What Happens When Affiliate Cookies Are Blocked or Expire?
Cookie blocking can cost affiliates a significant portion of commissions. Learn how cookie expiration works, what happens when users block cookies, and proven backup solutions.
TL;DR: When affiliate tracking cookies are blocked or expire, you lose the ability to attribute sales to your referrals—meaning no commission. Cookie blocking (via browser settings, ad blockers, or privacy tools) affects a growing percentage of users. Cookie expiration varies wildly: Amazon gives you 24 hours, while some programs offer 90+ days. To protect your revenue, use server-side tracking, cookieless attribution methods, email capture strategies, and tools that aggregate data across platforms before cookies expire.
Understanding How Affiliate Cookies Work (And Fail)
Affiliate cookies are small text files stored in a user's browser when they click your affiliate link. These cookies contain a unique identifier that tells the merchant "this visitor came from [your affiliate ID]."
Here's what happens during a typical affiliate referral:
- User clicks your affiliate link
- Merchant's server drops a cookie in the user's browser (typically 7-90 day duration)
- User browses the site, maybe leaves, maybe returns
- User makes a purchase
- Merchant's system checks for valid affiliate cookies
- If your cookie exists and hasn't expired, you get credited
But this system has two major vulnerabilities: cookie blocking and cookie expiration. Let's break down exactly what happens when each occurs.
What Happens When Cookies Are Blocked
Browser-Level Cookie Blocking
Modern browsers increasingly block third-party cookies by default:
- Safari (ITP): Blocks third-party cookies entirely, limits first-party cookies to 7 days
- Firefox: Blocks third-party cookies and trackers by default
- Chrome: Plans full third-party cookie deprecation (delayed to 2025+)
- Brave: Blocks all cookies and trackers aggressively
When a user clicks your affiliate link with these settings enabled, one of three things happens:
Scenario 1: Cookie Rejected Entirely
The merchant's server attempts to set the cookie, but the browser refuses. The user's click is never tracked. Even if they purchase 5 minutes later, you get zero commission. This is most common with third-party cookies (when the affiliate network domain differs from the merchant domain).
Scenario 2: Cookie Stored But Restricted
The browser allows a first-party cookie but with severe limitations. Safari's Intelligent Tracking Prevention (ITP) allows cookies but expires them after 7 days regardless of the merchant's intended duration. If Amazon sets a 24-hour cookie, it still expires in 24 hours. But if ShareASale sets a 60-day cookie, Safari cuts it to 7 days maximum.
Scenario 3: Cookie Deleted During Browsing
Some users actively clear cookies regularly (via browser settings, CCleaner, privacy tools). Your affiliate cookie might exist for hours or days, then suddenly disappear. When the user returns to complete their purchase, your attribution is gone.
Ad Blocker Cookie Blocking
Ad blockers like uBlock Origin, AdBlock Plus, and Ghostery block affiliate tracking alongside display ads. According to eMarketer, a significant share of U.S. internet users employ ad blockers.
When an ad blocker is active:
- The initial click may still register (user reaches the merchant site)
- But the tracking cookie is prevented from being set
- Or the cookie is set but subsequent "pings" to verify it are blocked
- The merchant's attribution system sees no valid referral source
Real Impact: Industry reports suggest that a notable percentage of affiliate clicks are affected by ad blockers — some blocked entirely, others with cookies that can't be reliably verified.
What Happens When Cookies Expire
Cookie duration varies dramatically across affiliate programs. Here's what actually happens as time passes:
Amazon Associates: 24-Hour Window
Amazon's 24-hour cookie is notoriously short. Here's the timeline:
- Hour 0: User clicks your link, cookie set
- Hour 23: User adds product to cart but doesn't checkout
- Hour 25: User completes purchase — you get nothing
The only exception: If the user adds items to their cart within the 24-hour window, you earn commission on those specific items for up to 90 days. But any items added after hour 24 don't count.
Reality check: Many Amazon affiliate clicks don't convert within 24 hours. Those potential commissions simply vanish.
ShareASale: 30-90 Day Windows
Most ShareASale merchants set 30-day cookies. Here's a typical scenario:
- Day 0: User clicks, browses, leaves
- Day 15: User returns directly (typing URL) and purchases — you get credited
- Day 31: User returns and purchases — no commission
If a competing affiliate's link is clicked on Day 20, their cookie typically overwrites yours (last-click attribution). Your cookie still exists but becomes inactive.
