16.07.2026 · 3 min read
Tier-1 iGaming Paid Traffic in 2026: Expensive Lessons or Real Treasure?

Tier-1 traffic has never been cheap, darling. CPA payouts can reach €600+, while player value often justifies the investment. The catch? Buying traffic is only half the game. The real question is whether those players still deposit after month two.
Where Tier-1 Volume Comes From
Forget the idea that one traffic source solves everything. Search and social remain the main engines for intent-driven traffic, while native and programmatic channels usually take over once scaling hits a ceiling.
Google Ads — high intent, higher costs, strict approval requirements.
Meta — strong for retargeting and app installs, but account management matters as much as creative quality.
Native traffic (Taboola, Outbrain, MGID) — often the go-to option for scaling.
Push and Pop — cheap testing, fast volume, usually weaker long-term value.
Programmatic DSPs — built for serious budgets and large-scale optimization.
The Funnel Numbers That Matter
A flashy FTD count can make any media buyer blow their wig. Retention tells the real story.
Typical Tier-1 benchmarks look like this:
Registration rate: 8–20%
Registration-to-FTD: 20–40%
KYC approval: 70–90%
Average first deposit: €165--€322
At Big Betty, optimized PPC and SEO campaigns can achieve reg-to-deposit rates of 20–60%. But if first deposits stay low and players disappear after a few weeks, that traffic is all show and no go.
Google Ads: High Intent, High Expectations
Google remains one of the strongest acquisition channels in Tier-1. The traffic is valuable, but so is the operational workload.
Campaign success depends on:
stable conversion history for automated bidding;
properly structured account architecture;
compliant landing pages;
long-term account health.
Many buyers focus on CPCs. Smart buyers focus on what happens after the click.
Meta: Great Traffic, Zero Room for Carelessness
Meta can still deliver excellent player value, especially for retargeting and app-install campaigns.
A few realities:
app campaigns are generally easier to scale;
attribution is less precise than server-side tracking;
creative fatigue arrives fast;
account discipline matters more than creative brilliance.
Fresh creatives every 7–10 days are often part of the job when competing in Tier-1 markets.
Native and Programmatic: The Scaling Layer
Once search and social stop growing, native traffic often becomes the next move.
Premium networks like Taboola and Outbrain typically require larger testing budgets, but they consistently deliver stronger traffic quality than lower-cost inventory. MGID lowers the barrier to entry and remains a popular testing option.
The lesson is simple, pal: cheap clicks rarely tell the whole story. Retention and repeat deposits decide whether a source deserves more budget.
Budgeting for Tier-1
One of the most common mistakes is underfunding the testing phase.
Serious buyers usually:
spend the first two weeks testing audiences, creatives, and landing pages;
use weeks three and four to evaluate deposit quality and retention;
scale gradually instead of doubling budgets overnight.
A structured Tier-1 launch often requires €13.8k–€27.6k per GEO, including creative production, localization, analytics, and testing. Cheap launches often become expensive lessons.
CPA, Revenue Share, or Hybrid?
For newer campaigns, CPA helps recover acquisition costs faster.
Once traffic demonstrates strong retention and repeat-deposit behavior, Revenue Share becomes far more attractive. That is why many experienced affiliates eventually move toward Hybrid deals that combine upfront payouts with long-term revenue participation.
At Big Betty, partners can work with:
CPA up to €600;
Revenue Share up to 60%;
Hybrid models for buyers focused on long-term growth.
The bottom line? Tier-1 traffic is not a game of finding the cheapest click. It is a game of finding players who stick around. Dig it, darling — retention is where the real treasure hides.
Want the numbers, benchmarks, and the full picture? Read the complete article on our blog.
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