CPA (Cost Per Acquisition)
CPA is a commission model where an affiliate earns a fixed payment for each qualifying action, such as a deposit, registration, or purchase, that a referred user completes.
What it means in practice
CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) is one of the most common commission structures in affiliate and partner programs. The affiliate receives a one-time, fixed payout when a referred user completes a predefined action. That action varies by industry and program. It could be an FTD (First Time Deposit), an account registration, a funded account, or a completed purchase.
CPA is attractive to affiliates because earnings are predictable and immediate. There is no dependency on what the referred user does after converting. For operators, CPA simplifies budgeting but shifts long-term risk: if the acquired customer generates high LTV, the operator benefits disproportionately. If the customer churns quickly, the operator still paid the full CPA. Conversion events are typically confirmed through server-side postback calls that verify the action in real time.
In practice, CPA rates vary widely depending on the vertical, geography, and traffic quality. Compared to other pricing models like CPL, CPA ties payment to a deeper conversion event rather than a lead. Operators often combine CPA with qualification rules to protect against low-quality referrals, or blend it with RevShare (Revenue Share) inside a Hybrid Commission deal.
How CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) works across industries
See how cpa (cost per acquisition) 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 supports CPA deal configuration with per-partner rates, geographic conditions, and qualification rules. Operators can set different CPA values per vertical, per geography, or per partner tier, and combine them with FTD (First Time Deposit) logic or Hybrid Commission structures.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about cpa (cost per acquisition), how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.
CPA stands for Cost Per Acquisition. It is a commission model where an affiliate earns a fixed payment each time a referred user completes a specific action, such as making a deposit, registering an account, or completing a purchase.
Related Terms
RevShare (Revenue Share)
RevShare is a commission model where an affiliate earns an ongoing percentage of the revenue generated by their referred customers, typically calculated on a monthly basis.
Hybrid Commission
Hybrid commission combines two payout models, most commonly CPA and RevShare, in a single affiliate deal so operators can reward both conversion volume and long-term customer value.
FTD (First Time Deposit)
FTD is the first successful deposit made by a newly referred user. In iGaming and some broker programs, it is one of the most common qualification events used for CPA payouts and partner reporting.
CPL (Cost Per Lead)
A commission model where an affiliate earns a fixed payment for each qualified lead they generate, typically defined as a registration, form submission, or account opening that meets specified criteria.
LTV (Customer Lifetime Value)
The total revenue or profit a business expects to generate from a single customer over the entire duration of their relationship, used to evaluate affiliate traffic quality and optimize commission structures.
Postback
A postback is a server-to-server HTTP callback confirming a conversion event like a registration, FTD, or purchase. Unaffected by ad blockers or cookies.
Minimum Deposit
The minimum deposit is the lowest amount a player must fund to activate their account or qualify for an affiliate commission event like an FTD.
CPA vs Hybrid Commission
CPA pays a one-time fixed amount per conversion. Hybrid commission combines a CPA payment with ongoing RevShare, balancing upfront payout with long-term alignment.
Continue Learning
Free structured courses that cover this topic and more.
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