CJ Affiliate (Commission Junction): Variable Durations
CJ merchants set their own cookie durations (7-120 days). But here's what many affiliates don't realize:
CJ uses last-click attribution with cookie refresh. If a user:
- Day 0: Clicks your link (60-day cookie set)
- Day 30: Clicks competitor's link (60-day cookie set)
- Day 40: Makes purchase
The competitor gets credited, not you. Your cookie didn't expire—it was overridden. This is a common occurrence in competitive niches where multiple affiliates promote the same products.
Impact and Rakuten: Advanced Cookie Logic
Enterprise platforms like Impact use more sophisticated cookie handling:
- Session extension: Active browsing refreshes cookie duration
- Multi-touch attribution: Multiple affiliates may share credit
- Cross-device tracking: Cookie syncing across devices (when users are logged in)
Even here, the fundamental vulnerability remains: If the user's browser blocks or deletes the cookie before purchase, attribution fails.
The Real Revenue Impact: Numbers You Need to Know
Let's translate cookie problems into actual revenue loss.
Example 1: Amazon Affiliate with 10,000 Monthly Clicks
- Total clicks: 10,000
- Conversion rate: 8% (800 conversions)
- Average commission: $4.50
- Expected revenue: $3,600/month
Cookie impact:
- 15% blocked by ad blockers/browser settings: 120 lost conversions
- 30% expire after 24 hours (delayed purchases): 240 lost conversions
- Total revenue loss: $1,620/month (45% of potential earnings)
Example 2: ShareASale Affiliate Promoting Software (90-day cookie)
- Total clicks: 2,000
- Conversion rate: 3% (60 conversions)
- Average commission: $120
- Expected revenue: $7,200/month
Cookie impact:
- 12% blocked: 7 lost conversions
- 8% expire before purchase (long sales cycle): 5 lost conversions
- Total revenue loss: $1,440/month (20% of potential earnings)
The difference? Amazon's 24-hour cookie creates 2-3x more revenue leakage than longer-duration cookies in programs with patient buyers.
How to Protect Your Affiliate Revenue
Strategy 1: Use Server-Side Tracking
Server-side tracking stores the affiliate attribution on the merchant's server, not in the user's browser. When properly implemented:
- Click ID is logged server-side immediately
- User browser state doesn't matter
- Cookie blocking has zero impact
Platforms offering server-side options: Impact, Everflow, Post Affiliate Pro, PartnerStack
Limitation: You can't implement this yourself—the merchant must support it. When evaluating affiliate programs, ask if they use server-side tracking.
Strategy 2: Capture Emails Before Sending to Merchants
Build an email list from your traffic before clicking through to affiliate offers:
- Offer lead magnet (buying guide, comparison chart, discount code)
- User enters email to access resource
- Email contains affiliate links + reminder emails over cookie duration
- Even if initial cookie fails, follow-up emails create new opportunities
Example funnel:
- Day 0: User downloads "Best Wireless Headphones 2026" guide (with affiliate links)
- Day 3: Email: "Forgot something? Here are those headphone recommendations"
- Day 7: Email: "New deals on our top picks"
Each email sets a fresh cookie, multiplying your chances of attribution.
Strategy 3: Use Cookieless Tracking Methods
Several emerging techniques bypass cookies entirely:
URL-based tracking: Some affiliate networks (like Gumroad, ConvertKit) use URL parameters that persist in the user's session storage, not cookies. These survive basic cookie blocking.
Browser fingerprinting: Creates unique user identifiers from browser characteristics. More reliable than cookies but raises privacy concerns—use only on compliant platforms.
First-party data tracking: If you own the merchant site (e.g., your own Shopify store with an affiliate program), you can track affiliates using customer account data rather than cookies.
Strategy 4: Choose Programs with Longer Cookie Durations
When possible, prioritize affiliate programs with:
- 60+ day cookies for physical products
- 90+ day cookies for software/services
- 180-365 day cookies for high-ticket items
Real comparison:
- Amazon Associates: 24 hours
- ShareASale (typical): 30-90 days
- Impact (typical): 30-120 days
- Shopify Affiliate Program: 30 days
- Kinsta Hosting: 60 days
- Semrush: 120 days
A program with a 90-day cookie gives your referral 3.75x more time to convert than a 24-hour cookie—directly impacting how many blocked/expired cookies result in lost revenue.
Strategy 5: Aggregate Your Data Early
One of the biggest cookie-related problems is fragmented reporting. If you're managing commissions across Amazon, ShareASale, CJ, Impact, and 10 other networks, you're manually checking dashboards to catch expirations.
