To access the HUNTME referral program dashboard, enter the email and password you used during registration.
Fill out the form — it takes 2 minutes. A manager will contact you on Telegram, provide free training, and help you get your first result.
Sooner or later, almost every affiliate runs into the same operational reality: some conversions get rejected, payouts get recalculated, or the numbers stop matching what you expected. This is especially common in adult and subscription-heavy verticals, where refunds, chargebacks, longer holds, and stricter validation create more status changes than “classic CPA.”
Many affiliates treat a dispute like a fight — an emotional attempt to prove someone is “cutting” their numbers. In reality, an affiliate dispute process is normal business workflow. Any serious network processes disputes daily: rejected conversions, tracking mismatches, payout adjustments, and technical event issues. The difference between a pro and a beginner is simple: the pro arrives with structured evidence; the beginner arrives with assumptions.
This guide shows how to run disputes like operations: what qualifies for a dispute, why rejections happen, what evidence to collect, how to write a dispute that gets answered, and how to escalate without burning relationships.
A dispute is any formal request to review conversion status, payout crediting, or reporting integrity.
Common dispute categories:
Earn with HUNT ME — weekly payouts
Not every “bad result” is dispute-worthy. If you violated offer rules, ran prohibited traffic, or the rejection reason is objective (e.g., confirmed duplicate), disputes rarely succeed. But if the issue is unclear validation, missing tracking events, unexplained deductions, or mismatched time windows, disputing is often worth it.

When affiliates see “rejected,” the first thought is usually “they’re cutting my payouts.” Most of the time the reason is simpler and fixable.
Typical rejection drivers:
Some rejections aren’t “quality” problems at all. They’re tracking problems:
This is why your first message should not be an accusation. It should be a request for the exact rejection reason and the criteria used. When you get a reason code or rule reference, the dispute becomes solvable.
The biggest mistake affiliates make is disputing with no proof. Every effective dispute starts with a consistent evidence pack.
Minimum evidence (must-have):
You also want an event timeline whenever possible:
Earn with HUNT ME — weekly payouts
If a status changed (approved → rejected, paid → adjusted), that change is the heart of the case. Your job is to show it clearly.
Some disputes are simple (reason code clarifications). Others require stronger support.
Additional evidence that helps:
This is not about “overloading support.” It’s about proving you understand the system and can isolate the issue. When you send a clean sample set with strong context, support can act faster.

Most delays happen because affiliates send a chaotic stream of screenshots with no structure. Support then has to ask ten follow-up questions before they can even start.
A strong dispute message looks like a short report:
That structure reduces back-and-forth dramatically because you’re giving support everything they need to process the case.
A lot of disputes drag because of how the conversation starts. Threats, accusations, or “I’m leaving” language almost always slows resolution.
If your goal is speed, the rule is simple: facts first, emotion never.
Good communication habits:
When escalation is needed, it should be structured:
That makes escalation possible and defensible internally.
Payment disputes often come down to a misunderstanding of net accounting.
If you’re disputing earnings changes, always clarify:
If you see large adjustments, request a breakdown:
This is where a clean gross vs net revenue dispute framing helps. You’re not claiming wrongdoing — you’re asking for transparent accounting.

Not every missing conversion is the network’s fault. Many are caused by integration problems on your side.
Before you file:
If conversions appear later, it may be normal maturity timing. Killing campaigns or opening disputes too early is one of the most common operational mistakes in subscriptions.
A proper technical dispute is very specific:
That’s a solvable question.
Bad disputes follow the same pattern:
A strong dispute process is the opposite:
This is why pros get faster resolutions and lose less money on rejected conversions over time.
A repeatable playbook turns disputes from chaos into operations.
Day 1: collect evidence, choose a sample set (20–50 IDs)
Day 2: submit using a structured template
Day 3–4: receive reason codes, request clarifications if needed
Day 5–6: adjust traffic rules/filters/routing if the issue is confirmed
Day 7: document outcome in a “quality journal” and update your checklist
This approach gives you two benefits: you recover money where recovery is valid, and you reduce future rejection volume by fixing root causes.
A dispute is not a fight. It’s a workflow. The affiliates who win more disputes are the ones who treat disputes like data reconciliation: they keep click IDs and subIDs, log timelines, monitor postbacks, and ask specific questions backed by evidence.
If you build these habits, you’ll spend less time arguing, recover more of what’s recoverable, and — more importantly — reduce rejections and adjustments going forward. Over months, that process often improves net profit more than chasing new offers every week.
1) What should I include in a rejected lead dispute template?
Offer name, date range, a sample list of clickid/subID, timestamps (with TZ), current statuses, and your exact request (reason codes, status review, or payout explanation). Without IDs, support can’t investigate efficiently.
2) When is it worth challenging rejected leads?
When you have evidence of compliance and tracking integrity, and the rejection reason is unclear or inconsistent. It’s usually not worth disputing obvious duplicates, GEO mismatches, or prohibited incentive traffic.
3) How do I handle missing conversions disputes?
First confirm clickid/subID passed correctly through redirects and that postback/event mapping is correct. Then provide a small sample set with timestamps and redirect chain context so the network can confirm receipt.
4) How long should I wait before escalating to an affiliate manager?
Ask for an estimated timeline in the first message. If there’s no response, follow up after 48–72 hours. Escalate only after you’ve provided a structured evidence pack and a clear question.
5) What’s the difference between payout adjustment disputes and “shave” accusations?
Adjustments often come from net recalculations: refunds, chargebacks, deduplication, fraud cleaning, caps, or compliance rules. A good dispute asks for a breakdown and reason codes, not a general accusation.
6) What’s the best way to reduce disputes long-term?
Track cleanly (clickid/subID), monitor postback events, keep a quality journal, and run traffic within offer rules. Most disputes disappear when the same root causes are fixed early.
Registration takes 2 minutes. No experience needed — we'll teach you everything.
Осталось только заполнить форму
Registration takes 2 minutes. No experience needed — we'll teach you everything.