Pip Rebate

A pip rebate is a commission structure where introducing brokers earn a fixed amount per pip of spread on each trade executed by their referred traders, with the broker adding a markup to the spread to fund the rebate.

What it means in practice

A pip rebate is a commission model used in Forex introducing broker programs where the IB earns a fixed monetary amount for each pip of spread on every trade their referred traders execute. The mechanism works through spread markup -- the broker adds a small increment to the standard spread, and that markup is paid to the IB as commission. For example, if the standard spread on EUR/USD is 1.2 pips and the broker adds a 0.3-pip markup for the IB, the trader sees a 1.5-pip spread and the IB earns the value of 0.3 pips per trade.

How pip rebates work in practice depends on the currency pair and trade size. A pip's monetary value varies by pair -- for standard lots, one pip on EUR/USD equals $10, while on USD/JPY it may differ based on the exchange rate. This means an IB earning a 0.3-pip rebate would receive $3 per standard lot on EUR/USD. Unlike lot-based commissions where the payout is a fixed dollar amount per lot regardless of spread, pip rebates scale with the spread width. If a broker uses variable spreads that widen during volatile periods, the IB's per-trade commission can fluctuate accordingly.

Compared to lot-based commissions, pip rebates create a different economic dynamic. With lot-based models, the IB earns the same amount whether the spread is tight or wide. With pip rebates, earnings correlate with spread conditions -- wider spreads during news events or low-liquidity periods can increase per-trade payouts, while tight spreads during calm markets reduce them. This distinction matters when IBs evaluate lot-based vs spread-based compensation. Some IBs prefer the predictability of lot-based commissions, while others favor pip rebates if their referred traders primarily trade during higher-spread conditions.

How Pip Rebate works across industries

See how pip rebate is applied in the verticals Track360 supports, from qualification logic and payout structure to the operational context behind each model.

Forex

Pip Rebate in Forex partner and IB models

Pip rebates are a core commission model in Forex IB programs and represent an alternative to [lot-based commissions](/glossary/lot-based-commission). The economics depend heavily on the currency pairs traded -- major pairs like EUR/USD typically have tighter spreads and lower pip rebate earnings per trade, while exotic pairs with wider spreads generate higher per-trade commissions. Brokers offering variable spreads create fluctuating IB income, while fixed-spread brokers provide more predictable rebate earnings. IBs should also consider how their referred traders behave -- scalpers generating high volume on tight-spread pairs may produce more total commission through lot-based models, while traders operating during volatile sessions may generate more through pip rebates.
Read More

How Track360 handles this

Track360 supports pip rebate commission structures alongside lot-based and other models, enabling Forex brokers to configure and track IB compensation accurately. Operators can monitor rebate calculations per trade, per partner, and per currency pair to ensure transparent and accurate payouts.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about pip rebate, how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.

A pip rebate is a commission structure in Forex introducing broker programs where the IB earns a fixed amount per pip of spread on each trade executed by their referred traders. The broker funds the rebate by adding a markup to the standard spread. For example, if the broker adds a 0.3-pip markup to EUR/USD, the IB earns the dollar value of those 0.3 pips on every trade -- approximately $3 per standard lot on that pair.

From the Blog

Related Articles

Further reading on pip rebate and related affiliate program topics.

Browse all articles
Blog→

What Is IB in Forex? How Introducing Broker Programs Work

A complete operational guide to understanding what an introducing broker (IB) is in forex. Covers how IB programs work mechanically, commission structures, multi-tier networks, broker requirements, and what separates a well-run IB program from one that creates friction.

Apr 28, 2026

Blog→

How to Evaluate and Choose a Forex IB Program That Scales

A structured guide for introducing brokers evaluating forex IB programs. Covers commission models, tracking infrastructure, payout reliability, and what separates scalable IB programs from those that create friction as partner volume grows.

Apr 28, 2026

Blog→

How Forex Brokers Structure IB Rebate Programs That Scale

A practical guide to structuring IB rebate programs for forex brokers. Covers rebate models, multi-tier IB structures, lot-based payouts, and how to align rebate logic with real trading activity.

Apr 19, 2026

Blog→

Spread-Based vs Lot-Based Commissions: How Forex Brokers Structure IB Payouts

A practical comparison of spread-based and lot-based commission models for Forex IB programs. Learn how each model affects broker margins, IB incentives, and payout scalability across different trading environments.

Apr 18, 2026

Forex→

Forex IB Management Software: How to Choose the Right Platform for Your Brokerage

A practical buyer's guide to evaluating forex IB management software. Covers the platform capabilities forex brokers actually need: lot-based commission logic, multi-tier IB hierarchies, trading platform integrations, real-time reporting, and migration from legacy systems.

Apr 14, 2026

Forex→

Forex Lot-Based Commission Structures: The Complete Broker's Guide

A detailed breakdown of the five forex commission models brokers use to pay IBs and affiliates: per-lot, spread-share, hybrid, PnL-based, and tiered volume. Includes calculation examples, IB hierarchy distribution logic, symbol-level payout control, and qualification rules.

Apr 14, 2026