CPA vs RevShare (Prop Trading)
In prop trading, CPA pays per challenge purchase while RevShare pays a recurring cut of challenge fee revenue. Each model suits different program structures and affiliate types.
What it means in practice
CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) pays a fixed amount when a referred trader completes their first challenge purchase. RevShare (Revenue Share) pays an ongoing percentage of revenue generated by referred traders - typically from repeat challenge purchases, reset fees, or new account tiers. In prop trading, the distinction between these models is especially meaningful because the challenge business model runs on repeat purchases.
CPA dominates prop trading affiliate programs because the purchase funnel is short and transactional. A referred trader buys a challenge, the affiliate earns a fixed CPA, and the relationship ends there from a payout perspective. This simplicity makes CPA easy to sell to affiliates and straightforward to reconcile, but it creates no incentive for the affiliate to send traders who will re-engage after a failed challenge or to promote resets and higher-tier accounts.
RevShare in prop trading is less common but growing. It rewards affiliates who build communities of active, repeat-buying traders. Operators who have a loyal customer base with high repeat purchase attribution rates may find RevShare more cost-effective long-term, since affiliate payouts are tied to actual revenue rather than one-off acquisition events. Recurring commission models are one implementation of this approach.
Many prop trading programs offer both models or a hybrid commission structure - a lower CPA on first purchase combined with a RevShare percentage on subsequent resets or upgrades. This balances fast affiliate cash flow with long-term alignment.
Advantages
- Fast, predictable earnings for affiliates per conversion
- Simple to calculate, explain, and reconcile
- Works well with paid media and one-time traffic sources
- Easy to budget for operators with high challenge purchase volume
Limitations
- No incentive for affiliates to send repeat or high-engagement traders
- Affiliates earn nothing from resets or repeat challenge purchases
- Can attract low-quality traffic focused only on the first purchase
Advantages
- Rewards affiliates who build loyal, repeat-purchasing trading communities
- Includes reset fee and repeat purchase revenue - higher long-term upside
- Aligns affiliate incentives with operator revenue
- Lower upfront cost per acquisition for the operator
Limitations
- Slower initial earnings - depends on trader re-engagement
- Requires transparent revenue reporting and clear deduction rules
- Less attractive to affiliates who run one-time campaign traffic
When to choose which
Choose CPA
Choose CPA when running high-volume acquisition campaigns, working with paid media buyers, or targeting challenge review sites that drive first-time buyers. CPA works best when the primary goal is challenge purchase volume and the affiliate relationship is transactional rather than community-based.
Choose RevShare
Choose RevShare when the affiliate has a loyal trading audience that re-engages with challenges, resets, and new account tiers. RevShare suits educators and community managers whose audiences make multiple challenge purchases over time. Programs with active [reset fee](/glossary/reset-fee) revenue are natural fits for this model.
How CPA vs RevShare (Prop Trading) works across industries
See how cpa vs revshare (prop trading) 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, RevShare, and hybrid commission structures for prop trading programs. Operators can configure per-purchase CPA triggers, ongoing RevShare on challenge fee revenue, and commission holds tied to evaluation phase completion - all configurable per affiliate or affiliate tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about cpa vs revshare (prop trading), how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.
CPA is far more common. The prop trading business model is transaction-based - traders buy a challenge, and CPA maps naturally to that single purchase event. RevShare requires an active repeat-purchase base, which not all programs have at sufficient scale.
Related Terms
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.
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.
Challenge Purchase
A challenge purchase is the primary conversion event in prop trading affiliate programs -- when a trader buys a funded account evaluation or challenge from a prop trading firm.
Challenge Fee
A challenge fee is the payment a trader makes to enter a prop firm evaluation challenge, often serving as the basis for affiliate commission calculations in prop trading programs.
Reset Fee
A reset fee is a discounted payment a trader makes to restart an evaluation challenge after failing, allowing them to re-enter the same challenge tier without purchasing a full new challenge at the original price.
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.
Recurring Commission
A recurring commission is an ongoing payment made to an affiliate for as long as the referred customer remains active or continues to generate revenue for the operator.
Repeat Purchase Attribution
The process of crediting an affiliate for subsequent purchases made by a trader they originally referred, beyond the initial conversion event.
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