Commission Share 50/60/70%: How BackBet Splits Revenue With You

Most rebate platforms describe their split with adjectives. This post does it with the actual constants, because the whole point of a commission-share model is that you can check it.
The split, in one line
Your cashback = the commission the exchange paid BackBet for your account × your share rate. The default share rate is 50%, set per linked account. High-volume accounts get raised to 60% or 70% — there's no published volume ladder yet; raises happen case by case, so if you're doing serious volume, reach out. Because the rate lives on the link (not sitewide fine print), your rate on one exchange doesn't depend on anyone else's.
One boundary worth stating: the separate monthly volume bonus on our campaigns page applies to standard share-rate accounts — a raised share rate and the volume bonus don't stack.
A worked example, end to end (illustration only)
The dollar amounts here are an illustration, not a quote — real commission depends on your volume, the exchange's published fee schedule, and its program terms. Suppose in one monthly period the exchange reports $40 of partner commission for your linked UID:
- Commission in: $40 recorded for your UID for the period.
- Share applied: at the default 50%, cashback = $40 × 50% = $20.00, rounded to the cent. (At 60% the same $40 pays $24; at 70%, $28.)
- The clamp: the payout math floors a negative or invalid commission at zero and caps the share at 100% — so cashback can mathematically never exceed the $40 received. That invariant is enforced in code and unit-tested, not policy.
- The ledger row: your history gains one entry — period, exchange, the original $40 commission, and your $20 — side by side, so you can audit the split yourself.
- The wallet: the $20 joins your pooled BackBet balance. Withdrawals are available from $5, paid in USDT on Solana, reviewed and sent manually.
Why the clamp matters more than the percentage
A platform that can only ever pay out a share of what it actually received is profitable by construction — which means it has no structural reason to stall your withdrawal, quietly change your rate, or disappear. The 50/60/70 number tells you how generous the split is; the clamp tells you the split is real. When you compare platforms (our checklist: how to choose a crypto rebate platform), weight the second one harder.
Payout timing, per exchange
Timing follows how each exchange reports, and each card states its real schedule: MEXC commission arrives on a daily T+1 reporting cycle; Mimo is reconciled manually once a week. No exchange on our site says "instant", because none of them settles instantly.
Your live balance, ledger history, and linked accounts are all in one place: your BackBet dashboard. The commission column is there on purpose — it's the number that lets you check our math, every period.
