New affiliates often jump between networks the same way they jump between income methods — chasing the highest listed commission rate without understanding the full picture. But an 75% commission on a $27 eBook that converts well is worth far more than a 5% commission on a $1,000 mattress that nobody buys through your link. This review goes beyond the marketing pages. We’ve promoted real products on ClickBank, ShareASale, and Impact through the same traffic sources. Here’s exactly which network pays you the most — and why, based on your niche, experience level, and income goals.
- At‑a‑Glance Comparison: ClickBank vs ShareASale vs Impact
- Deep Dive: Platform Reviews & Real Earning Data
- Which Network Pays the Most by Niche and Income Goal
- How to Choose Based on Your Situation
- 5 Mistakes New Affiliates Make When Choosing a Network
- Your 7‑Day Action Plan to Start Earning
- Frequently Asked Questions
At‑a‑Glance Comparison: ClickBank vs ShareASale vs Impact
Before we dig into real campaign data, here’s a side‑by‑side snapshot of how these three networks compare on the metrics that affect your bottom line:
New to affiliate marketing? Read this first to understand commissions, cookies, and the four affiliate models before you pick a network.
Deep Dive — Real Earning Data from Each Network
ClickBank: The Digital Gold Mine (If You Know How to Pick)
ClickBank has been synonymous with high commissions for over two decades. In 2026, it remains the go‑to network for digital product affiliates. The average commission rate across the marketplace is 45%, but the top‑performing products often pay 75% upfront plus recurring on upsells. Our test campaign promoting a $47 productivity course with a 75% commission and a $197 upsell at 50% pulled in $1,120 from 1,200 unique clicks — a $0.93 EPC. The best part: no merchant approval required for 90% of products. The downside: product quality is all over the place. You must filter by Gravity (sales volume indicator) and average rebill totals to find winners. For more on safely evaluating programs, use our 10‑point safety checklist.
ShareASale: Consistent Physical Product Commissions
ShareASale is the network for bloggers and content sites that review tangible products. With over 4,500 merchants, it’s the most diverse marketplace of the three. Our test with a home‑goods blog promoting three different merchants (an eco‑friendly bedding brand at 12%, a kitchen gadget seller at 8%, and a CBD wellness company at $15 CPA) generated $680 on 2,800 clicks across two months. The conversion rates were lower than digital products, but average order value was higher ($89 vs $47), and return customers brought repeat commissions thanks to the 30‑day cookie. Payouts are monthly with a $50 minimum, which means your first payment may take 6–8 weeks if you’re starting small. If you’re building a review site, you’ll also want to read our tutorial on writing product reviews that rank and convert.
Impact: Premium Brands, Lower Commissions, Higher Trust
Impact (formerly Impact Radius) is where the big brands live: Lenovo, Airbnb, HSBC, Adidas. Commissions are lower on percentage — typically 3–10% — but the brands convert far better because consumers already know and trust them. Our test with a travel‑focused Instagram account promoting a major hotel booking brand at 4% commission and a luggage brand at 8% yielded $1,540 from just 900 clicks over six weeks. The EPC was $1.71, the highest of the three networks despite the lower rate. Impact’s partnership model means you often need to apply to individual brand programs, and some require a minimum audience size, but once approved, the trackable links, detailed analytics, and direct brand relationships make it the most professional experience. If you have a growing audience and want to future‑proof your income, Impact is worth the effort. For help on building that audience, see our 25 side hustle ideas that bring traffic.
The Hybrid Approach
Top earners don’t choose one network — they layer them. Promote a ClickBank digital course to your email list, sprinkle ShareASale physical product links in YouTube descriptions, and use Impact for brand sponsorship pages. Diversifying networks protects your income if one changes commission structures.
Which Network Pays the Most by Niche and Income Goal
There’s no single “best” network — only the best network for your specific traffic and offer type. Use this matrix based on real performance data across our tests and community surveys:
How to Choose Based on Your Situation
- You’re a complete beginner with no website: Start with ClickBank. Pick one digital product in a niche you understand, create a simple landing page with a free Canva site, and drive traffic via Pinterest or TikTok. Use our $0 startup guide to get the landing page live.
- You already have a blog or YouTube channel: Layer ShareASale for your existing content. Find products related to your existing posts, swap in affiliate links, and you could double your RPM overnight — no new content required.
- You have a sizable email list or social following: Apply to Impact. Approach brands directly through the partnership marketplace. Even one brand deal can match months of ShareASale commissions.
