22Bet Partners is not “smarter bets”. It’s the money-making affiliate program of the brand. You sign up as a partner, you get tracking links, you send players and if they register and play on the platform, you get commission. That’s it. No heroic story. No “community.” Just monetization and numbers.
The reason it’s attractive (when thatis) is that if you have consistent traffic, you can just let that passive income grow. The terms are attractive: revshare is as high as 20% of the betting company’s net profit from players you sent in…but it also comes with a leash.
If you go quiet and send no new FTDs, the revshare can drop to 15% after 6 months, and then 5% after 12 months. That’s the part people skip because it ruins the “set and forget” fantasy.
Also, they really want you reachable. The signup form literally asks for a Telegram username right there in the middle of it, like they’re expecting back-and-forth, not silent emails into the void.
How do I sign up for 22 Bet Partners?
You simply click Register top-right and get the big Sign Up pop-up. White box, red header, the usual.
The form is longer than it needs to be, but not shocking:
- Name
- Phone (country dropdown; I flipped it to Nigeria +234)
- Telegram username (Telegram icon sitting in the field, so they’re not being subtle)
- User Name
- Password + One more time (confirm)
Then the “I’m not a robot” checkbox. If anything in your browser blocks scripts, you’ll notice it here because the captcha area is the first thing to act stubborn.
Once you hit Sign Up, it’s not instant access. The flow they describe is: you apply, they review, then if they accept you, they assign a dedicated affiliate manager. So you’re not launching links in 30 seconds unless they’re moving fast and you’re lucky.
What commission models does 22 Bet Partners offer?
22Bet offers in Nigeria three options: RevShare, CPA, and Hybrid. No extra mystery model. The annoying bit (also normal) is the “final terms are set individually” line. Meaning: you don’t just pick a clean CPA number like you’re ordering food. It depends on GEOs, traffic quality, volumes, and then the manager tells you what you’re actually getting.
RevShare is the only one where the terms get very specific with numbers: the program offers earnings as 20% of the betting company’s net profit from your players. And then it immediately adds the “if you stop sending new FTDs, we reduce you” rule: 15% after 6 months, 5% after 12 months. That’s not hidden. It’s sitting there like a warning label.
When and how are commissions paid?
22Bet is clear that commissions are monthly, and the terms basically pin it to a cycle: payout once a month, up to the 15th. Not daily. Not weekly. Monthly.
There’s also a hard minimum: $100 minimum withdrawal. If you’re under that, it rolls into the next month. So if you’re just testing traffic and you make $38, that $38 is going to sit there and stare at you.
Methods are described broadly: e-wallets, crypto, bank transfer, and they push you back to the dashboard for exact options and thresholds. Which is fine, but it also means you don’t know your exact payout rail until you’re inside the account.
One thing I really don’t like: they reserve the right to delay payouts up to 2 months in cases of “unforeseen technical failures” or traffic/source issues. That sentence is easy to ignore when everything’s fine. It’s a different feeling when you’re waiting.
Do they have negative carryover?
22Bet has a High-Roller Policy section. The threshold they call out is a customer producing a negative net revenue of at least $10,000 in a month. When that happens, they treat the negative balance as carrying forward rather than vanishing at month-end.
So yes, negative carryover is a real thing here, at least under the high-roller rules. It’s not framed like “sometimes maybe.” It’s spelled out as policy.
Which GEOs and products can I promote?
22Bet positions itself as a Sportsbook and Casino across multiple GEOs. It’s simple, promote where it’s live, and your manager will point you at what converts.
The terms side is stricter about how you promote. They outright ban the obvious shady stuff:
- cookie-stuffing “techniques” (they even mention invisible iframe-type behavior)
- certain brand-name contextual advertising scenarios
- repeat registrations / sub-affiliate tricks
- registering your own player account through your own affiliate link
It reads like they’ve seen every scheme already and they’re tired.
How are players tracked, and what’s the cookie duration?
Tracking is via unique tracking links and cookies. They state the cookie window is up to 30 days.
They also mention postback / S2S tracking being available on request. That’s one of those “ask your manager” lines where you can almost hear the unspoken part. If you’re sending serious volume, they’ll turn it on. If you’re not, you’ll never touch it.
Are there any payout fees?
They say they don’t add internal fees to your earnings. So no “admin fee” chopped off just because you withdrew.
But they also do the realistic disclaimer: payment-provider/network fees may apply depending on the method (bank wires, crypto network fees, whatever your e-wallet is).
And tucked into the revenue share area, they leave themselves room to put admin fees on commissions in regulated markets. It’s not a big drama, but it could be stated a bit more clearly.

