Affiliate program KPIs: what to track in 2026
Most affiliate programs track too many metrics and act on too few. The seven KPIs below are the ones that actually drive decisions: which partners to invest in, when to refine commission structures, when fraud is the real problem, and when the program is ready to scale. Everything else is noise dressed up as analytics.
The 30-second answer
The seven KPIs that matter: revenue from affiliates, EPC, conversion rate, active partner count, retention rate, fraud rate, and ROAS. Track daily on top-line revenue and EPC; weekly on partner activity; monthly on ROAS and retention; quarterly on program economics. Executive reports use five numbers, not 20. Most KPI inflation comes from tracking what is easy to measure rather than what drives decisions.
The seven KPIs that drive decisions
1. Total affiliate-attributed revenue
The headline number. Without this, you cannot make the case for the program. Track in absolute dollars and as a percentage of total revenue. Healthy ecommerce programs run affiliate revenue at 10 to 30 percent of total revenue. B2B SaaS programs typically 5 to 20 percent. Below 5 percent of revenue, the program is unlikely to justify a full-time manager.
2. EPC (earnings per click)
The most useful per-click efficiency metric because it normalizes across partners with very different traffic mixes. Calculated per partner and program-wide. Ecommerce DTC typically 0.50 to 2.00 dollars EPC. SaaS subscription 1.00 to 4.00 dollars. Financial services 2.00 to 8.00 dollars. A top-10 partner whose EPC drops 30 percent below their 14-day baseline is almost always a signal worth investigating.
3. Conversion rate from affiliate clicks
Useful but easy to misread. Content site traffic typically 1 to 3 percent. Coupon and cashback traffic 5 to 12 percent. Creator and influencer traffic 0.5 to 2 percent. Conversion rate without EPC context is misleading: a partner at 8 percent conversion with 0.50 dollars EPC is less valuable than one at 2 percent with 3.00 dollars EPC. Always pair the two.
4. Active partner count
The activity floor of your program. Total partner count is vanity (most affiliate programs have 10x more inactive partners than active ones). Active partner count is the real working set. Growth in this number is the leading indicator of program health; flat or declining is a warning even when revenue is up.
5. Partner retention rate
The single best signal of program quality. Healthy programs run 70 to 85 percent 90-day retention for top-tier partners. Below 60 percent retention indicates onboarding, communication, or commission structure problems. Above 90 percent often indicates either an unusually well-run program or an under-recruited partner pool with limited growth potential.
6. Fraud rate
The most underreported KPI. Industry estimates run 5 to 15 percent for general affiliate fraud and 8 to 18 percent for coupon-driven programs specifically. Programs that do not measure fraud rate are usually leaking 10 percent or more without knowing. Tracking it monthly and acting on the trend is the difference between a program that compounds and one that quietly bleeds margin.
7. ROAS (return on affiliate spend)
Total program cost includes commissions paid plus platform fees plus internal salary allocation plus AI tooling cost. A 5:1 ROAS is the rough health threshold. Below 3:1 signals economic issues (commission rates too high, partner mix wrong, or fraud unaddressed). Above 8:1 often indicates the program is under-invested and could scale further. Calculate quarterly, not monthly, to smooth out attribution lag.
KPIs to ignore (or de-prioritize)
Many programs track these because they are easy to pull from the dashboard. They rarely drive real decisions:
- Total partner count. Inflates with no signal value. Active partner count is the real number.
- Total clicks. Without EPC context, click volume is meaningless. A partner with 100K clicks and 0.20 EPC is less valuable than one with 5K clicks and 4.00 EPC.
- Average commission per partner. Skewed by outliers; the median per partner is more useful, but neither is action-driving.
- Bounce rate. Useful for content sites, not for affiliate programs. The conversion is downstream of the bounce.
- Cookie window adherence. Useful when troubleshooting attribution issues, not as an ongoing KPI.
The reporting cadence that actually works
| Cadence | For | KPIs |
|---|---|---|
| Daily | Affiliate manager | Revenue, EPC drops, fraud flags, top movers |
| Weekly | Affiliate manager + marketing lead | Active partner count, application queue, new-partner activation, week-over-week revenue |
| Monthly | Marketing leadership | ROAS, retention, partner mix, fraud rate |
| Quarterly | Executive team | Total revenue, ROAS, top-partner concentration, fraud rate, growth versus prior quarter |
The most common mistake is reporting daily numbers to executives. Daily fluctuations are noise. Executives need the monthly and quarterly view; the affiliate manager handles the daily and weekly.
What "good" looks like (benchmarks by vertical)
| Vertical | EPC | Conv rate | Retention 90d | ROAS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ecommerce DTC | 0.50 to 2.00 | 1 to 3% | 70 to 80% | 4:1 to 7:1 |
| Subscription / DTC | 0.80 to 2.50 | 1.5 to 3.5% | 75 to 85% | 5:1 to 8:1 |
| SaaS | 1.00 to 4.00 | 2 to 5% | 80 to 90% | 6:1 to 12:1 |
| Fintech / lending | 2.00 to 8.00 | 1 to 3% | 70 to 85% | 4:1 to 8:1 |
| Insurance | 3.00 to 10.00 | 0.5 to 2% | 65 to 80% | 3:1 to 6:1 |
| Coupon / cashback | 0.30 to 1.00 | 5 to 12% | 60 to 75% | 3:1 to 6:1 |
| Creator / influencer | 0.50 to 3.00 | 0.5 to 2% | 50 to 70% | 3:1 to 6:1 |
Benchmarks are starting points, not absolutes. Programs below these ranges have specific problems worth investigating; programs above them often have either unusually strong execution or a measurement issue (over-attribution, undercount of fraud, narrow partner mix).
Common KPI mistakes
Five mistakes show up repeatedly when programs review their dashboards:
Measuring revenue without ROAS. Revenue growth that comes with commission-rate increases or fraud growth is not real growth. Always pair revenue with ROAS to verify economics improved alongside scale.
Tracking total partners instead of active partners. 90 percent of partners in most programs are dormant. The 10 percent active ones drive 95 percent of revenue. Optimize for activation and retention of active partners, not for adding more dormant ones.
Ignoring fraud rate until it is a crisis. Fraud rate creeps up slowly. By the time it is obviously a problem, it is already 15 to 25 percent of program spend. Monthly tracking with thresholds catches the trend early.
Reporting daily to executives. Daily fluctuations are mostly noise. Executives lose trust in the program when noisy reports show inconsistent signals. Stick to monthly and quarterly.
Over-attributing to affiliates. Default attribution windows (often 30 days post-click) capture conversions the affiliate did not actually drive. Tightening the window to 7 to 14 days for most verticals gives a cleaner read on real contribution.
How to automate KPI tracking
Manual KPI tracking takes 5 to 10 hours per week to do properly. AI manager layers (Ezra, a few competitors) automate the daily and weekly cadence: pulling data from your tracking platform via API, computing the seven core KPIs, surfacing anomalies in Slack, and generating drafted weekly summaries the manager edits and sends.
The monthly and quarterly reviews stay manual because they require judgment: deciding which partners to invest in, whether to recalibrate commission rates, when the fraud trend justifies new detection rules. AI surfaces the data; the operator makes the calls.
Daily KPI tracking, automated. Free during beta.
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