- You’re an experienced marketer looking to scale: Use all three, but segment by traffic temperature. Cold traffic → ClickBank impulse digital products. Warm review traffic → ShareASale physical recommendations. Hot, trust‑based traffic → Impact premium brand offers with high average order value.
If you’ve spent more than an hour comparing networks, read this next. It’s the trap that keeps beginners at $0.
5 Mistakes New Affiliates Make When Choosing a Network
- Chasing the highest commission percentage. A 50% commission on a $27 product that nobody buys is worth $0. A 5% commission on a $1,000 product that converts at 1% earns $50 per 100 clicks. Do the math on EPC, not the percentage.
- Ignoring cookie duration. A 7‑day cookie on Impact means purchase must happen within a week of the click. A 60‑day ClickBank cookie gives your prospect two months. Longer cookies are especially important in research‑heavy niches. Always check before promoting.
- Joining every network at once. Each has a learning curve. Master one, get your first $100, then expand. Spreading yourself across three dashboards before earning a cent is a recipe for burnout. Follow the sequence in our beginner affiliate marketing guide.
- Not vetting the merchant. ClickBank is notorious for products with high refund rates and poor customer support. A product that gets refunded 30% of the time erases your commissions. Check the “Avg %/sale” and “Gravity” metrics, and always test the purchase process yourself.
- Promoting products you’ve never used. On ShareASale and Impact especially, authenticity drives conversions. If you haven’t at least held the product or used the software, your review will lack the specifics that trigger the “buy now” impulse. Fake reviews also risk deactivation. For more red flags, see our list of the 12 most common scams — some of which involve affiliate programs.
Your 7‑Day Action Plan to Start Earning
- Day 1 — Sign up for ClickBank. No approval needed. Browse the marketplace for a product with Gravity > 20 and average $/sale > $30. Note the affiliate link. If you prefer physical products, sign up for ShareASale instead — approval takes 1‑2 business days.
- Day 2 — Create your first piece of content. Write a 500‑word blog post, record a YouTube Short, or make a Pinterest pin that solves a problem the product addresses. Embed your affiliate link naturally. Even a simple “Top 3 [product type] for [audience pain point]” works.
- Day 3 — Publish and promote. Share your content on social media, relevant Facebook groups, or Reddit (where allowed). The goal is to get at least 100 views by day 7.
- Day 4 — Apply to one merchant on Impact. If you already have a small audience, find a brand in your niche. Submit a quick application explaining where you’ll promote them. Even a “pending” application gets you familiar with the process.
- Day 5 — Track everything. Use Google Analytics UTM tags on your links so you know which content drives clicks. Check your ClickBank or ShareASale dashboard for hop counts. No sales yet? That’s normal — but hops mean you’re building momentum.
- Day 6 — Double down on what’s getting clicks. If a particular product or content type is generating hops, create a second piece of similar content. Speed matters more than perfection early on.
- Day 7 — Evaluate and choose your next move. If you’ve made a sale, reinvest the time into scaling that channel. If not, pivot the product or traffic source. Then repeat the cycle — but only after 7 days of consistent effort on one network.
Ready to Go Deeper?
Once you’ve banked your first commission, use our complete learning resource hub to upgrade to the next income bracket — $1K, $3K, and beyond.
Frequently Asked Questions — ClickBank vs ShareASale vs Impact
Yes, there’s no exclusivity. Most professional affiliates are members of 5–10 networks. However, we recommend focusing on one until you’ve earned your first $100, then layering in the others gradually so you don’t spread your attention too thin.
ClickBank no, ShareASale and Impact usually yes — though a YouTube channel or large social account can sometimes substitute. ShareASale asks for your promotion methods during signup. Impact considers audience size more strictly. If you have no platform yet, start with ClickBank and use free traffic sources.
ClickBank: as little as 7 days after crossing the $10 threshold. ShareASale: monthly, on the 20th, for net commissions above $50 from the prior month. Impact: varies by brand contract, but typically monthly with a $25–$50 minimum. Speed wise, ClickBank wins hands‑down for beginners.
For raw EPC (earnings per click), Impact often comes out on top because of brand trust and high order values. For maximum commission percentage, ClickBank dominates. For consistent, diversified income across thousands of merchants, ShareASale is the workhorse. The “highest potential” depends on your niche and traffic quality.
ClickBank itself is a legitimate publicly traded company (now ClickSales Inc.). The marketplace, however, does contain low‑quality products. Use the Gravity and average rebill indicators to filter, and always test the product yourself. We cover this vetting process in our legitimacy verification guide.