Key takeaways
- Single-tier pays an affiliate only for the sales they personally drive.
- Multi-tier (sub-affiliate) also pays them a smaller cut on sales from affiliates they recruited.
- Multi-tier can accelerate recruiting because partners are motivated to bring in others.
- The trade-offs are higher complexity, thinner margins, and reputational risk if it looks like an MLM.
- Keep it legitimate: reward real sales, cap the tiers, and never pay just for recruiting.
Most affiliate programs are single-tier: you pay partners for the sales they bring in, and that's it. Multi-tier programs add a second layer — partners also earn a slice when affiliates they recruited make sales. It's a powerful way to grow a partner network, but it carries real complexity and reputational risk. Here's how to think about the choice.
What is the difference between single-tier and multi-tier?
The difference is whether affiliates earn on other affiliates' sales. In a single-tier program, an affiliate earns only on conversions they personally drive. In a multi-tier (or sub-affiliate) program, they also earn a smaller percentage on sales made by affiliates they referred into the program — a second layer of commission.
How sub-affiliate commission works
When a top-level affiliate recruits a new affiliate, that new affiliate's sales generate two payouts: the full commission to the affiliate who made the sale, plus a smaller override to the affiliate who recruited them. For example, a sub-affiliate earns 20% on their sale and their recruiter earns an extra 5% override on the same sale. The override comes out of your margin, so it must be priced in.
What are the pros and cons of multi-tier?
Multi-tier's main advantage is faster network growth; its main drawbacks are complexity, cost, and reputational risk. Weigh them honestly against your goals.
- Pro: partners are motivated to recruit other partners, so your network can grow without you doing all the recruiting.
- Pro: well-connected affiliates can bring in clusters of relevant promoters quickly.
- Con: more layers mean more commission per sale and thinner margins.
- Con: tracking, attribution, and payouts get more complex across tiers.
- Con: poorly designed, it can resemble a pyramid scheme and damage trust.
The line between multi-tier and a pyramid scheme
A legitimate multi-tier program pays only for real product sales — never for the act of recruiting itself. The moment commission flows from sign-ups rather than sales, you've crossed into pyramid-scheme territory, which is illegal in many places. Reward sales, cap the depth (usually two tiers), and you stay on the right side of that line.
When should you use a multi-tier program?
Use multi-tier when recruiting is your bottleneck and your margins can absorb the override. It works best when your partners are well-networked within a community that trusts peer recommendations and when you have healthy enough margins to pay two layers. If your constraint is conversion quality rather than partner volume, a single-tier program with strong incentives for top performers is usually the better, simpler choice.
How do you keep a multi-tier program clean?
Reward sales only, limit the number of tiers, and make the structure transparent. Cap the program at two tiers, pay overrides strictly on real, refund-cleared sales, document the structure plainly in your terms, and use a platform that tracks the relationships and applies fraud rules across tiers. Afflio supports multi-tier commissions with this kind of structured, auditable tracking built in.
Multi-tier rewards people for building a network of sellers. A pyramid rewards people for building a network of recruits. Pay for sales, not sign-ups, and you'll always know which one you're running.
Is a multi-tier affiliate program a pyramid scheme?
Not if it's designed correctly. A legitimate multi-tier program pays commission only on real product sales — including the override an affiliate earns on their recruits' sales. It becomes a pyramid scheme only when people are paid for recruiting itself rather than for sales, which is illegal in many jurisdictions.
How many tiers should a multi-tier program have?
Two is the practical and safest limit for most programs: the affiliate who made the sale and the one who recruited them. Deeper structures multiply cost and complexity and look more like a pyramid, so cap the depth and keep overrides modest.
Does multi-tier cost more than single-tier?
Yes, because each qualifying sale can generate two payouts — the seller's commission plus the recruiter's override. You need to price the override into your margin, which is why multi-tier suits businesses with healthy margins and a recruiting bottleneck.