBC TravelOne is worth a shot if you book flights via their partner TAs or directly from the HSBC app.
 
@Manu_CK @cardio_guy @hellowo₹ld @HumorSimpson
Looks good — you did some solid number crunching 👌. On paper the math is fine, but in reality things don’t always play out the same. For example, I’ve often noticed fares on HDFC SmartBuy are inflated compared to airline sites or OTAs, so the “real” return feels lower than what the reward % suggests. That’s why I never fully trust just the numbers.

From my experience, it really depends case-to-case. Sometimes Regalia Gold gives better value, and other times Atlas pulls ahead. The one thing I’ll agree on — Atlas has a stronger transfer ratio (esp. for Accor and airline partners), but it can be unpredictable with frequent T&C changes.

I currently use both HDFC RG and Atlas, and I’ll soon be trying HSBC TravelOne too. Early feedback says HSBC shows more competitive fares and lower convenience fees than HDFC or Axis, so I’m curious how that plays out.

I’m not a hardcore “miles gamer,” but here are some common mistakes most of us make with these cards:
  1. Spending big but not using the best redemption routes.
  2. Believing reward numbers blindly — real value depends heavily on where/how you redeem.
  3. Flight fares + convenience fees are critical — since most of us redeem for travel, they can make or break the ROI.
  4. Focusing only on reward % instead of net return.
So yeah, the math is a great reference point, but the actual value depends on redemption choices, pricing quirks, and even convenience fees.

My Suggestions:
  • Consider Atlas if you’re into Accor stays, or if you can hit milestones and enjoy tier-based benefits. Some airline partners (like Air India) also give decent value on transfers — though it depends on the route.
  • HDFC Regalia Gold is solid for medium spenders, and if you get it LTF, it’s hard to beat.
  • HSBC TravelOne is worth a shot if you book flights via their partner TAs or directly from the HSBC app.

to eat some more of your brain time 😉

Thread 'Is Your Credit Card Worth the Fee? A Guide to Evaluating Net Rewards' https://www.technofino.in/community...-fee-a-guide-to-evaluating-net-rewards.25803/
 
@Manu_CK @cardio_guy @hellowo₹ld @HumorSimpson
Looks good — you did some solid number crunching 👌. On paper the math is fine, but in reality things don’t always play out the same. For example, I’ve often noticed fares on HDFC SmartBuy are inflated compared to airline sites or OTAs, so the “real” return feels lower than what the reward % suggests. That’s why I never fully trust just the numbers.

From my experience, it really depends case-to-case. Sometimes Regalia Gold gives better value, and other times Atlas pulls ahead. The one thing I’ll agree on — Atlas has a stronger transfer ratio (esp. for Accor and airline partners), but it can be unpredictable with frequent T&C changes.

I currently use both HDFC RG and Atlas, and I’ll soon be trying HSBC TravelOne too. Early feedback says HSBC shows more competitive fares and lower convenience fees than HDFC or Axis, so I’m curious how that plays out.

I’m not a hardcore “miles gamer,” but here are some common mistakes most of us make with these cards:
  1. Spending big but not using the best redemption routes.
  2. Believing reward numbers blindly — real value depends heavily on where/how you redeem.
  3. Flight fares + convenience fees are critical — since most of us redeem for travel, they can make or break the ROI.
  4. Focusing only on reward % instead of net return.
So yeah, the math is a great reference point, but the actual value depends on redemption choices, pricing quirks, and even convenience fees.

My Suggestions:
  • Consider Atlas if you’re into Accor stays, or if you can hit milestones and enjoy tier-based benefits. Some airline partners (like Air India) also give decent value on transfers — though it depends on the route.
  • HDFC Regalia Gold is solid for medium spenders, and if you get it LTF, it’s hard to beat.
  • HSBC TravelOne is worth a shot if you book flights via their partner TAs or directly from the HSBC app.

agree. one thing I only consider whether that credit card worth the fee or not only after redemption.

for cashback its straight, for voucher upto 20% discount value, for hotel or flight booking same location, similar hotel or flight fares.

but that can only be known after redemption and for majority multiple years, until then they have to start somewhere and that needs numbers.

so, IMO these calculations helps them to choose best one. Providing both low and high numbers means they can expect their final net return in that range and can only be procced if they satisfied with it.

because we dont know whether they take Indigo or Vistara, marriot or accor or Oyo..
 
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