For casino & sportsbook affiliates

Know the moment a casino affiliate program changes the deal — before it costs you.

Your income lives or dies on terms you don't control. A program can quietly cut your commission, slip in negative carryover, raise the payout threshold, drop your payment method, block a GEO you rank for, lose its licence, or just close and stop paying. Today you find out late — on payday, or when someone happens to post about it on a forum. affiliate-watch watches the programs you depend on and tells you the moment a documented change appears.

No spend, no account to use the feed. We monitor only public pages, politely and per robots.txt.

The changes that quietly drain affiliate income

Every one of these is a documented change to a program's own terms — visible on a public page the day it ships, but easy to miss until your next payment is short.

Commission cut

RevShare 45% → 25%, a worse CPA, a new tier you'll never hit, or a shortened cookie window.

Negative carryover

A clause appears that carries a negative balance into next month — or the "no negative carryover" reassurance you signed up for is quietly removed.

Payment terms

Higher minimum payout, a dropped method (Skrill/Neteller/PayPal), a new "admin fee", or a slower schedule.

GEO restriction

A market you rank for is added to the restricted list — your best-converting traffic stops qualifying.

Licence lost

The operator's licence is revoked or suspended in a market, putting your payments and players at risk.

Program closes

"No longer accepting", "going direct", the page 404s — and you're still sending traffic to a dead deal.

Catching one silently-degraded or dead program in time can be worth more than a year of watching for it. That's the entire pitch — no inflated numbers, no hype.

How it works

  1. You give us the affiliate programs you depend on (their public terms / commission / status pages).
  2. On a schedule, we take a snapshot of each page and diff it against the last one — cosmetic churn (cookie banners, tokens, ad slots) is normalised away first, so we don't false-alarm.
  3. When real content changes, we classify it with transparent rules: closure, negative carryover, commission cut, payment/GEO/licence change, or a generic terms edit — each with a severity and the exact before/after lines that triggered it.
  4. You get a specific alert for your programs — by email, or via an RSS feed you can pipe to Slack/Telegram/a dashboard.

Every alert shows why it fired — the matched phrase and the added/removed lines — so you can judge it in seconds. We never invent a change. The engine that does this is real and tested; you can read the source.

Honest positioning: automated & continuous vs. the manual GPWA forum

The closest thing that exists today is the GPWA "Affiliate Program Warnings" forum, where affiliates manually post when a program stops paying or worsens terms. It's genuinely valuable — and it catches things a page diff can't (a program that pays late without changing any page). affiliate-watch is the complementary automated half: it diffs the programs' own public pages and alerts you about your programs, the moment a documented change is published.

GPWA "Program Warnings" forumaffiliate-watch
How a change is founda human notices & postsautomated snapshot + diff of the program's own pages
Coveragewhatever people happen to reportexactly your watchlist
Latencywhenever someone postsevery scheduled run
Outputa forum thread to go reada per-program alert → email / RSS / your channel
Catchesmostly non-payment scandalsterms edits, RevShare/CPA cuts, negative carryover, payment / GEO / licence / closure

It cannot see changes that aren't reflected on a public page — affiliate-portal-only terms or a silent late payment. It's a published-change radar, not a payment auditor. We'd rather be clear about that than oversell it.

Get alerts for the programs you depend on

Join the waitlist. Tell us which programs you care about and we'll prioritise coverage and let you know when per-affiliate alerts are ready.

Guides for affiliates

Practical, honest reads on the program changes that cost affiliates money — and how to catch them early.