# RefCampaign vs PartnerStack — Comparison 2026

Compare RefCampaign and PartnerStack for SaaS affiliate programs: pricing, setup, payouts, Stripe tracking and startup vs enterprise fit.

PartnerStack is built for late-stage SaaS with dedicated partner teams. RefCampaign serves the 95% of SaaS not yet at that scale.

## Feature comparison

- **Built for startups**: Suitable for affiliate programs at any revenue stage, including pre-PMF.
- **Time to launch**: From signup to a live affiliate program collecting clicks.
- **Onboarding model**: Self-serve activation vs guided implementation.
- **Stripe integration**: Native handling of Stripe subscriptions and recurring commissions.
- **Transparent pricing**: Public pricing across all tiers.
- **Minimum commitment**: Required monthly or annual minimum spend.
- **Free trial**: Real product trial without sales gate.
- **Hidden fees**: Setup fees, success fees, or per-partner fees beyond list price.
- **Real-time tracking**: Click and conversion attribution within seconds.
- **Automated payouts**: Affiliate payout workflows, payment records, and supported payout methods.
- **Custom commission rules**: Per-affiliate, per-product, or per-cohort commission logic.
- **API & webhooks**: Public REST API and outbound webhook events.
- **Data ownership**: Who owns the click and conversion data: you or the platform.
- **Data export**: Bulk CSV / API export without restriction.
- **Attribution transparency**: Visibility into the click chain that produced each conversion.
- **Analytics control**: Ability to query data outside the bundled dashboard.
- **Native French support**: Support in French on French business hours.
- **EU hosting**: Data stored in EU regions for GDPR residency.
- **Support availability**: Support included on every plan vs gated to higher tiers.
- **Implementation help**: Onboarding assistance: documentation, in-app guides, or human help.
- **Partner marketplace**: Pre-existing pool of partners discoverable inside the platform.
- **Multi-tier programs**: Sub-affiliate trees and multi-level commission structures.
