What Is Trading Fee Cashback? (And Where the Money Actually Comes From)

Every time you place a trade, the exchange charges a fee — maker or taker, spot or futures. That fee doesn't vanish into a server room. A meaningful slice of it gets paid out to whoever referred you, every month, for as long as you trade. Exchanges call this revenue share, and it's how the entire affiliate economy works.
Here's the part most traders never see: if you signed up through anyone's link — a YouTuber, a Telegram admin, a friend — that person is collecting a percentage of your fees right now. If you signed up with no referral, the exchange simply keeps everything.
Trading fee cashback flips this arrangement. A cashback platform like BackBet registers as an official exchange partner, receives that same commission stream, and instead of keeping it, returns most of it to you — up to 70% depending on the exchange. You trade exactly as you always did. Same fees, same interface, same account security. The only difference is where the commission ends up.
There's no catch because the economics are simple: we keep a small cut of the commission to run the platform. We only earn when you earn. No subscription, no minimum volume, no expiry on your account.
One thing cashback is not: a discount trick or a promo code that dies after a month. Commission share is lifetime — as long as your account stays tagged to our referral, every fee you ever pay generates cashback. A trader doing modest volume might see a few dollars a month. An active futures trader can recover hundreds. Either way it's money that was already leaving your pocket.
The only real question is who's collecting your commission today: the exchange, a KOL, or you.
