Bonus Abuse
Bonus abuse is the practice of players systematically exploiting promotional offers -- such as welcome bonuses, free spins, or deposit matches -- to extract value with minimal risk or genuine play.
What it means in practice
Bonus abuse occurs when players systematically exploit promotional offers to extract value rather than engaging in genuine play. This includes techniques like matched betting (using deposit bonuses on both sides of an outcome to lock in profit), multi-accounting (creating multiple accounts to claim welcome bonuses repeatedly), and bonus scalping (meeting minimum wagering requirements with low-risk bets designed to preserve as much bonus value as possible). While some bonus optimization is expected player behavior, systematic abuse at scale drains operator revenue.
Bonus abuse has a direct and often underestimated impact on affiliate programs. When bonus abusers are attributed to an affiliate, the costs of the exploited bonuses are deducted from NGR, reducing the revenue pool that determines RevShare payouts. In extreme cases, heavy bonus abuse on an affiliate's referred players can trigger negative carryover, where the affiliate earns nothing for the period because bonus costs and player winnings exceed net revenue. This means legitimate affiliates can suffer financially when their traffic is mixed with or contaminated by bonus abusers.
Operators detect and prevent bonus abuse through multiple layers. Wagering requirements are the first line of defense, making it harder to withdraw bonus funds without genuine play. Bonus-to-deposit ratio monitoring flags accounts that deposit only the minimum needed to trigger bonuses. Player behavior pattern analysis identifies accounts that consistently exhibit low-risk, bonus-maximizing play styles. Qualification rules can also be applied at the affiliate level, holding commissions on referred players who show signs of bonus abuse until their activity is verified as legitimate.
How Bonus Abuse works across industries
See how bonus abuse is applied in the verticals Track360 supports, from qualification logic and payout structure to the operational context behind each model.
How Track360 handles this
Track360 provides fraud detection capabilities that help operators identify patterns of bonus abuse among referred players, flag suspicious affiliate traffic, and apply qualification rules to protect RevShare payouts from being eroded by promotional exploitation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about bonus abuse, how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.
Bonus abuse is the systematic exploitation of promotional offers by players who aim to extract value rather than engage in genuine play. Common tactics include multi-accounting to claim welcome bonuses multiple times, matched betting to lock in profit from promotions, and wagering bonus funds exclusively on low-risk bets to preserve the bonus value. It costs operators significant revenue and distorts affiliate program economics.
Related Terms
Deposit Bonus
A promotional incentive offered by an iGaming operator to new or existing players, typically matching a percentage of their deposit amount as bonus funds with wagering requirements.
Wagering Requirement
A multiplier condition that determines how many times a player must wager bonus funds before those funds become withdrawable. Wagering requirements directly affect operator bonus costs and affiliate RevShare earnings.
Negative Carryover
Negative carryover is a policy where a negative revenue balance from one period is rolled into the next period and offsets future affiliate earnings before new commissions are paid out.
NGR (Net Gaming Revenue)
NGR is the revenue that remains after an operator deducts costs such as bonuses, taxes, and platform fees from GGR. It is a common base for RevShare calculations in iGaming affiliate programs.
Affiliate Fraud
Affiliate fraud is the deliberate manipulation of affiliate tracking, attribution, or conversion data to earn commissions that were not legitimately generated.
Qualification Rules
Qualification rules are the conditions a referred customer must meet before the affiliate earns a commission, such as minimum deposit amounts, wagering requirements, or identity verification.
Multi-Accounting Fraud
Multi-accounting fraud occurs when a single person creates multiple accounts to exploit bonuses, inflate referral counts, or manipulate program rules.
No Deposit Bonus
A no deposit bonus is a promotional offer where new players receive bonus funds or free spins upon registration without needing to deposit money first.
Matched Betting
Matched betting is a technique where bettors exploit free bet promotions by placing opposing wagers to extract guaranteed profit from sportsbook bonuses.
Bonus Laundering
Bonus laundering is a fraud pattern where bad actors exploit promotional offers to extract cash from an operator by meeting wagering requirements through low-risk betting strategies.
Continue Learning
Free structured courses that cover this topic and more.
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