The Most Active and Friendliest
Affiliate Marketing Community Online!

“TES  “CPA

Why push traffic still works in 2026

Despite the growth of social platforms and native advertising, push traffic continues to perform well in several verticals.

Some of the main reasons include:

• large traffic volumes
• relatively low CPC
• fast campaign testing
• strong engagement in certain GEOs

Push traffic remains especially popular in verticals such as betting, sweepstakes and utilities.

Do you think push traffic will remain competitive in the coming years?
 
Bottom of the barrel

As far as interest goes--apparently.

1774643607568.png
 
I've been running push traffic for the past 2-3 years (PropellerAds and Adsterra mostly), so I can speak to this from the ground.

You're right that push traffic has changed. The cheap-click goldmine days are over — CPCs have crept up in most Tier 1 geos, and user fatigue is real. But farouqjoy nailed it: it's still working for affiliates who focus on angles, creatives, and clean funnels.

Here's what's actually working for me in 2026:

What still works:
- Push still converts well for nutra and sweeps in Tier 1 (US, CA, UK, AU) — if your angle is fresh. Generic "Click here to claim" creatives are dead. You need to hook attention in 2 seconds.
- Volume is still there. PropellerAds and Adsterra can deliver 10k+ clicks/day in US alone if you have budget.
- Fast testing. I can spin up a campaign, test 5 angles, and know what's working within 24 hours. That's harder with native or social.

What's changed:
- Cost. US push traffic used to be $0.004-0.006 CPC. Now it's closer to $0.01-0.015 on quality sources. You can't brute-force profitability with volume anymore.
- User quality. A lot of push subscribers are serial clickers who never convert. Whitelisting/blacklisting is mandatory now — I spend more time optimizing source IDs than I do on creatives.
- Geo matters more than ever. Tier 2/3 geos (Brazil, India, Philippines) still have cheap traffic, but conversion rates are inconsistent. I stick to Tier 1 and accept the higher CPC because the ROI is more predictable.

Will it stay competitive?

Depends. If you're running push the old way (broad targeting, generic creatives, no tracking), you'll bleed money. But if you're using proper tracking (I've tested Voluum, ClickMagick, and a few cheaper alternatives), geo-targeting your links, and testing angles aggressively, push traffic still prints.

The affiliates who are making money on push in 2026 are the ones who treat it like a data game, not a traffic volume game.

TL;DR: Push traffic isn't dead, but it's not easy anymore. You have to be sharper than you were 3 years ago.
 
Push traffic will probably stay relevant, especially for fast testing and certain niches. But competition is growing and quality can vary, so many advertisers are mixing it with other traffic sources for more stable results.
 
Despite the growth of social platforms and native advertising, push traffic continues to perform well in several verticals.

Some of the main reasons include:

• large traffic volumes
• relatively low CPC
• fast campaign testing
• strong engagement in certain GEOs

Push traffic remains especially popular in verticals such as betting, sweepstakes and utilities.

Do you think push traffic will remain competitive in the coming years?
i would love to learn more about this, push traffic
 
Despite the growth of social platforms and native advertising, push traffic continues to perform well in several verticals.

Some of the main reasons include:

• large traffic volumes
• relatively low CPC
• fast campaign testing
• strong engagement in certain GEOs

Push traffic remains especially popular in verticals such as betting, sweepstakes and utilities.

Do you think push traffic will remain competitive in the coming years?
Push traffic is definitely keeping its edge in 2026, especially as In-Page Push helps affiliates bypass iOS restrictions and older browser filters. While it's still a volume king for sweeps and betting, the real winners now are focusing on quality over quantity and using AI to refresh creatives faster than users can develop ad blindness.
 
MI
Back