iGaming affiliate deals explained: CPA vs RevShare vs Hybrid

If you’re new to iGaming affiliate marketing, “deal types” can feel confusing because two offers can look identical…

Vit S Dec 17, 2025 0 Comments 6 min read
iGaming affiliate deals explained: CPA vs RevShare vs Hybrid

If you’re new to iGaming affiliate marketing, “deal types” can feel confusing because two offers can look identical (e.g., 30% RevShare) yet pay very differently.

The reason is simple: The headline model matters, but the definitions and rules in the terms matter more.

Most disputes (and most “surprises”) come from how a program defines FTD, NGR, deductions, and whether it applies negative carryover or a high-roller policy.

This guide explains the main deal types and shows you, with numbers, how to evaluate them.

 

Quick glossary

  • CPA: you get a fixed payout for a qualified acquisition (very often a First Time Depositor / FTD).
  • FTD: a first-time deposit (often used as the qualifying event for CPA).
  • RevShare: you earn a % of revenue generated by your players (usually based on NGR).
  • GGR: gross gaming revenue (commonly simplified as bets minus wins).
  • NGR: net gaming revenue (GGR minus deductions like bonuses, fees, chargebacks, taxes/ops costs depending on the agreement).
  • Negative carryover: if a month ends negative, that negative balance can roll into the next month and reduce future commissions.
  • High-roller policy: a “ring-fence” approach that isolates extreme wins so one player doesn’t distort earnings/revenue.

 

CPA deals (usually CPA on FTD)

What a CPA deal is

In iGaming, CPA most commonly means: you get paid when a referred user becomes an FTD (not just a registration). Programs often add activity requirements (minimum deposit, wagering, KYC completion, time window).

Why operators like CPA (operator-friendly view)

  • Predictable cost per acquisition (easy to budget).
  • Low long-term risk from player variance.
  • Works well for rapid scaling and testing new sources.

Why affiliates like CPA

  • Faster, predictable cash flow.
  • Less “month-to-month volatility” from big wins or retention swings.

Example: CPA deal

  1. Deal: €120 per qualified FTD
  2. You deliver: 20 qualified FTDs in a month
  3. Earnings = 20 × €120 = €2,400

What beginners must check

These aren’t “tricks”, they’re standard controls to protect both sides from fraud and low-quality traffic:

  • FTD definition (min deposit? must be “new customer”? time limit?)
  • Qualification rules (wagering, KYC, “first deposit only counts once”)
  • Hold period (payout is delayed while deposits/players are validated)
  • Chargebacks/fraud reversals (some CPA can be clawed back if the deposit is reversed or flagged)

Tip: Ask the AM for a one-liner: “What exactly counts as a qualified FTD for this CPA?”

 

RevShare deals (the compounding model)

What RevShare is

You earn a percentage of revenue from your referred players often based on NGR, not GGR.

Why operators like RevShare

  • Incentives align: affiliates are motivated to bring players who stick, not just quick deposits.
  • Risk is shared: if players don’t retain, operator isn’t locked into fixed CPA spend.

Why affiliates like RevShare

  • Long-term compounding: one good cohort can earn for months (or years).
  • Upside grows with retention + strong CRM.

The big question: “RevShare on what, GGR or NGR?”

Many programs describe NGR as GGR (bets – wins) minus bonuses, transaction fees, taxes and/or other operational costs defined in the agreement.

That means “30% RevShare” can vary massively depending on:

  • bonus policy
  • payment fees
  • chargebacks
  • taxes/ops deductions (if included)

Example: RevShare on NGR

  1. Assume your players in a month generate: GGR: €10,000
  2. Deductions (bonuses, fees, chargebacks, etc.): €3,000
  3. NGR: €7,000
  4. Deal: 30% RevShare on NGR
  5. Earnings = 0.30 × €7,000 = €2,100

RevShare “gotchas” to understand early

A) Negative carryover

If your players have a very lucky month (big win), the month can end negative. Some programs roll that negative into next month.

Example (how it feels in real life):

  • Month 1 NGR: €2,000 → commission negative/€0
  • If negative carryover applies, Month 2 starts at €2,000, so you must “earn back” before you get paid.

This isn’t automatically “bad”, it’s a risk-sharing mechanism but you must know whether it applies and how.

B) High-roller policy

High-roller policies are often described as ring-fencing to avoid revenue distortion from a single large win.

What varies is how it’s applied (thresholds, time windows, whether the player is isolated, etc.).

 

Hybrid deals (CPA + RevShare together)

What a Hybrid deal is

Hybrid combines:

  • an upfront CPA (usually for a qualified FTD), plus
  • ongoing RevShare on the same cohort.

This is increasingly popular because it’s a balanced model: affiliates get cash flow, operators keep quality incentives.

Example: Hybrid deal

  1. Deal: €60 CPA per qualified FTD + 20% RevShare (NGR)
  2. You deliver: 20 qualified FTDs → CPA = €1,200
  3. Same month NGR from those players: €4,000 → RevShare = €800
  4. Total = €2,000

What to verify in Hybrid

You’re effectively signing two deals at once, so check:

  • CPA qualification rules (FTD definition, wagering, KYC)
  • RevShare base (NGR definition and deductions)
  • negative carryover + high-roller policy on the RevShare portion

 

Other deal types you’ll run into

CPL (Cost per Lead)

Sometimes used where the “lead” is a registration (varies by offer), but in iGaming it’s often less common than CPA/FTD because a deposit is the true value event.

Tiered RevShare

Your % increases if you hit targets (FTDs, NGR levels). This can be great for scaling just verify what’s counted and whether targets reset monthly.

Flat fees / sponsorships

Big sites negotiate fixed placements. These are operator-friendly when you can guarantee exposure and compliance.

 

The 7 deal terms that matter most

Copy/paste these questions to an affiliate manager:

  1. Is CPA paid on registration or on FTD? What qualifies as a valid FTD?
  2. What is the hold period and when are conversions approved?
  3. Is RevShare calculated on GGR or NGR? Please share the NGR definition.
  4. Which deductions apply to NGR (bonuses, transaction fees, taxes, chargebacks)?
  5. Is there negative carryover? Full / partial / none?
  6. Do you use a high-roller policy (ring-fencing)? When does it trigger?
  7. Any traffic restrictions (geo, brand bidding, ad claims, compliance requirements)?

 

Which deal should a beginner choose?

Choose CPA if:

  • you need predictable cash flow
  • you’re testing traffic sources
  • you’re still learning which audiences convert

Choose RevShare if:

  • you have SEO/content traffic and can drive retention
  • you want long-term compounding income
  • you trust the operator’s product + CRM

Choose Hybrid if:

  • you want cash flow + long-term upside
  • you’re scaling steadily and want balanced risk

Note: A good program will often steer beginners toward CPA/Hybrid until traffic quality is proven, then open stronger RevShare tiers. That’s a healthy partnership dynamic.

 

Need help choosing or negotiating the right affiliate deal for your geo?

We’ve worked with multiple clients across different markets, including the Czech Republic (e.g. kasina s licencí) and can help align deal structure with traffic quality, regulation, and long-term performance.


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Vit S

Owner

With over 15 years of experience in graphic design and the past 8 years focused on full-stack development and WordPress specialization. At C9 Agency, I oversee web projects from concept to launch and occasionally share insights about new trends, tools, and innovations shaping the industry.

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