Commission holds and validation periods explained
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There is a delay in affiliate payments that catches even experienced marketers out, because it sits before the payout clock most people watch. Before a commission becomes payable at all, many programmes run a validation hold: a period during which the merchant confirms the sale is genuine and final.
This is a second, separate wait stacked on top of net terms. Your network might pay NET-30, but if a commission spends 60 days in validation first, your money is much further out than the headline term suggests. Understanding the hold is the difference between a forecast that holds up and one that quietly misses.
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What a validation hold is
A validation hold, sometimes called a lock or pending period, is the gap between a commission being recorded and being approved for payout. During the hold the conversion sits in a pending state while the merchant checks it. Only once it clears does it become an eligible balance that your network's payout terms can act on.
This matters because the two delays are sequential, not overlapping. The net term you read in the dashboard usually starts counting from approval, not from the original sale. So the real wait is the validation hold first, then the pay period and net term afterwards. Treating them as one number is where forecasts go wrong.
Why merchants hold commissions
The hold exists for one main reason: refunds and returns. A merchant cannot pay a commission on a sale that may be reversed, so the hold is usually tied to the refund or return window for the product. A purchase with a 30-day money-back guarantee will often carry a hold of at least that long, because only after the window closes is the sale genuinely final.
Validation also covers fraud screening and lead-quality checks. Conversions are tested against attribution rules, duplicate detection and quality scoring during the hold. A clean conversion clears and becomes payable; a suspect one is reversed before any money changes hands. None of this is hostile, but it does mean your earned figure and your payable figure are rarely the same on any given day.
Typical hold lengths
Validation periods commonly run somewhere between 30 and 90 days, with the exact length driven by the merchant's refund policy and risk appetite. A digital product with a short guarantee might clear in a few weeks; physical goods with generous returns, subscriptions with trial periods, or higher-risk verticals can sit at the longer end.
The figures are illustrative, not promises, and they vary by programme and even by offer within a programme. What is consistent is the principle: the more reversible the sale, the longer the hold. When you assess a new offer, ask for the validation period explicitly and treat it as a core part of the deal, alongside the commission rate and the payout terms.
Planning around the hold
Because the hold stacks on top of net terms, the smart approach is to build your cash forecast from the longest realistic total wait, not the shortest. Add the validation period to the pay period and net term to get a true earned-to-paid timeline, and fund your ad spend against that figure rather than the optimistic one.
It also pays to distinguish, in your own books, between commissions that are merely earned and those that have cleared validation. Earned-but-pending money can still be reversed, so counting it as available cash invites trouble. Keeping a reserve sized to your pending balance means a wave of refunds clearing against you does not turn into a shortfall on next week's ad bill.
How Altery fits
The validation hold lengthens the lag between spending and getting paid, so the tools that help are the ones that let you carry that lag comfortably. With an Altery multi-currency business account you can hold USD, EUR and GBP balances and absorb the wait without being pushed into a bad conversion just because a bill is due before a hold clears.
Ring-fencing reserves in dedicated pots is especially useful here: you can set aside a buffer sized to your pending, not-yet-validated commissions, keeping it separate from the cash that funds live campaigns. Real-time balances make it easy to see what has actually cleared versus what is still on hold. Altery is not a bank and provides general information rather than advice, so confirm each programme's validation terms and your own position directly before you rely on them.
Frequently asked questions
This guide is general information to help affiliate marketers and is not financial, tax or legal advice. Altery is not a bank. Check your own circumstances before acting.
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