Exness Partnership: How the IB Program Works From the Trader's Side
An independent look at the official introducing-partner model: what stays the same on a trading account, where spread markup can creep in, and how partners return part of their share as backcom.
Open Exness Account →The Exness partnership program is the broker's official introducing-partner (IB) model: Exness pays partners a share of referred clients' trading costs — up to 40% at the top tier (source: Exness affiliates site) — and a partner can pass up to 100% of that share back to the client through the official rebate system (source: Exness Partners Help Centre). For traders, published trading conditions stay unchanged unless a partner enables spread markup.
Key Facts About the Exness Partner Program
- Exness runs an official partnership program on the introducing-partner (IB) model: the broker pays its introducing partners a share of the trading costs of clients they refer, and through the official rebate system a partner can pass up to 100% of that share back to the client (source: Exness Partners Help Centre, 'All about the rebate system').
- By default, nothing changes in a trader's published conditions when an account is attached to a partner: Standard and Pro remain $0-commission account types where the cost is the spread, Raw Spread charges up to $3.50 per side per lot with spreads from 0.0 pips, and Zero charges from $0.10 per side with 0.0 pips on majors during most of the day (source: Exness published account specifications).
- The exception is partner spread markup: dishonest IBs can widen a referred client's spread and pay the 'rebate' out of the client's own overpayment, so community guides advise comparing live spreads against the broker's published figures before funding an account (source: backcomhub.com warning article).
- Where an honest partner shares their reward, the rebate is typically credited automatically every day to the trading account like a deposit, with closed trades counted up to a daily cut-off around 04:00 server time (sources: traderviet.blog; duynenfx.com).
- A rebate applies only to accounts opened under the partner's link; an existing client can file a 'Change Partner' request with Exness support via Live Chat, approval typically takes 24–72 hours, and the rebate then covers only a new trading account created after the change (sources: traderviet.blog; duynenfx.com; nududo.com guide).
- A client who is unsure which partner their profile sits under can request that information from support, as described in the Exness Help Centre article 'Can I find out who my partner is?'.
- The broker voids rebates generated by artificial churning volume, and self-rebate — registering under one's own partner link — is detected automatically, after which payments stop (sources: PaybackFX broker page; Exness Partners Help Centre, 'Why haven't I received any commission').
- In the Vietnamese market, this partner-rebate model is known as backcom or hoàn phí, and the niche spans more than 20 services alongside Zalo and Facebook groups and forum threads on VOZ and tinhte (research, July 2026).
One Trader, Three Scenarios: No Partner, Honest IB, Markup IB
| Criterion | No partner | Honest IB (no markup) | Markup IB |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spread paid | Published spread only | Published spread only — unchanged from the broker's listed conditions | Published spread plus partner markup — wider than listed |
| Rebate possibility | None — no partner reward exists to share back | Partner may return part or all of their share via the official rebate system (source: Exness Partners Help Centre) | A 'rebate' may be paid, but it is funded by the client's own overpaid spread (source: backcomhub.com) |
| Total trading cost | Full published spread and commission | Published cost minus the daily rebate — effective cost is reduced | Equal to or above the no-partner baseline despite the 'rebate' |
| How a trader can verify | Support can confirm which partner, if any, a profile sits under, per the Exness Help Centre article 'Can I find out who my partner is?' | Live spreads match the broker's published figures | Live spreads run consistently wider than published — a documented warning sign (source: backcomhub.com) |
Frequently asked questions
Does the Exness partnership change a trader's spreads or commissions?
By default, no: an account attached to a partner trades on the same published conditions as any other account of the same type. The one documented exception is partner spread markup, where a dishonest IB widens the client's spread and pays the 'rebate' out of that overpayment (source: backcomhub.com). Community guides therefore advise comparing live spreads against the broker's published figures before funding an account.
Is the rebate paid by Exness itself, like a special client offer?
The rebate comes out of the partner's own reward, not from any extra broker scheme; the broker does not run promotional credit schemes — a rebate is a partner-side cost refund (source: Exness Help Centre). It is calculated on closed lots regardless of an individual trade's result and should be understood strictly as a reduction of effective trading costs, not as income. CFD trading itself carries a high risk of loss, and no rebate changes that.
How does a trader move an existing account to a different partner?
The client contacts Exness support via Live Chat and files a 'Change Partner' request, with approval typically taking 24–72 hours (sources: traderviet.blog; duynenfx.com; nududo.com guide). After approval, any rebate applies only to a new trading account created after the change — existing accounts keep their old attachment.
Can a rebate stop being paid?
Yes. Rebates generated by artificial churning volume are voided by the broker, and self-rebate — registering under one's own partner link — is detected automatically, after which payments stop (sources: PaybackFX broker page; Exness Partners Help Centre, 'Why haven't I received any commission'). A partner can also change or end their sharing terms, since the share is paid from the partner's side.