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How Much Do Affiliate Apps Really Cost? Understanding Fees, Caps, and Revenue Cuts

The sticker price of an affiliate app isn't the cost. Here's how affiliate apps actually charge, which model costs you most as you grow, and how to work out your real number before you install anything.

Published on July 18, 2026

by Fawaz

How Much Do Affiliate Apps Really Cost? Understanding Fees, Caps, and Revenue Cuts

How Much Do Affiliate Apps Really Cost? Understanding Fees, Caps, and Revenue Cuts

Affiliate app pricing looks simple until you read it properly.

One app says "free to install."

Another says $29.99 a month.

A third says $14.99.

They all look pretty straightforward, until you discover that the free one only works on development stores, the $29.99 one also takes a percentage of every affiliate sale you make, and the $14.99 one caps you at 50 orders a month.

The sticker price is not the cost.

This guide breaks down how affiliate apps actually charge, which model costs you most as you grow, and how to work out your real number before you install anything.

The four pricing models

Almost every affiliate app on Shopify uses one of these.

  1. Flat subscription: You pay a fixed monthly fee, and that's it. Predictable, easy to budget, and your cost doesn't change whether your affiliates drive $1,000 or $100,000. BixGrow and GoAffPro work this way.
  2. Revenue share (a performance fee): The app takes a percentage of your affiliate-driven sales, sometimes instead of a subscription, often on top of one. This is the model to understand most carefully, for reasons below.
  3. Hybrid: A monthly subscription plus a percentage of your affiliate sales. Two meters running at once. UpPromote and Refersion both use versions of this.
  4. Free, with or without limits: Some apps are genuinely free. Others are "free" up to a cap on referral orders or affiliates, at which point you're upgrading whether you planned to or not.

Why revenue cuts are the model to watch

A performance fee sounds harmless. Two percent of affiliate sales? That's nothing.

Except it isn't, because it grows precisely as your program succeeds.

Here's what that actually looks like.

Say you're on a plan costing $29.99 per month plus 2 percent of your approved referral sales:

  • Your affiliates drive $5,000 a month. You pay $29.99 + $100 = about $130.
  • They drive $20,000 a month. You pay $29.99 + $400 = about $430.
  • They drive $50,000 a month. You pay $29.99 + $1,000 = about $1,030.

Now compare that to a flat $24.99 app. At $50,000 in affiliate sales, you'd pay $24.99. Same month, same program, roughly $1,000 difference.

And notice what's happening: the better your program performs, the more your software costs, taken directly out of the revenue your affiliates just generated.

You're already paying those affiliates a commission.

The performance fee is a second commission, paid to your software vendor, on the same sale.

That's why the fee structure matters more than the headline price.

A percentage-based cost is the one line item that punishes you for succeeding.

Caps: the second hidden cost

The other thing that turns "free" or "cheap" into something else is caps.

Most free tiers limit either your referral orders per month, your number of affiliates, or both.

Some examples of how tight they get:

  • BixGrow's free plan caps at roughly 50 referral orders a month and 30 affiliates.
  • UpPromote's free plan caps your monthly referral orders too.
  • Shortly's "free to install" applies to development stores only, so a live store starts at $9.99 a month.

A cap isn't inherently bad.

The problem is what happens when you hit it.

Your program is working, orders are coming in, and you're suddenly forced onto a paid tier mid-month, not because you chose to, but because your affiliates did their job.

The apps that cap lowest often convert the fastest, which is the point.

Before installing, work out how many referral orders you'd need per month for the program to be worth running, then check whether the free plan even reaches that number.

Gated features: the third cost

The third thing that inflates your real price is what's locked behind higher tiers.

The features merchants actually want, tiered commissions to reward top affiliates, coupon tracking, PayPal payouts, frequently live on the top plan.

  • On BixGrow, the tiered commissions feature sits on Pro.
  • On Shortly, the unlimited affiliates feature is on the $29.99 Pro plan.

That means the plan you'd actually need isn't the entry price you compared against.

If a professional-looking program matters to you, price the tier that includes it, not the one on the ad.

The costs nobody lists

Two more that don't appear on any pricing page:

  • Switching costs: Migrating affiliate apps means rebuilding your commission rules, moving your affiliates, and giving them new links or portal access. Your reporting history usually doesn't come with you. This is a real reason to choose carefully up front, and a real reason not to pick a model that gets more expensive exactly when switching becomes most disruptive.
  • Setup time: An app with a hundred settings takes longer to launch than one built to do the core job. That's your time, and for a founder, it's usually the scarcest thing you have.

What the market actually charges

A rough picture of the landscape, current as of writing:

table-on-what-the-market-charges

Pricing and plan limits change often, so always confirm on the app's current Shopify App Store listing before deciding.

How to calculate your real cost

Run any app through this before you install:

  1. Estimate your monthly affiliate revenue at the scale you're aiming for, not where you are today.
  2. Add the subscription for the tier that actually includes the features you need, not the entry tier.
  3. Add the performance fee, if any, calculated on that revenue figure.
  4. Check the caps on the tier you chose, and what happens when you exceed them.
  5. Ask what it costs at 3x your current volume. This is the question most merchants skip, and it's the one that matters.

That last step is where the models separate.

A flat app costs the same at 3x. A hybrid app roughly triples the fee portion.

Where Affilitrak sits

Affilitrak is free.

There's no subscription, and there's no percentage taken from your affiliate sales.

That's the whole pricing model, and it's the point.

The features that usually sit on premium tiers elsewhere are simply part of the product:

  • Percentage, flat, and tiered commissions
  • Automatic link tracking
  • And an affiliate marketplace to help new partners find your program.

Your affiliate links can also carry an auto-apply coupon, so the discount applies automatically when a shopper clicks (we also have many other features that are being gated by other affiliate marketing apps).

Run the calculation above on Affilitrak and every step returns zero.

At $5,000 in monthly affiliate sales, at $50,000, at 3x whatever you're doing now, the software cost doesn't move.

The revenue your affiliates generate stays with you, which is the entire reason you started an affiliate program.

Conclusion

The real cost of an affiliate app is rarely the number on the listing.

It's the subscription for the tier you actually need, plus any percentage taken from your sales, plus whatever the caps force you into once your program starts working.

Before you install anything, price it at three times your current volume.

Apps that charge a percentage of affiliate revenue get more expensive exactly as your program succeeds, and that's the moment you least want to be migrating to something else.

If you'd rather your affiliate software cost the same at $50,000 a month as it does at $500, you can start free with Affilitrak and keep every dollar your affiliates earn you.

Setup is covered step by step in the Help Center.