Forex Spread Markup
A forex spread markup is an additional pip value added to the base spread by a broker, often used to fund IB commissions or revenue sharing.
What it means in practice
A forex spread markup is an extra cost added on top of the raw interbank spread by a broker before presenting the final trading spread to the client. For example, if the raw EUR/USD spread is 0.2 pips and the broker adds a 1.0 pip markup, the client sees a 1.2 pip spread. This markup is a primary revenue mechanism for brokers operating on a spread-based model rather than a fixed commission model.
Spread markups are directly relevant to Introducing Broker (IB) and affiliate programs because they often fund partner commissions. In a spread-based commission structure, the IB receives a portion of the markup as compensation for each trade their referred clients execute. This creates a direct link between trading activity and IB earnings, similar to how lot-based commissions tie payouts to volume.
The markup level affects both client acquisition and retention. Higher markups generate more revenue per trade but increase the client's effective trading cost, which can drive traders to competitors with tighter spreads. Brokers must balance markup levels against market competitiveness, especially for high-volume traders who are sensitive to execution costs and compare pip values across platforms.
For affiliate program operators, transparent markup structures matter because they determine the economic pool available for partner payouts. A broker with a 1.5 pip average markup has more room for generous IB rebates and client rebates than one operating on 0.5 pip margins. Understanding the markup structure is essential for negotiating sustainable deal terms.
How Forex Spread Markup works across industries
See how forex spread markup is applied in the verticals Track360 supports, from qualification logic and payout structure to the operational context behind each model.
How Track360 handles this
Track360 supports commission calculations based on spread markup structures, enabling brokers to configure spread-based commissions that tie IB payouts to the actual markup earned per trade. This provides transparent payout logic that aligns partner earnings with broker revenue.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about forex spread markup, how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.
A spread markup is an additional pip value added by a forex broker on top of the raw interbank spread. If the raw spread is 0.2 pips and the broker adds 1.0 pip, the client trades on a 1.2 pip spread. The markup is the broker's primary revenue source in spread-based pricing models.
Related Terms
Spread
The spread is the difference between the bid (sell) and ask (buy) price of a financial instrument, serving as a primary revenue source for Forex brokers and a basis for spread-based affiliate commissions.
Spread-Based Commission
A commission model in Forex IB programs where the introducing broker earns a portion of the spread (the difference between bid and ask price) on every trade their referred clients execute.
Lot-Based Commission
Lot-based commission is a broker affiliate or IB payout model where partners earn a fixed amount for each traded lot generated by their referred clients.
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.
Pip Value
The monetary value of a single pip movement in a forex trade, which varies by currency pair, lot size, and account currency. Pip value is used as a basis for calculating IB commissions in spread-based and pip rebate models.
Introducing Broker (IB)
An Introducing Broker is a partner who refers new traders to a Forex or CFD brokerage in exchange for ongoing commissions, typically calculated on the trading volume or revenue generated by those referred clients.
IB Rebate
An IB rebate is a payment that an introducing broker passes back to referred clients, typically funded from the IB's own commission share. Rebates are used to attract and retain active traders by reducing their effective trading costs.
Client Rebate
A portion of the spread or commission returned to the end client (trader) by the broker or introducing broker as an incentive to trade through a specific partner channel.
Continue Learning
Free structured courses that cover this topic and more.
Forex IB Program Management
Lot-based and symbol-based commission structures, multi-level IB hierarchies, MT4/MT5 integration, and per-partner deal terms built for brokerages. From onboarding to payout.
Scaling Forex IB Networks
Regional IB hierarchies, multi-currency payouts, advanced deal logic, and operational strategies for brokers scaling from 10 IBs to 500+.
Related Articles
Further reading on forex spread markup and related affiliate program topics.
Track360 and Skale CRM Partnership
Track360 Partners with Skale CRM to Empower Forex Brokers and Prop Firms with Next-Level Affiliate & IB Management
Sep 9, 2025
Track360 at Forex Expo Dubai October 2024
Track360's participation in Forex Expo Dubai 2024 was a milestone, showcasing our innovative solutions, building strategic partnerships, gaining industry insights, and reinforcing our commitment to excellence in forex and affiliate management.
Feb 2, 2025
Track360 and Antelope Partnership
Track360 and Antelope CRM Announce Strategic Partnership to Drive Enhanced Operational Efficiency, Streamlined Processes, and Growth Opportunities for Forex Brokers and Prop Firms
Feb 2, 2025