By using a unified dashboard like Affiliate Manager, you can see real-time commission tracking across all 59+ platforms in one place. This doesn't prevent cookie blocking, but it helps you:
- Identify which platforms have the highest cookie failure rates
- Spot patterns in delayed conversions
- Optimize promotion timing (e.g., email send times) based on when cookies typically expire
- Calculate actual cookie loss percentages per program
Strategy 6: Implement UTM Parameter Backup Tracking
Even when cookies fail, UTM parameters in your URLs can help with attribution:
https://merchant.com/product?utm_source=yoursite&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=review2026
While merchants don't pay commissions based on UTMs, you can:
- Track which content drives traffic (even if cookies fail)
- Use this data to negotiate direct partnerships
- Prove your value if you later pitch for a CPA deal or sponsored content
Many affiliates also use link shorteners with their own tracking (Bitly, Pretty Links) to capture click data before users even reach the merchant.
Platform-Specific Cookie Behavior
Amazon Associates Cookie Nuances
Beyond the 24-hour standard cookie:
- Shopping cart persistence: Items added within 24 hours earn commission for 90 days
- Cross-category purchases: If user clicks your link for headphones but buys a TV, you get commission (within 24 hours)
- Amazon Prime members: Tend to purchase faster (higher cookie success rate)
Optimization tip: Promote products likely to trigger impulse purchases or be added to cart immediately (deals, limited-time offers, Prime-exclusive items).
ShareASale Cookie Overrides
ShareASale uses last-click attribution, meaning:
- Most recent affiliate cookie wins
- Your 30-day cookie can be overwritten on Day 2
- Conversely, you can override competitors' cookies
Optimization tip: Retarget your audience multiple times during the cookie window with fresh content/links to refresh your cookie.
CJ Affiliate Cookie Stacking Rules
CJ prohibits "cookie stuffing" (forcing cookies without user clicks), but allows:
- Multiple legitimate links in the same content
- Email sequences with refreshed links
- Cross-promotional links across your content network
Optimization tip: If you run multiple sites, cross-link complementary content with fresh affiliate links to extend your attribution window.
The Future: What's Replacing Cookies?
As third-party cookie death approaches, affiliate networks are adopting:
1. First-Party Cookie Strategies
Merchants host affiliate tracking on their own domains, making cookies "first-party" to bypass browser restrictions.
2. Privacy Sandbox APIs
Google's cookie replacement includes Attribution Reporting API—designed for ad tracking but potentially useful for affiliate attribution.
3. Unified ID Solutions
Email-based identity graphs (like LiveRamp) that track users across sites with consent. Early adoption in affiliate marketing.
4. Blockchain-Based Attribution
Decentralized ledgers recording affiliate clicks. Still experimental but being tested by platforms like Refersion.
5. App-Based Tracking
Mobile apps use IDFA/AAID instead of cookies. Affiliate programs in apps (like Amazon's app) have higher attribution reliability.
Key Takeaway
Cookie blocking and expiration can cost affiliates a significant portion of potential commissions. The impact varies based on your traffic sources (Safari users = higher blocking), promotion methods (email = more repeat touches), and program cookie durations (24 hours = maximum vulnerability).
You can't eliminate cookie loss, but you can minimize it by:
- Choosing programs with 60+ day cookies
- Building an email list to create multiple touch points
- Tracking performance across platforms to identify where cookie failures hurt most
- Negotiating direct deals once you prove traffic value beyond cookie-based attribution
- Using server-side tracking options when available
The affiliate marketers who adapt to a cookieless future—through email, first-party data, and diversified tracking methods—will maintain revenue while others watch their commissions disappear with every browser update.
Want to see which of your affiliate programs are most affected by cookie expiration? Track all your platforms in real-time with Affiliate Manager—get instant visibility into commission timing, platform performance, and cookie-dependent revenue across 59+ networks in one dashboard. Start your free trial today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are my affiliate cookies being blocked?
Modern browsers increasingly block third-party cookies by default. Safari's ITP limits cookies to 7 days, Firefox blocks cross-site tracking, and Chrome is phasing out third-party cookies. Ad blockers and privacy extensions also strip affiliate tracking parameters from URLs.
How long do affiliate tracking cookies last?
Cookie duration varies by program—Amazon Associates uses 24-hour cookies, while many SaaS programs offer 30-90 day windows. Browser restrictions can shorten these further: Safari ITP caps first-party cookies at 7 days, and third-party cookies may be blocked entirely.
What happens when affiliate cookies expire?
When affiliate cookies expire before a purchase, the affiliate loses credit for the sale. The customer still completes the purchase, but the merchant's system can't attribute it to the affiliate. This is especially problematic for products with long sales cycles where buyers research for weeks before purchasing.