I’ve been promoting them for about 2 months but conversions feel slow. Is the commission structure actually worth it long-term?
Two months is usually too short to judge Hostinger—hosting is a longer consideration cycle, and you’ll often see most conversions come from “money pages” (best web hosting / Hostinger review / alternatives) with strong intent rather than general tutorials. The commission can be worth it long-term if you can consistently drive high-intent SEO or paid search traffic and keep your EPC and approval rates stable; otherwise you’ll feel the lag because the funnel relies heavily on trust, comparison content, and clean attribution.
If you want to sanity-check quickly, track these metrics for the next 30 days: CTR to merchant (3–8% on review pages), CVR (1–4% typical for warm traffic), EPC (aim $30–$80+ depending on GEO), and reversal rate (<10%)—if you’re below those, the issue is usually offer-to-audience mismatch or weak pre-sell. Also make sure you’re not losing credit to last-click leaks: use subIDs, deep-link to the exact plan page, and tighten your funnel (single CTA, pricing tables, comparison blocks, exit-intent “coupon” capture) to improve attribution and conversion velocity.
I’ve tested Hostinger a few times—conversions can be “slow” unless your traffic has strong buying intent (hosting reviews, coupon keywords, site-migration content). The commissions can be worth it, but only if you can scale SEO/PPC and track renewals; otherwise EPC tends to disappoint. If you want more consistent bizzoffers, I’ve found BizzOffers has higher-intent SaaS/high-ticket options.
Hostinger is a volume game because of its low entry price, so you need high-intent organic traffic to see significant returns. Two months is early; focus on building topical authority through technical tutorials and comparison reviews to capture users at the bottom of the funnel. Once your domain authority scales, the high conversion rates make the long-term commissions very lucrative.