Straightforward terms for a marketplace built on outcomes. No fine print designed to trip anyone up.
You must be 18+ to use BountyMe. Creators are responsible for complying with disclosure laws (FTC, ASA, etc.) when promoting brand links.
Promote only with audiences you legitimately own. No fake engagement, no incentivized clicks, no bot traffic. Conversions traced to fraud are reversed.
Honor posted bounties. Approve or dispute conversions within the agreed window. Maintain accurate attribution endpoints.
Conversions become payable after the brand's approval window. Payouts are made via the methods configured in your account. BountyMe does not hold creator funds longer than necessary.
What's posted is what you earn. If a bounty says $0.20, $0.20 hits your wallet — no platform cut on creator payouts, no surprise withdrawal surcharges. Standard processor fees from your chosen payout provider (e.g. PayPal, bank) are shown before you confirm a withdrawal.
The moment a brand verifies an action, you receive an in-app notification and your balance updates in real time. You should never have to refresh to know whether you got paid.
Every cent earned is recorded in your Earnings ledger with the date, brand, action, bounty type (CPA or CPM), gross amount, and the amount you keep. The record is permanent and exportable on request — your proof that the platform pays.
We treat every payout — even $0.20 — as a contract. Verified earnings are honored through any account review, dispute, or platform change. If we ever fail to pay a verified conversion, contact support and we will make it right.
BountyMe charges a transparent platform fee on brand spend, disclosed inside the brand console before any campaign goes live. This fee is never deducted from creator earnings.
We may suspend accounts that violate these terms or engage in fraud. Verified earned conversions are honored through any resolution.
BountyMe provides the marketplace; it is not party to the creator–brand commercial relationship. We are not liable for indirect or consequential damages.
Last updated: June 8, 2026